2007

Four Continents Championships

Dance Event

All photos Copyright 2007 by George S. Rossano

 
Standings
Place

Couple

Country CD OD FD
1 Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon CAN 1 2 1
2 Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto USA 2 1 2
3 Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir CAN 4 3 3
4 Meryl Davis & Charlie White USA 3 4 4
5 Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre USA 6 5 5
6 Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason CAN 5 6 7
7 Cathy Reed & Chris Reed JPN 7 9 6
8 Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng CHN 8 7 8
9 Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang CHN 10 8 9
10 Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov UZB 9 10 10
11 Laura Munana & Luke Munana MEX 11 11 11
12 Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov AUS 12 12 12

 

Compulsory Dance

Golden Waltz

 
Starting Order - Compulsory Dance
  1. Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon

  2. Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng

  3. Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang

  4. Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov

  5. Laura Munana & Luke Munana

  6. Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre

  7. Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto

  8. Meryl Davis & Charlie White

  9. Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir

  10. Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason

  11. Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov

  12. Cathy Reed & Chris Reed

 

Compulsory  Dance Placements
Place Couple Country
1 Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon CAN
2 Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto USA
3 Meryl Davis & Charlie White USA
4 Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir CAN
5 Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason CAN
6 Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre USA
7 Cathy Reed & Chris Reed JPN
8 Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng CHN
9 Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov UZB
10 Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang CHN
11 Laura Munana & Luke Munana MEX
12 Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov AUS

Debreuil & Lauzon

Belbin & Agosto

Davis & White


Ben Goes Whoops while Marie-France & Patrice Glide Smoothly into a Slender 0.82 Lead.

by Alexandra Stevenson

1. First up of the 12 couples from 7 countries to skate the Golden Waltz were Marie-France Dubreuil, 32, & Patrice Lauzon, 31, who set a standard no one could beat. She was gorgeous in a beautiful light blue knee length dress with splits in the chiffon-y skirt and lots of tasteful gold and silver sparkles. He was elegant in tails and a gorgeous cream waistcoat and matching cream bow tie. However, his tails flapped in a distracting way and when he raised his shoulders too much of the bottom, side and back of the waistcoat was exposed.

The five time Canadian champions, who train in Lyon, France with Muriel Boucher Zazoui, flew gracefully through the complicated steps which took them twice around the Broadmoor World Arena which was dotted with a sprinkling of about one hundred spectators (a far cry from the packed crowd for the compulsories in Spokane or Halifax.) It is the longest compulsory.

Dubreuil explained, "Skating first is always a little more nerve wracking with the altitude. We didn’t warm-up fully because we wanted still to have some juice for the performance. At the end, we were just exhausted. It felt like doing an original."

That was not surprising because the compulsory derives from an original invented by Marina Klimova & Sergei Ponomarenko. Ponomarenko is now a Technical Specialist though Marie Bowness & Katerina Mrazova were fulfilling that function here. Ponomarenko says, "only about four or five steps were changed from when we did it." The music, however, is different. The Russian duo, who married and now live in California with their two children, were from Moscow. Taught by Natalia Dubova, they won medals in three successive Olympics, bronze (’84), silver (’88) and gold (’92). They were known for their near perfect footwork so no wonder this is considered the most difficult compulsory to do.

Dubeuil & Lauzon recently went through a trying time. She explained, "I got a virus which caused an ear infection. It shifted a piece of my inner ear and that gave me vertigo. I couldn’t even sleep lying down. I couldn’t turn my head without getting vertigo. I even fell down and injured my arm in the shower because of it. A therapist worked with me twisting my head like a wrestler. I had a hard time at nationals but I’m okay now. After nationals, we came straight here because there was no point in going back to France (where they train) for such a short time."

The skating world is lucky to have this couple still around. Who can forget Marie-France’s disastrous fall in the original in Torino, which took them out of the Games? Astonishingly, she was able to return to the ice and compete in the world championships in Calgary not long after. There, they won the Free Dance and finished second overall.

They said they would retire but after a short layoff discovered all the things they thought they disliked about competing were the things they actually missed the most. After talking to other athletes at a meeting for the Canadian Olympic Association, they changed their minds and decided to continue competing.

This season started well. They won their two Grand Prix events and were second in the Final behind the world champions, Abena Denkova & Maxim Staviski.

