2010 Skate Canada

Men's Event

 

by

Alexandra Stevenson

 
Final Standings
Place Skater Country SP FS
1 Patrick Chan CAN 4 1
2 Nobunari Oda JPN 1 3
3 Adam Rippon USA 3 2
4 Kevin Reynolds CAN 2 6
5 Javier Fernandez ESP 6 4
6 Alban Preaubert FRA 5 5
7 Artur Gachinski RUS 7 7
8 Jeremy Ten CAN 9 8
9 Yasuhara Nanri JPN 8 9
10 Grant Hochstein USA 12 10
11 Kristoffer Berntsson SWE 11 11
12 Paolo Bacchini ITA 10 12

Short Program

 
Starting Order - Short Program

Warmup Group 1

1. Jeremy Ten, CAN
2. Paolo Bacchini, ITA
3. Grant Hochstein, USA
4. Yasuhara Nanri, JPN
5. Kristoffer Berntsson, SWE
6. Javier Fernandez, ESP

Warmup Group 2

7. Kevin Reynolds, CAN
8. Artur Gachinski, RUS
9. Adam Rippon, USA
10. Alban Preaubert, FRA
11. Patrick Chan, CAN
12. Nobunari Oda, JPN

Start Time: 28:15

 

Short Program Placements
Place Skater Country
1 Nobunari Oda JPN
2 Kevin Reynolds CAN
3 Adam Rippon USA
4 Patrick Chan CAN
5 Alban Preaubert FRA
6 Javier Fernandez ESP
7 Artur Gachinski RUS
8 Yasuhara Nanri JPN
9 Jeremy Ten CAN
10 Paolo Bacchini ITA
11 Kristoffer Berntsson SWE
12 Grant Hochstein USA

Nobunari Oda


Japanese Oda Makes  Spectacular Comeback

Chan fourth after falling three times and surviving earlier bruising collision with Rippon

Reynolds goes into record books as first to do two quads in SP

1.81.37 (43.37+38.00) Proud new father, Nobunari ODA, Japan, was beaming smugly Friday night. "Yes, I have a son, Shintaro. He was born this month, October 1. He is back in Japan with my wife, and, yes, I am pleased with how I skated. I was really upset after Worlds. This season, I have practiced more and I’m more confident. Becoming a father has given me confidence." The 23-year-old had an up-and-down last season, placing seventh in the Olympics, although he had previously lost his national title, and then went to Worlds in Torino and had an absolute disaster, placing 28th, not even qualifying for the FS.

Skating order in Grand Prix events is done by ISU standings, which are a product of various events over the past two seasons, although they use only the better position from either Worlds or Olympics. So, Oda, and not Chan, was given the honor of skating last. He took the ice immediately after Chan’s disaster. "No, I did not see Patrick skate," Oda said. "I keep to myself at that time. I have to prepare for my routine." Skating to Storm by Yoshida Brothers, Oda gave a spectacular showing.

He opened with a super triple Axel which earned straight +2s from eight of the nine-member panel, and a +3 from the remaining judge. For his next move, triple flip to triple loop, he earned two +3s and the rest of the panel gave +2. His triple Lutz got three +2s, five +1 and one 0, which means that panelist thought the jump was merely adequate in all respects. All three spins earned Level 4 with +0.43; +0.64 and +0.57 GoEs. His straight line steps were Level 3, but no competitor earned a Level 4 for this element. His steps’ GoE was +0.43. After the disappointment at Worlds, Oda left his coach, Nikolai Morosov, and is now trained in Barrie, Ontario, by Lee Barkell.

2.80.09 (46.03+34.06) Kevin REYNOLDS first tried a quad when he was 15, and landed one in the Canadian championships in 2006. But in many competitions since then, he had often been saddled with under-rotation penalties. Now the rules have changed. This is the first season attempting two quads in the Short Program has been sanctioned, and the 20-year-old from Coquiltam, British Columbia, has stepped up to his niche in history, as did a series of his Canadian predecessors, starting with Don Jackson’s triple Lutz (’62 Worlds), Vern Taylor’s triple Axel (’78 Worlds), Kurt Browning’s first quad (toe ’88 Worlds) and Elvis Stokyo’s quad-triple in ’97 in Skate Canada in Hamilton, Ontario.

