Tuesday, March 30, 2010

“Asada beats Kim at World Figure skating championship - Meri News” plus 3 more


Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Asada beats Kim at World Figure skating championship - Meri News

Posted: 27 Mar 2010 12:45 PM PDT

AT THE World Figure skating championship in Turin, Italy, Mao Asada got her second figure skating title, beating Olympic silver medalist Kim Yu-na on Saturday. The win sees Kim Yu-na lose her first competition, after dominating for two seasons.

Figure skating watchers believe that this win by Asada, has caused an upswing in the rivalry between the two renowned figure skaters.

Asada has won the figure skating championship title this year, after her win in 2008. Last year, the title had gone to Kim Yu-na, who had wrested it from Asada. She has won this year's title by earning 197.58 points, seven more than the South Korean skater Kim Yu-na.

Mao Asada said,"I didn't think I would be sitting here. I had to continue and challenge and push myself. And I guess that is what led to today's results. I am just really happy Japan was able to get the gold in both the women's and the men's competition"

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Figure skating: Asada delighted to round off season ... - Big Hollywood

Posted: 30 Mar 2010 03:44 AM PDT

TOKYO, March 30 (AP) - (Kyodo)—Mao Asada on Tuesday spoke of her joy at rounding off the season with the gold medal after arriving home from a triumphant performance at the world figure skating championships in Turin.

Speaking at a Tokyo press conference alongside men's champion Daisuke Takahashi, Vancouver Olympic runner-up Asada said, "I was able to win the gold medal in the last event of the season with my best performance. I am so happy."

Asada opened a new chapter in her rivalry with Vancouver champion Kim Yu Na when she beat the South Korean starlet by almost seven points to win the gold in Italy on Saturday.

Asada's victory completed a golden double for Japan after Takahashi won the men's event in the absence of heavyweights Evgeni Plushenko and Evan Lysacek.

"I am proud to be the first Japanese men's world gold medalist," said Takahashi, who won bronze in Vancouver. "I thought we would have a chance to both win gold and told Mao how great I thought it was."

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Figure skating: Canadians Virtue-Moir win original ... - Honolulu Advertiser

Posted: 25 Mar 2010 12:25 PM PDT

TURIN, Italy — Olympic gold medalists Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada won the original dance at the World Figure Skating Championships on Thursday with a sultry, saucy flamenco, extending their lead over Vancouver runners-up Meryl Davis and Charlie White.

Virtue and Moir earned a season-best 70.27 points — almost two points higher than their Vancouver score.

"We didn't think we had quite the magic we had at the Olympic Games, but we were pleased with the performance," Moir said.

They have 114.40 points heading into Friday's free dance. Davis and White, two-time U.S. champions who train with Virtue and Moir, have 112.54 points after scoring a season-best 69.29 for their colorful Bollywood-on-ice OD.

The men's free skate is later Thursday.

Virtue said their Turin performance was stronger than the one in Vancouver, but there was no shortage of emotion as they performed fiery step sequences. The pair trained with flamenco dancers to infuse the piece with authenticity.

"A lot of that passion that they brought to us now comes from within," Virtue said.

The Canadians and Americans are both hungry for a world title — something neither has achieved — after their Olympic success. Though Virtue and Moir lead Davis and White by almost two points, that can be made up in Friday's free dance.

"We feel we used the Olympic Games to help us grow as skaters and performers, and I think it helped us out there," White said.

In Turin, the job of hometown favorites falls to Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali of Italy, who remained third in the overall standings by finishing third in the original dance. They have 100.01 total points.

The Italian crowd cheered wildly for Faiella and Scali's original dance, which combined traditional dances from Naples and Calabria. Their only flaw was an error on their twizzles — spinning turns — that cost them in both difficulty and execution.

"It's hard to dance with a crowd screaming like a soccer game, but we are very happy," Scali said.

Americans Emily Samuelson and Evan Bates were in 11th place after skating their country-western dance, with a total of 85.40 points. The couple, who finished 11th in Vancouver, need to maintain or improve their placing in the final free dance to secure three U.S. spots at next year's worlds.

"This is probably my favorite program to compete and the season, too, has been fantastic," Samuelson said.

The top two American couples must finish with a combined placement of 13 — second and 11th, for example — and Samuelson and Bates are being counted on after reigning world silver medalists Tanith Belbin and Ben Agosto decided not to compete.

The third American dance couple, Kimberly Navarro and Brent Bommentre, was in 13th with a Brazilian folk dance.

"We were motivated, we trained hard and we skated well today," Bommentre said. "Our only goal is to skate well and to enjoy. Well, maybe tomorrow we can do 300 points and win the gold medal!"

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Figure Skating: Virtue, Moir add world gold to Olympic title - Channel NewsAsia

Posted: 26 Mar 2010 05:18 PM PDT

Figure Skating: Virtue, Moir add world gold to Olympic title
Posted: 27 March 2010 0636 hrs


TURIN, Italy : Canadian ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir added the world title to their Olympic gold at the world figure skating championships here on Friday.

The couple edged Meryl Davis and Charlie White by just 1.43 points to take the title ahead of their US rivals, just as they did in Vancouver last month.

Italy's Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali claimed bronze, a distant third behind the two leading couples after the free dance final at the Palavela.

"We're really excited to have those two titles, this is big for us. It motivates us for bigger and better things in the future," Moir told Eurosport.

"This has always been in our mind, these two competitions were our main goals.

"Last year was difficult with Tessa's (shin) injury but we just peaked at the right time. It's just fortunate, but we worked very hard for this."

They become the first ice dancers since Russia's Oksana Grishuk and Yevgeny Platov in 1994 to hold the Olympic and world titles in the one season.

Despite an error by Moir on one of their twizzles in their programme to the haunting music of Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 5, the Canadians held their advantage from the first two rounds - the compulsory and original dance - to take their first world title.

They scored 110.03 for the free dance and 224.43 overall.

Olympic runners-up Davis, 23, and White, 22, showed incredible speed with intricate footwork and step sequences to Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera to win the free dance with a career best 110.49 and overall 223.03.

The top two couples, who are both trained by former Soviet ice dancers Marina Zueva and Igor Shpilband, were in a class of their own, finishing over 26 points ahead of their rivals.

Faiella and Scali scored 97.84 for their moving routine to Nino Rota's The Emigrants, giving them 197.85 overall, and their first world podium at their ninth attempt.

Virtue, 20, and Moir, 22, became the first Canadian ice dancers to win the ISU world junior championships in 2006, and in Vancouver the first North Americans to win the Olympic title.

But the road to Olympic and world gold has been rocky for the young couple.

They won silver at 2008 worlds, and were boosted by a bronze last year after missing the entire Grand Prix session because of a shin injury Virtue suffered due to overtraining.

They become the second Canadians to win the world title after Shae-Lynn Bourne and Victor Kraatz in 2003.

- AFP /ls

 

0 comments:

Post a Comment