2. Lying second are Tanith Belbin, 22, & Ben Agosto, who turned 25 on January 15. They were only 0.82 in the elements score and 0.64 on the components behind the leaders. Belbin & Agosto, who won the Olympic silver medal in the absence of Dubreuil & Lauzon, recently won their 4th straight US title and have won medals in all five of their appearances in the Four Continents Championships, silver in ’02 & ’03 and gold for the past three years.

They looked like a couple on top of a wedding cake, she, all in white, with a see-through skirt and arm covering, he in standard black tails and white bow tie. Everything progressed well until the fourth segment of the second sequence, when Agosto tripped and put his left hand on the ice to keep from falling. He explained, "I still feel it was our strongest performance of the waltz, because we felt very tentative at nationals. We wanted to push it out here, to make it more exciting. It felt great and very smooth. It was a short turn-around from nationals but we managed to improve on the small things. Having performed here before we were used to the altitude, but it is still something we are aware of."

They received a negative GoE (0.58) which gave them only 1.02 marks. Dubreuil & Lauzon got a +0.75 which gave them 2.35. The bottom line is they would have been significantly ahead but for the error.

Belbin said, "The fact that we are less than a point behind the leaders even with a major error puts us in a good position. Even with the error, I felt this was a better dance than at nationals. We were more contained, we held back at nationals."

However, the draw for the original section has not favored them. The bottom four drew for the first group to skate but an open draw for the other eight couples. Belbin & Agosto will skate second in the second group, which is before the ice resurface while Dubreuil & Lauzon are skating second of the group after the flood.

3. In third, a significant distance (1.20 on the elements score plus 2.84 on the components) behind Belbin and Agosto, are Meryl Davis, 20, & Charlie White, 19, the ’06 US Junior champions. Breathing down their necks are the Canadians, Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir who were ahead of their US rivals by 0.14 on the component score but behind by 0.41 on the element marks.

These two talented couples both train in Canton, MI, with Igor Shpilband & Marina Zueva (who also co-trains Tanith & Ben). The careers of these two duos seem almost parallel. Both have skated with their partners for many years. Both were in their first Senior Grand Prix events this season.

Charlie even beat Scott once in a hockey match. Davis said, "It helped a lot having the Golden Waltz at Nationals. If we’d only had a week to brush it up, it would have been a lot more difficult."

Because this is their first senior season, they only started working on it after they won bronze at the world junior championships last March. White said, "It’s been an interesting ride doing this dance. At first we thought it was just too difficult. It was an almost hopeless task." In Lake Placid last summer, the first time they competed with it, he fell flat during the first few steps. Then in Skate Canada, in the GW, Davis ran out of rink. Her blade hit the barrier and she brought White down with her and both crashed to the ice. Those beginnings are now over and, after a lot of work, they are much more comfortable with it. White added, "But you get into it and you start to feel it, start to feel the music. By the end of the year, it was pretty comfortable, not too bad at all. And confidence-wise, we’ve been feeding off what we did in nationals (where they were an upset second in this dance, beaten only by Belbin & Agosto)." They finished third overall at nationals gaining a spot on the world championship team."

Neither Davis & White, nor Virtue & Moir received a negative mean GoE for this dance, for which the eleven judges and the referee give eight marks plus scores for the four component divisions for each couple. (There are five components for all the other sections, but the compulsory, of course, does not get a choreography mark since the steps are identical for everyone – or, I should say, are meant to be identical.) Davis, who was prettily attired bright pink, said about that choice, "I was advised to get the brightest possible color. I think I’d call this neon coral."

4. Moir, 19, struggled with a nose bleed that started at the end of their warm-up. "I just choked it back and kept breathing in (which you really shouldn’t do because the blood then goes down the wrong way). We shrunk down the second pattern." Looking at the marks, he confessed, "I really don’t know what the marks mean." Virtue, 17, who was also in pink, said, "The second sequence was definitely more difficult but we tried to keep the energy level up."

Virtue & Moir are the reigning world junior champions and were runners-up for the Canadian title in Halifax. They won bronze in this event last year.

5. In fifth, 3.71 points behind their teammates, are Lauren Senft, 19, Leif Gislason, 23, who were 4th in the Canadian championships. The competed in this event two years ago finishing fifth. "It was a little disappointing not being third at nationals," said Senft. "But they announced we would come here at the closing ceremony. We hope this season will end on a high note and are pleased to be here." (Kaitlyn Weaver, who is from Houston, and Andrew Poje who teamed up only in August, were a surprise third in Canadian nationals after being 7th in the CD and 3rd in the other two sections. They are being sent to World Juniors instead of this event.)