Reynolds, whose slight build (130 pounds on a 5’9" frame) belies his splendid muscle tone, had his best placing nationally in five entries in the Canadian Senior championship this year, earning the bronze and getting his first berth on the World Senior Championship team, finishing 11th. Skating first of the top six, to two pieces by Art Blakey, Moanin’ and Drum Thunder Suite, he soared through his first element, quad Salchow to triple toe, rotating so fast that some viewers assumed it was a triple-triple. The judges’ increased the base value for this move of 14.60, with +0.71 GoE.

Thrilled by his accomplishment, Reynolds let his concentration slip for a moment and was forced to execute a double three turn to hold onto the landing of the triple Axel, which lost him -1.71 off that move’s base value of 8.50. Stunned back into concentrating, he earned +0.71 over the 10.30 base value of his second quad, a toe loop. Reynolds will never forget this moment. "I was absolutely thrilled when I landed that second quad. I had so many emotions running through my head. I was so happy. It’s the first time I’ve got credit for two in a major competition. I’ll be going for two also tomorrow in the Free."

3.77.53 (41.10+36.43) Adam RIPPON faced the press after his Short Program, set to Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet, with an obviously bruised left cheek bone and icing his left shoulder. The facial red welt was at least the size of a quarter. That, and his aching shoulder, were the result of a spectacular crash with Chan in the morning practice. Chan was skating backward doing footwork and turned just in time to see Rippon executing a walley jump. The meeting of two speeding bodies sent Rippon flying over the Canadian and he did a face dive along the ice.

Rippon said, "That was definitely the most exciting collision, I’ve had but not the most dangerous. I hit my face a little bit and my shoulder. I’m fine and I think it knocked some of the nerves out of me. It definitely didn’t affect my performance today. And I think I look kind of cool with my bruise. All sorts of people keep coming up to me asking how I am."

Late in 2008, Rippon, the world junior champion, changed coaches and training grounds, moving to Canada. Rippon interested David Wilson enough to have the maestro agree to choreograph his routines. In doing that, he also got Brian Orser to agree to take him on as a pupil. Shortly after that he successfully defended his world junior title with a performance which was even better than the year before.

Now Rippon says, "I see Brian as more than a coach. I see him as a mentor. There have been times when my motivation dropped. He’s been through all this himself. Brian, David and Tracy Wilson play a huge role in keeping me grounded and focussed." (Orser is most famous for the battle of the Brians at the 1988 Olympics in Calgary, when he and Brian Boitano both gave incredibly moving performances, with Boitano taking gold and Orser getting his second straight Olympic silver.)

Rippon, the 2010 Four Continents and 2008 US Junior champion, was seventh at senior level in the US in 2009 and fifth earlier this year. Skating ninth, he began with a +1.0 triple Axel and a +1.40 triple flip to triple toe. After a Level 3 flying camel, he did an okay +0.20 triple Lutz. His other two spins were Level 4 with +0.43 for the change foot sit and +0.50 for the ending combination. His Level 3 steps earned +0.71.

4.73.20 (36.73+39.47 -3.0) Obviously, there is enormous pressure on Patrick CHAN. As the "face" of Skate Canada, a role the Olympic ice dance champions were expected to fulfill, he was the focus of the opening press conference for this event. Even with three falls (on his first two elements, the quad toe and triple Axel jumps, and, in a complete surprise, towards the end of his final move, the straight line steps), there was lots to appreciate.

To start with this was a new Short Program, set to Dave Brubek’s Take Five choreographed by Lori Nichol. The 3-time Canadian title-holder and twice world championship silver medalist, said the choice of music came about because he had so much fun with his exhibition program set to Don’t Worry! Be Happy! by Bobby McFerrin. This program has a similar Happy Go Lucky feeling. It encapsulates his youthful joie de vivre. From the opening stance, he puts himself into the role of cocky young man at a bar, with a girl on each arm. One of the girl’s boyfriends takes umbrage and throws a punch at him, but he shakes it off. However, maybe that mental image became a physical presence when he went sprawling on the quad, which was fully rotated.

Chan was quick to call himself "an idiot" afterwards. "When I missed the quad, I started to doubt myself. It’s a lack of experience. It’s part of the learning process. I’m at the bottom and must work my way up." The triple Axel fall was less of a surprise. "The quad is a lot more consistent than the Axel." As for his fall near the end of his straight-line step sequence, he said he scolded himself internally, saying, "You’re an idiot. That’s a rookie mistake. It was a stupid thing to do it. All I can stay is that I’m still getting used to the program. Obviously, it needs a lot more miles on it." Choreographer Nichol explains, "He’s like a young colt. He can still act goofy, which I love."

