Browning Receives Break From Judges, Petrenko Leads in World Figure Skating
Source: |
San Francisco Chronicle, Ed: Final, Sec: Sports, P. C1 |
Date: |
March 27, 1992 |
Author: |
Jane Gottesman |
Copyright 1992 The San Francisco Chronicle
In a guide to figure-skating competition, it says that to understand
scoring, you need to know that 1 means very poor, 2 means poor, 3 means
mediocre, 4 means good, 5 means excellent and 6 is perfect.
That said, the performance of four of nine panel judges yesterday
afternoon in the World Figure Skating Championships was no better than 1.
Canadian Kurt Browning, a three-time world champion, did not complete
one of the required elements in his original program. Yet he was awarded a
5.9 -- a tenth of a point from a perfect score -- for technical merit from
a Canadian judge.
It also says in the rules that there is a mandatory half-point
deduction for missing any one of eight required moves in the original
program. Four of the nine judges didn't deduct that amount from Browning's
technical marks.
Entering today's 4 1/2-minute, free-skate final, Olympic gold medalist
Viktor Petrenko of Ukraine is in first place, Czech Petr Barna is in second
place, Browning is third, and Canadian Elvis Stojko is fourth. U.S. skaters
Todd Eldredge and Christopher Bowman are fifth and sixth, respectively.
The judges can't hide from their flagrant kowtowing to the world
champion, thanks to Eldredge. A former U.S. champion from Massachusetts,
Eldredge simplified the equation by missing the same move as Browning. Both
skaters didn't do the triple jump. Both doubled, instead, but only Eldredge
was penalized accordingly.
Having to face the same set of judges today, Eldredge was
understandably understated when discussing yesterday's competition. "I was
hoping that maybe the judges would have blinked, but they didn't."
The night program demanded a pause to appreciate perfection, and
thankfully, a different panel of judges was on hand to do just that. The
skating of Natalia Mishkutienok and Artur Dmitriev last night was sublime.
The pair, of the former Soviet Union, easily defended its world pairs title
and pushed the boundaries of beauty with a performance that commanded four
6.0s. Mishkutienok and Dmitriev cast a spell over a nearly sold out
Coliseum Arena that wasn't broken until an extended standing ovation was
complete.
Canadians Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler seemed shaken,
performing immediately after the former Soviets, and Brasseur fell twice.
They dropped one place, taking a bronze medal, and Czechs Radka Kovarikova
and Rene Novotny won the silver medal.
Americans Calla Urbanski and Rocky Marval remained in seventh place,
and compatriots Natasha Kuchiki and Todd Sand dropped to eighth.
Browning wasn't available for comment when the men's competition ended.
After all, he can't be blamed for being unjustifiably rewarded his skating.
While Petrenko skated an almost seamless performance -- the same one he
used in the Olympics -- to the music from "Carmen," Barna looked as good.
In fact, a German judge gave the Czech the only 6.0 of the championships so
far, for his artistic interpretation.
Bowman, who skated early in a field of 35 and had to reduce his triple
Lutz/triple toe loop combination to a triple Lutz/double toe loop for fear
of crashing into the boards, said, "Time is on my side" for today's final.
He'll skate last, a position for which most skaters hope when they draw for
their order.
It's a "continuing saga," Bowman said of sometimes-dreadful judging
that detracts from figure skating. "Today, you saw what Petrenko can do,
you saw what Barna can do, you saw what Browning can do . . . or can't do."
Browning got to the top "by digging his blades and fingernails in our
faces," Bowman said. "As a figure-skating competitor, he's strictly
ruthless."
No one gets high marks for being a nice guy, said Eldredge. "You've got
to go out there and attack.
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