Gislason said, "We skated very free and with no reservations. We were really excited to be done and not to have to train this dance anymore!" They changed training locations last April 20 and now train with the stable of skaters in Canton, Michigan.

6. In sixth place, only 0.33 behind Senft & Gislason are Kimberly Navarro, 25, & Brent Bommentre, 22. "We did some minor mistakes, (particularly in the third segment of the second sequence) after the cascade steps," said Navarro, who wore a regal dress of gold, "but we feel we really connect with the audience and with ourselves right from the opening pose. We feel we improved a lot after Vienna, Skate America and Skate Canada."

Navarro & Bommentre were the replacements for the second ranked US couple, Melissa Gregory & Denis Petukhov. The US couples skated one after another, with Navarro & Brent Bommentre, sixth on, Belbin & Agosto seventh, and Davis & White eighth.

7. Skating last and delighted with their seventh place standing, 1.95 points behind Navarro & Bommentre, are the ’06 US Novice champions, Cathy Reed & her brother, Chris Reed, who now represent Japan.

"Because of my age (19)," said Cathy, "I knew we could not compete on the junior circuit. Because we are half Japanese (they have a Japanese mother), we were able to approach Japan." They were both born in Kalamazoo. Chris is 17.

"We’re totally excited," said Chris. "We competed in Zagreb and were well received. (They finished fourth.) That was great experience. We were second (of three couples) in the Japanese championships. (The current champions have said they expect to retire after the world championships in Tokyo.) The Japanese have lots of talent in the singles events. We would like to show that we can represent them well in ice dance. Going from novice to the Golden Waltz was the hardest thing. When we tried it with the music, we thought it was impossible."

Cathy, who wore white and muted green, said, "I can’t stop smiling. We were very nevous." They drew to skate the original last immediately following Davis & White.

8. Xintong Huang, who just turned 20 in January, & Zun Zheng, 19, who are the Chinese champions, lie eighth, 2.81 points behind the Reeds after getting minus GoE’s for all but one of their eight segments. They were 10th in this event last year and have competed in the last three world junior championships, finishing 19th, 14th, and 11th. They train with Hongyan Xi in both Harbin and Beijing. They were 2nd in the recent Asian Games.

9. Olga Akimova, 23, & Alexander Shakalov, 28, from Uzbekistan lie a further 1.70 back in ninth place after getting minus GoE’s for all the eight segments. They are trained by Svetlana Alexeeva in Moscow, although their hometown is Tashkent, their country’s capital city. This is their third appearance in this competition. Akimova was at the Four Continents with two previous partners, while Shakalov also competed in this event with another partner. Their highest finish has been 11th last year.

10. Xiaoyang Yu, 20, & Chen Wang, 20, were 7th in this event last year in their fourth appearance in this event. They lie a small 0.54 behind the Uzbekis. Yu & Wang who train alongside their teammates, Huang & Zheng, were the ’06 Chinese champions but were third in the Asian Games.

11. Brother and sister, Laura, 25, & Luke Munana, 27, who were born in San Jose, CA, but are the first ice dancers ever to represent Mexico, are in a transition phase. "We recently changed coaches (from the Ponomarenkovs to Muriel Zazoui in Lyon, France.) We have only been there for a week but it is very exciting and she is changing many things about us including our technique." They lie 1.40 behind Yu & Wang.

12. Because the GW is so difficult, it is easy to sort out the competitors. Maria & Evgeni Borounov were completely outclassed, finishing 8.12 points behind the Munanas. "We’re not at this standard," admitted Maria, who is 24 and was born in Perth in Western Australia when they live and train. "We were second in Australia when there were only two couples and this time we won the title but there were just us. We only learned this dance a short time ago and it is so hard. We didn’t fall and we had no deductions. I thought I skated as well as I could. Evgeni thought he did better in practice. He said he was very nervous. We’ve only competed once before internationally. That was this event last year (where they finished 14th). We’ll have a whole new frame of mind tomorrow. We will be doing nothing like the same steps. Our association has set us a goal. If we make 85.00 points, we will go to the world championships. It was a long trip here." They were married (to each other) in ’02. Evgeny, who is 27, was born in Moscow. They train with Elena Kustarova & Svetlana Alexeeva.