5.69.71 (35.57+34.14) Alban PREAUBERT, who has won bronze in the French championships four times, skated to Turtle Shoes by Bobby McFerrin. His only minus (-0.57) came on his triple Axel which was landed very scratchily. His combination was a +0.50 triple flip to triple toe loop and the solo jump out of steps was a +0.30 triple loop. Preaubert, 25, won bronze in Skate Canada last year. Two of his three spins earned Level 4 with small positives.

6.66.74 (34.32+32.42) Javier FERNANDEZ, 19, who became the first Spanish male to represent his country in figure skating at the Olympics since Dario Villalba took part in the 1956 Games, skated very expressively to Rhumba d’Amour and Nu Pogodi (a Russian cartoon soundtrack). It was a very audience-friendly routine. (Unlike Villalba who was towards the bottom of the field, Fernandez placed a very respectable 14th in Vancouver and was 12th in Worlds a few weeks later. He skated last in the first group of six and gave a quite obviously superior showing with a great +1.57 triple Axel. However, although he earned a Level 4 for a spin, he had trouble with his triple Lutz landing and he could get airborne again only for a double instead of the planned triple toe, and the effort was saddled with -0.20 GoE. Also his final spin was slammed with a Level 1.

7.66.57 (34.14+32.43) Artur GACHINSKI, the young Russian, known to fans as "baby" Plushenko, has already won two golds this season, albeit in more minor competitions, the Finlandia Trophy and Coupe de Nice. The 17 year-old world junior bronze medalist skated to a selection of music by Pink Floyd. He got credit for the rotation of his opening move, a quad toe, and almost fell so he couldn’t get airborne for the second jump of the intended combination. Although he brought off a good +1.0 triple Axel, and +0.30 triple loop, he got negatives on two of his three Level 3 spins. However, his energetic circular steps were a+0.57 Level 3.

Both he and Olympic silver medalist Evgeny Plushenko are trained by Alexei Mishin. Gachinkski was asked about his feelings on Plushenko’s recent statement that, despite his current ineligibility (due to taking part in exhibitions unauthorized by his national skating Federation), he is still hoping to compete in the 2014 Games. "It is good for the sport to have a leader. He is a fine example," Gachinski, said.

8.61.00 (31.60+29.40) Yasuhari NANRI, 25, must feel like he is on a treadmill going backwards. He was third twice in the Japanese championships 2007 &2008. But he was 4th nationally in 2009 and 5th last season. Skating to Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso by Camille St.-Saens, he did a good +0.57 triple Axel, a +0.10 triple Lutz, and got one Level 4 (for a -0.04 combination spin) but his steps were only base value Level 1 and his triple flip to double toe got a full point removed from the base value.

9.60.70 (30.39+30.31) Jeremy TEN’s best season came in 2009 when he placed third in the Canadian championship earning a spot on the world championship team, where he finished 17th. But his Olympic dreams were dashed when he finished only seventh in nationals last January. Skating to selections from the soundtrack of A Single Man, the 21-year-old from Vancouver, lost two full points on his triple Axel and, although he got +0.10 on his triple Lutz to triple toe, he singled his flip and earned Level 4 only for his final move, the combination spin.

10.59.78 (30.21+29.57) Paolo BACCHINI, 25, Italy, who finished 20th at the Olympics, but subsequently withdrew from the world championships because of a thigh injury and was off the ice for three months. He is still getting back to his former standard. He skated to a selection from the musical Pinocchio, presenting only a double Axel which put him out of this league of competitors.

The 25-year-old finished 20th in the Olympics, but withdrew from the 2010 World Championships due to an injury to his thigh and was off the ice for three months.

11.57.49 (26.32+32.17 -1.0)Kristoffer BERNTSSON, who won his first national title in 2000, becoming the first Swede ever to land a triple Axel in competition, skated to Yann Tiersen’s Comptine d’un Autre Ete (Nursery Rhyme of Another Summer. With negatives on four elements out of seven, it was a far inferior showing to the one he presented when winning this section in the Finlandia Trophy.

Berntsson, who is 28, said he had considered leaving the sport. "But then I thought, this is what I enjoy doing so why would I do that just because I’m getting older. I’m not in the best shape at the moment because I spent most of the summer finishing my Masters’ Thesis but I enjoy skating and as long as I can, I will continue."

