Alexei returns as a star
Russian skater's last trip to K-W was an emotional pressure-cooker
Source: |
Kitchener Record |
Date: |
April 30, 2002 |
Author: |
Anne Kelly |
Copyright 2002 Toronto Star Newspapers, Ltd.
When Alexei Yagudin was in Kitchener last December, he sobbed with
relief after narrowly winning the Grand Prix figure skating final over
arch-rival Yevgeny Plushenko.
When he returns Sunday to the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium,
expect nothing but smiles from the Russian as he performs with Stars
on Ice.
Yagudin, a four-time world champion and the only man ever to win
the Triple Crown of figure skating -- the European, Grand Prix and
world titles -- all in one season, will be having a ball, even though
he'll be working harder than ever.
"I love it," the 22-year-old said in a recent phone interview from
London, Ont., where he was appearing in the Skate the Nation Tour.
"Emotionally, it's way easier to do shows, but physically, it's
way harder."
Coming off gold medal wins at the Salt Lake City Olympics and
world championships in Nagano, Japan, Yagudin triple-Axeled right into
the show circuit with barely enough time catch his breath
In Skate the Nation, choreographed by Canadian Olympic silver
medallist Brian Orser, Yagudin is on the ice seven times per show. In
Stars on Ice, he does two solos and two or three group numbers.
It's his chance to learn from the seasoned pros who, he said,
"know how to play to the public."
"It's a great opportunity for me to learn new steps that I can put
into my program," he said.
A program for the next competitive season, perhaps?
Yagudin insisted he is undecided about his future.
He said he's definitely planning to compete in Skate Canada and
Skate America next season, but in the next breath added he "could
decide tomorrow" to turn professional.
Yagudin dominated the 2001-02 season. "I've got everything," he
acknowledged. "But each world title means a lot for me."
So, too, does being on the show circuit with Stars on Ice
luminaries like Kurt Browning, Kristi Yamaguchi, Todd Eldredge,
Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler and Shae-Lynn Bourne and Victor
Kraatz. All of them will perform at the Kitchener stop.
Yagudin said travelling with the other skaters, some considerably
older than he is, is like being part of a big family.
"They all care about each other. The skaters are like my second
parents."
Yagudin was so dejected when the touring season ended in Vancouver
last August that he sat in the dressing room and cried. "I couldn't
imagine that everything was over."
Yagudin could be excused for craving a family connection. He
trains in Connecticut, half a world away from his family in
St. Petersburg. He grew up sharing a tiny two-bedroom apartment with
his parents and grandmother.
Yagudin was sickly as a youngster and his mother, Zoya, put him in
figure skating at age four in an effort to boost his physical
stamina. When he was 12, his parents divorced and Yagudin grew
increasingly close to his mother.
"She was father and mother for me -- all I needed," he said.
She still won't watch him compete. "She can't, because it's so
emotional," he said.
Yagudin and Plushenko shared the same coach, Alexei Mishin, until
the summer of 1998 when Yagudin sought out legendary Russian coach
Tatyana Tarasova, who by then was based in the United States.
He hasn't looked back. "I'm happy here," he said.
He also likes skating in Canada, especially in shows. "Canadian
fans are No. 1," he said. "During the group numbers, when everyone is
so crazy and so loud, that's the best thing I can get from skating."
Olympic gold is sweet, too, he admitted.
Tarasova inspired him before Salt Lake with two simple questions:
"If not you, then who? If not now, then when?"
He answered with a superb performance technically and
artistically.
Although a favourite with young women fans, Yagudin brushes aside
questions about his Sexy Alexei nickname. "I've heard about that, but
I don't pay attention," he said.
The skater's closest companion right now is his cocker spaniel,
Lawrence. He doesn't have a girlfriend.
But, he added teasingly, "I'm still searching."
ABOUT THE SHOW
If you don't have a ticket yet for Stars on Ice, your chances of
getting one are slim.
"We're basically sold out," Wendy Kane, vice-president of winter
sports for the show's owner IMG Canada, said yesterday.
"Tickets are very, very limited and they are for individual
seating."
The auditorium box office can be reached by calling 745-0303.
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