 

Original Dance

 Tango

 
Starting Order - Original Dance
  1. Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov

  2. Laura Munana & Luke Munana

  3. Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov

  4. Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang

  5. Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason

  6. Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto

  7. Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng

  8. Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre

  9. Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir

  10. Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon

  11. Meryl Davis & Charlie White

  12. Cathy Reed & Chris Reed

 

Original Dance Placements
Place Couple Country
1 Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto USA
2 Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon CAN
3 Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir CAN
4 Meryl Davis & Charlie White USA
5 Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre USA
6 Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason CAN
7 Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng CHN
8 Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang CHN
9 Cathy Reed & Chris Reed JPN
10 Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov UZB
11 Laura Munana & Luke Munana MEX
12 Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov AUS

Belbin & Agosto

Debreuil & Lauzon

Virtue & Moir

 

 


Belbin & Agosto Overcome Torn Hem to Triumph

By Lynn Rutherford

It was "D-day" for Tanith n’ Ben.

After a less-than-stellar fall season, the couple badly needed a confidence-building win over World silver medalists Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon in the Tango Original Dance held this afternoon at Colorado Springs’ World Skating Arena.

They got it, although their hopes nearly unraveled along with the decorative hem of Belbin’s dress.

The Canton, Michigan-based team had unison trouble on twizzles mid-way through their mid-line step sequence, when Belbin meandered a bit. The element was dropped to Level 3, although it maintained a GOE of +.25.

The remainder of their elements – particularly a well-shaped pair spin and closing rotational lift with lovely rise and fall, both rated Level 4 – were strong and well-defined. The couple earned 60.45 points (30.58 TES + 29.87 PCS) to take a slim .31-point lead overall.

"I was doing the one-foot section of our mid-line steps, trying to clearly show my rocker, and my blade got snagged in my dress," Belbin said. "I just pulled it as hard as I could and kept going. I’m impressed I was able to keep my balance."

"Everything else felt great," Agosto added. "Our coach said it was our best run-through yet. It’s so difficult to put in the intensity and emotion, and still do the difficult elements."

The performance was enough to hold off Dubreuil & Lauzon, who had a few missteps of their own.

The five-time Canadian champions, who train in Lyon, France in Muriel Boucher-Zazoui’s school, effectively set the mood when took the ice: Lauzon played the role of a predator on the dance floor, stalking his partner.

The couple opened with their mid-line steps, and Dubreuil quickly showed signs of the vertigo that had troubled her at the Canadian Championships less than two weeks ago. She put a foot down on the twizzle sequence, reducing that element to a Level 3, and remained tentative throughout the steps, which were also graded a Level 3.

After the couple’s awe-inspiring straight-line lift, mini-disaster struck when Dubreuil stumbled on a transition move leading into their spin. Although the slip was not on an element, it undoubtedly lowered several of their component scores. Therefore, despite showing the character of the tango with more intensity than the Americans, they placed second with 59.32 points (39.58 TES + 29.74 PCS).

(This is the second OD of the season for the couple, who won their two Grand Prix events and placed second in the Grand Prix Final to World champions Albena Denkova & Maxim Staviski. After receiving feedback at Skate Canada that their initial OD was not on the proper beat, the couple contacted David Wilson to choreograph another dance. He, in turn, enlisted former ice dancer Julie Marcotte, and the four created the OD used today.)

"We just brush it off and move on and that’s it," Dubreuil said. "The stumble was not on an element but it still had impact. Tanith and Ben had a stumble yesterday and we had one today."

World junior champions Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir, who placed second at Canadians, performed an intricate, sophisticated tango highlighted by superb edges, fine positions in the combination lift and good twizzle sequences at the end of their mid-line steps.

The young couple skated exceptionally close together and built the performance to an effective climax. They earned 57.49 points (31.23 TES + 26.26 PCS), with all six of their elements gaining Level 4.

"We’re thrilled about our Level 4’s," Virtue said. "It’s definitely been something we’ve been working on technically. So we’re very happy with our skate today. We felt really solid out there."

Fast-rising Americans Meryl Davis & Charlie White, who train with Belbin & Agosto and Virtue & Moir in Canton, placed third, nearly three points behind their training mates. Opening with a fine Level 4 spin with White in exceptionally low and difficult positions, the couple had a lovely transition into their mid-line steps, which began with the fastest twizzle sequence of the event. The exceptionally difficult diagonal step sequence (Level 4) was done with authority.