12.56.98 (27.80+30.18 -1.0) Grant HOCHSTEIN, a 20-year-old from Grosse Point Park, MI, performed to Suite No. 3 and Herodiade by Jules Massenet, performed by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. Three weeks ago, Hochstein came within one/one hundredth of a point of winning the bronze medal in his first senior international competition, the Finlandia Trophy. He was fifth in the 2010 world junior championship.

His spins were all Level 4 with positive GoEs. But he is still transitioning to senior and his jump elements all received negatives. The triple Axel got credit for the rotation, although it had one arrow, but the combination was "only" triple Lutz to double toe and the triple flip received an edge call.

 

Free Skating

 
Starting Order - Free Skating

Warmup Group 1

1. Grant Hochstein, USA
2. Kristoffer Berntsson, SWE
3. Paolo Bacchini, ITA
4. Jeremy Ten, CAN
5. Yasuhara Nanri, JPN
6. Artur Gachinski, RUS

Warmup Group 2

7. Javier Fernandez, ESP
8. Alban Preaubert, FRA
9. Patrick Chan, CAN
10. Adam Rippon, USA
11. Kevin Reynolds, CAN
12. Nobunari Oda, JPN

Start Time: 16:00

 

Free Skating Placements
Place Skater Country
1 Patrick Chan CAN
2 Adam Rippon USA
3 Nobunari Oda JPN
4 Javier Fernandez ESP
5 Alban Preaubert FRA
6 Kevin Reynolds CAN
7 Artur Gachinski RUS
8 Jeremy Ten CAN
9 Yasuhara Nanri JPN
10 Grant Hochstein USA
11 Kristoffer Berntsson SWE
12 Paolo Bacchini ITA

 


 


Chan Jumps to Top With His First Quad

1.Total Score 239.54; 1. FS 166.32 (83.18+84.14 -1.0) Patrick CHAN obviously loves what he does. He was able to smile even after falling three times in the Short Program. Going into Saturday’s Free, on the surface, he didn’t seem to have a care. The boy doesn’t get out of his teens until this New Year’s Eve, yet he has escaped from a normal teenager’s angst. The secret is he loves what he is doing.

After third degree questioning, he did admit, "It was a little tough because I really didn’t know what I had done wrong yesterday. Maybe, I hestitated. But today, it was pretty exhilarating to land the quad and hear the crowd. They were so loud, I couldn’t even hear my music for the first couple of seconds. The quad takes skating to another level. It brings a different feeling. There’s a lot of excitement and a lot of tension because, if it goes wrong, as I have demonstrated, it can really take you down. Doing it is like being in a whirlwind, a vortex."

He skated ninth of the 12 skaters, presenting a reshuffling of his last year’s Phantom of the Opera. The quad was so good, all but one of the judging panel gave +2 and the ninth punched in his/her vote for the maximum +3. Chan banked a total of 12.30 points for this one move. The following jump, the triple Axel was another matter. It wasn’t straight in the air and there was no way he could NOT fall. Nevertheless, getting credit for the rotation earned him 5.50 points and he sprang back up as if he had hit a trampoline and not hard ice. That was followed by a +0.30 triple Lutz and +1.0 Level 3 straight line steps. As in the Short, no competitor received the maximum Level 4 for their steps, and only two other competitors received Level 3, Fernandez and Gachinski.

Two of Chan’s three spins were the maximum Level 4, and both received a GoE of +0.79. His third spin, the change foot sit was Level 3 with +0.57. Apart from the fall, his only negative GoE came on the ninth of the 13 elements, on his last combination of jumps, a triple loop to triple toe, which received -0.70 taken off its base value because the second jump was not quite fully rotated. The Specialist gave one arrow. Had it been more under-rotated, Chan would have received a second arrow and been downgraded to a double, which loses the skater a LOT of points.

Chan explained how modern dance instructor Kathy Johnson played a major part in his getting his quad this season, and how he made the decision to include a quad toe in both routines. "Last season, I was doing the quad in the harness but not really getting it. The quad (toe loop) is definitely more consistent than my triple Axel. Kathy explained how to use my core body as well as my arms and legs. Everything has to move together. Before, I wasn’t doing that and the arms and legs were not being reinforced and supplemented by my core. When I put that extra strength into action, the rotation came so much more easily."

Johnson, who studied Martha Graham technique and then attended the Julliard School of Dance in New York, got interested in skaters after her daughter took up the figure skating, and she realized how much alike the dance and skating fields are. Chan agrees. "I’ve looked at a lot of ballet tapes. They don’t have the advantage we have of glide and momentum. I did a lot of ballet when I was young so I wasn’t unused to dance but there are things I didn’t realize before."

