Canadian pair believes skating is in deep freeze
Gold medalists are concerned controversy has tarnished sport
Source: |
Rochester Democrat & Chronicle |
Date: |
March 14, 2003 |
Author: |
Scott Pitoniak |
(March 14, 2003) - The Olympic gold medals they received 13 months
ago following the scandal that rocked the figure skating world are
locked away in a safe deposit box back in Edmonton, Alberta.
"We don't bring them with us on tour because we don't want to lose
them again," Jamie Sale jokes.
There is truth in her jest.
Sale and pairs partner David Pelletier lost the gold the first time
at the Salt Lake City Games two Februarys ago when a French judge was
pressured into voting for Russian skaters Elena Berezhnaya and Anton
Sikharulidze.
After intense media scrutiny and an investigation by the
International Olympic Committee, a wrong was righted and gold medals
were awarded to both the Russian and Canadian skaters.
The grace and dignity Sale and Pelletier displayed during the
controversy won them legions of fans worldwide.
It also landed them on the sets of Letterman and Leno and the
covers of Newsweek and Time.
"It's strange how things work out, but if the scandal hadn't
occurred, we wouldn't be as well-known as we are," says Sale, who will
perform with Pelletier on Saturday night when the Smucker's Stars on
Ice Tour comes to the Blue Cross Arena at the War Memorial.
"We'll be in a mall or a restaurant or a hotel lobby and people
will point at us and say, 'Hey you're those Canadian skaters.'
And, then, they usually follow that with, 'We're so glad that
justice was served."
Justice may have been served during the Olympics, but more than a
year later the sport's judging system remains mired in controversy.
A revolution hasn't occured; just more of the same. Accusations of
bias persist, and Sale and Pelletier believe the dark cloud is having
a negative impact on skating's popularity.
"It's sad to see," Pelletier says. "It's not the way it was. The
(television) ratings are down. Attendance is down. I don't care what
the sport is, people don't want to go to something they believe is
fixed."
The gold-medal duo believes true reform won't occur until all
corrupt judges are removed and the governing bodies start seeking the
input of skaters and coaches, past and present.
"We've turned pro, so it doesn't directly affect us any more," Sale
says. "But we have many friends in the amateur ranks and we feel
badly for them."
One of the appeals of skating professionally is that Sale and
Pelletier no longer are beholden to judges.
They are performing rather than competing; their judges are the
spectators.
"I started competing at age seven and did that for the next 20
years," Pelletier says. "I don't miss it at all. I think this is the
most fun I've ever had skating. You still have to go out and put on a
good show because people have paid to come and see you. But there is
more joy and less stress in this."
Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze perform on the same tour, and that has
given the Canadian skaters an opportunity to get to know their former
skating rivals as people rather than competitors.
"It's difficult when you are competing because you are both after
the same goal," Sale says. "But the tour is a noncompetitive
situation.
"We're very relaxed with each other now. We ride the buses together
and joke around. We both understood that the Olympic controversy was
never about the skaters; it was about the judging. I think we are both
happy with the way it was resolved."
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