Davis & White earned 54.66 points (29.47 TES + 25.19 PCS) for 88.34 points overall. They sit fourth going in to the free dance.

"It felt really good. It was probably our best run-through of the year," White said. "It was nice to do it at Four Continents, with the altitude and all, and coming off of Nationals."

"It might not have been our best technical score, but it was our (highest) level of intensity and commitment," Davis added. (Their straight-line lift and mid-line steps gained Level 3, while they were hoping for Level 4.)

Both skaters denied that their close competition with Virtue & Moir created tension at the Canton rink, where Virtue & Moir, Davis & White, Belbin & Agosto, Senft & Gislason, and other couples are all coached by Igor Shpilband and Marina Zoueva.

"It might be a problem if we were not such good friends with Tessa and Scott off the ice," White said. "We’re pretty much best friends. We can’t control what the judges do. Actually I think competing together is an advantage, because we support each other so much."

Davis agreed, saying, "Everyone gets equal time from our coaches. If one team gets one more lesson one day, then the other gets an extra lesson the next day."

Americans Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre earned a personal best 48.44 points with their tango. For the first time internationally they earned four Level 4 elements. (The diagonal steps were graded Level 2.) As always, strong edges and her perfect positions set the team apart.

"Our skating skills get better with every performance," Bommentre said. "There’s no expiration date on our partnership. We’re still a new team (18 months); all of this experience makes us better."

The fourth-place couple at Canadian Nationals, Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason, performed an International-style tango highlighted by fine positions in the pair spin. Undone by twizzle trouble at the Canadian Championships – where they had hoped to place third – the couple was overly cautious on both their mid-line and diagonal step sequences.

They earned a rather generous 46.34 points (25.42 TES + 20.92 PCS) for sixth place in the OD and sixth overall.

Attractive, handsomely costumed (in black and red, with silver trim) Xiayang Yu & Chen Wang of China skated an International-style (French) tango. While the lissome, well-matched couple had attractive lifts, their mid-line steps were slow and they lost unison in an intricate diagonal step sequence. They earned 41.56 points for seventh place in the OD, and sit in ninth place overall.

Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng of China were eighth in the OD and are eighth overall. Cathy & Chris Reed, the brother-and-sister duo from Kalamazoo who competes for Japan, lost ground when Cathy took an unfortunate fall during the diagonal step sequence. They placed ninth in the OD and will enter the free dance in seventh place, with 68.30 points.

Olga Akimova & Alexander Shakalov of Uzbekistan had a pleasant but slow performance to "Tango de Roxane." They placed 10th in the OD with 37.44 points, and sit in 10th place entering the free dance.

Laura & Luke Munana, the San Jose, California born brother-and-sister team who skate for Mexico, had a rather slow and labored performance, particularly in the mid-line steps. The couple has not improved over prior seasons, although their recent move to Zazoui’s school in Lyon proves they are still trying. The Munanas earned 36.35 points, far off their personal best of 42.35, and landed in 11th place in the OD and 11th overall.

Overmatched Australians Maria & Evgeni Borounov – she barely completed the mid-line step sequence, and later fell during the diagonal steps -- placed 12th in the OD and 12th overall, with 31.10 points.

 

Free Dance

 
Starting Order - Free Dance
  1. Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov

  2. Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov

  3. Laura Munana & Luke Munana

  4. Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang

  5. Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre

  6. Cathy Reed & Chris Reed

  7. Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason

  8. Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng

  9. Meryl Davis & Charlie White

  10. Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto

  11. Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir

  12. Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon

 

Free Dance Placements
Place Couple Country
1 Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon CAN
2 Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto USA
3 Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir CAN
4 Meryl Davis & Charlie White USA
5 Kimberly Navarro & Brent Bommentre USA
6 Cathy Reed & Chris Reed JPN
7 Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason CAN
8 Xintong Huang & Xun Zheng CHN
9 Xiaoyang Yu & Chen Wang CHN
10 Olga Akimova & ALexander Shakalov UZB
11 Laura Munana & Luke Munana MEX
12 Maria Borounov & Evgeni Borounov AUS

Debreuil & Lauzon

Belbin & Agosto

Virtue & Moir


Dubreuil & Lauzon Win Four Continents Title

by Alex Shibutani

Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon won the ice dancing title at the Four Continents Figure Skating Championships Friday afternoon at the World Arena in Colorado Springs, CO. With this year’s event as competitive as any, the audience was treated to a very high quality of skating and many strong performances.  The reigning World silver medalists (100.73 points) topped Americans Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto, last year’s Four Continents champions, in the free dance by a mere 1.92 points giving them the win with a combined event total of 198.59.