Chan landed his first quad in competition at the Liberty Open in Aston, PA, this summer. "We are very careful not to over train it," Chan says. "If I have a day when things are not working out, after two attempts, we just move on to something else." He also said the break-up with former coach Don Laws and his move to Colorado Springs under the guidance of Christy Krall was made to take advantage of the training opportunities. "Every day, there are people on the ice in Colorado, including Juniors like Brandon Mroz and Joshua Ferris, doing quads. It’s very motivational to see that."

He also revealed that if he had won Olympic gold, he probably would have moved on to the next challenge, possibly even out of skating. "In the greater pattern of things, maybe it was all for the best that things happened the way they did. My goal, obviously, now is Sochi (where the Winter Olympics will take place in 2014). Although fifth place in the 2010 Olympics was an achievement in itself, most of Canada tuned in hoping to see Chan win a medal and now that is a goal which will define his next four years.

Chan also revealed that his views have changed about quads. "I now realize quads are a whole different level. You exert a lot more strength through your legs, through your glutes and the reat of your body. Your arms have to pull in really, really close. In the past, I kind of took the side that if you did a clean program without the quad you can still win. I understand differently now because I’m on the other side of the wall. I still believe it’s possible (to win a world title without a quad). Evan’s win at the Olympics was fair. He totally deserved it. He worked so hard for it. But including quads brings a level of excitement. You elevate your program to that level of excitement. Everyone else who has done quads, like Plushenko, has that excitement. Elvis had that excitement, Kurt(Browning) had that excitement, and I think that’s thanks to the quad. You get that extra oomph in your program from it."

2. .Total 236.52; 3. FS 155.15 (81.87+74.28 -1.0) Nobunari ODA, who had been in the lead after the Short, skated last to music from Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto No.1. He was slightly anti-climatic. He also began with a quad toe, which was meant to be combined with a triple, but the landing was not as slick as Chan’s. He decided not to take the risk of trying the other jump and received only the base value of 10.30. He did attach a triple toe to his next jump, a triple Axel which was so smoothly executed the entire judging panel punched in +2 and he banked a total of 14.60 points.

However, he fell on his second attempt at the triple Axel, set at the halfway point where the bonus ten percent clicks in for jumps. Towards the end, he was tiring. The last element was his third spin, and, although he got Level 4 for the other two spins, his flying sit was Level 3,with a negative (-0.13). Since he is now training in Canada, he will not go back to his native Japan until after Skate America, and won’t get to see his son born on October 1 until then. Asked about his feelings being separated from his wife and child at this critical time, he said that his mother is helping his wife, and his coach is deliberately making him as busy as possible so he hardly has time to think about loneliness. Although he won the silver, he was a full three points behind Chan, and he said he has a lot to work on before his next Grand Prix and a limited number of days to do so.

3. Total 233.04; 2. FS 155.51 (80.35+75.16) Adam RIPPON performed to Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No.2. He was second in the free but was unable to advance from third, finishing a clear three and a half points behind Oda. Rippon competed in his first US senior championship last season, finishing fifth. The competitors in that event who were fourth and fifth ended up at Worlds as the replacements for Evan Lysacek and Johnny Weir, where Rippon did extremely well, finishing sixth.

That success has put a lot of expectations on the youngster, who will turn 21 on November 11. He explained that winning the bronze here, "gives me a lot of confidence. I came in here not feeling my best. I had a cold. Then, I had a rough bit when Patrick and I collided (in practice), but with all that, I kept my head focused and stayed the course. I’m a little upset with my performance [quality] today. I know I can do better. I can hear my choreographers (David Wilson and Sebastien Britten) saying, ‘You had a blank face on you here and there you were early on the music.’ Next time I want to concentrate better on my breathing, and take each element one at a time."

Rippon began with a triple Axel to double toe followed by an inside spreadeagle into a double Axel and a triple Lutz with the three rotations executed with both arms over his head. This is Rippon’s own invention, a variation on the famed Boitano Lutz, in which one arm is positioned above the head. Pulling your arms into the body is a critical factor in creating proper rotation in a jump, so placing in a different position makes the jumps far more difficult. The judges were certainly impressed. Three of them awarded Rippon the maximum +3 GoE, while five others punched in +2 and the remaining official thought it was nothing special and worthy only of +1.