The Canadians performed their free dance to, "At Last" by Etta James. The couple received all level 4s except for on their circular and midline step sequences for which they received level 3s.  They did not receive a single negative GOE for their elements.

On winning the title, Dubreuil stated, "Just because of the altitude, it weighs a lot more. It’s very exciting for us to win this title. We haven’t been to Four Continents for the past three, four years The competition in ice dance was very rich."  When asked on their plans before Worlds, she said, "We’re going to David Wilson, our choreography. We have show numbers to do plus some work on our two choreographies … Our free dance had success all season, so there is no point in changing right now, it’s just fine tuning."

Four time U.S. National Champions and reigning World bronze medalists, Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto skated their relatively new free dance to music from the motion picture "Amelie" by Yann Thiersen. With about a week of preparation after the U.S. National Championships to make adjustments, Belbin & Agosto said that they still have more work to do but were still pleased with their performance.

"It’s always fun for us to come to Four Continents," Agosto said. "It’s a great opportunity to get out again. Every time we compete is a great learning experience for us. We benefit so much from being in front of the judges and with world class skaters."

Belbin & Agosto finished with 196.98 points with 98.81 of those points coming in the free dance.  Like Dubreuil & Lauzon, Belbin & Agosto received all level 4s except for on their step sequences in which they received level 3s.  At U.S. Nationals, Belbin & Agosto's diagonla step sequence was called level 2.  By improving one level, they increased their total base value to 43.60 points, to match the Canadians.

Canadians Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir, who placed second at their national championships, won the bronze medal with a combined score of 184.89. Their free dance earned a score of a 93.99.  Skating to "Valse Triste" by Jean Sibelius, Virtue & Moir received level 4s in all of their elements, except for their diagonal step sequence which received a level 3.  Like in the Original Dance, Virtue & Moir had the highest technical score of all teams in the event receiving a technical score of 50.40 points.

"It’s definitely a good confidence boost for us." Virtue said. "We had three good skates, solid performances and it’s definitely nice to get the mileage on the programs."

Virtue & Moir, who are Canadian teammates with Dubreuil & Lauzon and train with Belbin & Agosto, support everybody. "We are really good friends with Tanith & Ben and with Patrice & Marie-France. I think we try to cheer evenly as much as we can.

2007 U.S. bronze medalists, Meryl Davis & Charlie White finished in fourth place with 91.35 points in the Free Dance and 179.69 points overall.  Only 2.64 points behind Virtue & Moir in the Free Dance, they received all level 4s on their elements except for a level 2 on their rotational lift at the end of their program.

Skating to "Polovetsian Dances" by A. Borodin, the dynamic Davis & White skated their free dance with their usual power and flair. They also train with Belbin & Agosto, Virtue & Moir and sixth place finishers Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason in Canton, Michigan, under Igor Shpilband and Marina Zoueva. They will be joining their teammates in Tokyo, Japan on March 19 at the World Championships.

2007 U.S. pewter medalists, Kim Navarro & Brent Bommentre placed fifth in the free dance and fifth overall with 157.82 points, 80.01 scored in the Free Dance. Their Free Dance score was a personal best.  Navarro & Bommentre skated to a Beatles Medley that got the crowd involved with their fun and energetic free dance. They received level 4s on their elements except for their two step sequences, both of which were called level 3.

Canadians, Lauren Senft & Leif Gislason, who finished fourth at their nationals skated to "Anytime, Anywhere" by Sarah Brightman and came in seventh in the free dance with 73.35 points, and sixth overall with 149.39 points. They skated cleanly through nearly all their program only to have a fall in the final rotational lift before their closing pose.  It appears Senft miss-stepped exiting the lift.  In addition to the deduction, the lift was called level 2 and was also given a extended lift deduction.  This did not affect ther final result, however, since they ended up over 8 points behind Navarro & Bommentre in the final results.

 

2007 Four Continents Dance Medalists

 

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