Later Ripon showed another variation with arms over the head in a three jump combination of triple Lutz to double toe to double loop. Rippon’s only negative came when he stepped out of his second triple Axel, set when the bonus marks click in. After this point, he also presented a +0.80 triple flip to triple toe loop, the previously mentioned three jump combination, a triple loop and a triple Salchow. Two of his spins earned the maximum Level 4 with +0.21 and +0.64. The other spin was Level 3 and +0.43. It was definitely a showing of great potential.

4. Total 218.65; 6. FS 138.56 (70.06+69.50 -1.0) Kevin Reynolds had been over-the-moon after moving into the record books as the first skater to execute two triple jumps in a Short Program. But he wasn’t able to sustain that standard. His opening quad Salchow and quad toe loop to triple toe loop were awarded +0.71 above their respective base values of 10.50 and 14.40 which meant he had acquired 26.32 points almost immediately after starting. But then he singled both his triple Axel attempts, and a publicized quad loop attempt turned into a triple. Towards the end of the four minute forty second routine he fell on a combination of triple flip to triple toe loop.The routine was set to The Skaters’ Waltz and two other Johann Strauss pieces of music.

5. Total 210.85; 4.FS 144.11 (75.11+69.00) Javier FERNANDEZ, Spain, showed he is also ready for the top ranks by bringing off a +1.71 quad toe and a +1.43 triple Axel. And, although he singled his second attempt at a triple Axel, he gave one of the event’s most enjoyable presentations set to the soundtrack of Pirates of the Carribbean by Klaus Badelt and Hans Zimmer, which included passages in which he mimed drinking from a bottle and staggering around in a Johnny Depp manner.

6. Total 209.05; 5. FS 139.34 (72.98+66.36) Albert PREAUBERT, France, used to give the public unusual enjoyable showings. However, after starting with a triple toe instead of the planned quad, and doing only a double toe after his first triple Axel, his routine, set to piano music by Franz Schubert, went rather flat.

7. Total 204.08; 7.FS 137.51 (73.91+63.60) Artur GACHINKI, Russia, put his hand down on his opening quad toe, but his triple Axel to double toe to double loop , and second triple Axel were very smoothly executed. He performed to The Bolt by Shostakovich, miming and doing all sort of weird positions including wiggling his gloved fingers, one hand white, one black.

8.Total 191.86; 8. FS 131.16 (67.66+64.50 -1.0) Jeremy TEN, from British Columbia, began his routine, set to The Queen Symphony by Tolga Kashif, with a very nice triple Axel, a triple Lutz to triple toe loop and a triple flip, but then he fell on his triple Axel which may have been because one of his boots came undone. He stopped and went to the referee, Susan Lynch, and was allowed to pick up the routine after relacing the boot without penalty.

9. Total 188.96; 9. FS 127.96 (69.56+58.40) Yasuri NANRI from Japan performed to Bizet’s Carmen played by Rodion Shchedrin. His black and white outfit also included a red glove and red lower part of one sleeve. Although he began with a +1.0 triple Axel to triple toe loop, he fell on his triple Axel.

10.Total 181.65; 10. FS 124.67 (64.45+61.22 -1.0) Grant HOCHSTEIN advanced from 12th to 10th with a routine set to the Adagio from Spartacus, despite falling on his triple Axel. "I didn’t do as well as I had done at the Finlandia Trophy three weeks ago, but, even though I fell on the triple Axel, I was pleased I got credit for the rotation. I was nervous going into Finlandia. Now I realize I should have been more relaxed there. This was a higher level and more business-like. I felt I skated with my heart." Apart from the fall, he received (small) negatives for only two elements. He got a -0.30 for his second triple Lutz, although the majority of the panel punched in zero, which meant they felt it was perfectly acceptable in all aspects. He also got a -0.60 on his last jumping pass, a triple flip to double toe which was meant to include a third jump, a double loop.

Hochstein e started out in Tae Kwon Do when he was five. "I was really good and I was only a couple of test away from getting my black belt. But then I watched the 1998 Olympics and Michelle Kwan changed my life." He still knows some of the moves, though, so, whatever you do, keep your distance!

11.Total 175.84; 11.FS 118.35 (55.71+62.64) Kristoffer BERNTSSON, Sweden FS Michael Jackson Medley

12.Total 167.60; 12.FS 107.82 (49.60+59.22 -1.0) Paolo BACCHINI Selection of music from Cirque du Soleil.

 

2010 Skate Canada Men's Medalists

 

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