Saturday, March 27, 2010

“Figure Skating World Championships Results - ESPN.com” plus 3 more


Figure Skating World Championships Results - ESPN.com

Posted: 27 Mar 2010 10:43 AM PDT

Saturday

At Turin, Italy

Women

Final Ranking

1. Mao Asada, Japan, 197.58 points.

2. Kim Yu-na, South Korea, 190.79.

3. Laura Lepisto, Finland, 178.62.

4. Miki Ando, Japan, 177.82.

5. Cynthia Phaneuf, Canada, 177.54.

6. Carolina Kostner, Italy, 177.31.

7. Mirai Nagasu, United States, 175.48.

8. Ksenia Makarova, Russia, 169.64.

9. Rachael Flatt, United States, 167.44.

10. Viktoria Helgesson, Sweden, 161.79.

11. Akiko Suzuki, Japan, 160.04.

12. Sarah Heckin, Germany, 153.94.

13. Alena Leonova, Russia, 152.86.

14. Jenna McCorkell, Britain, 150.90.

15. Julia Sebestyen, Hungary, 147.66.

16. Liu Yan, China, 141.29.

17. Cheltzie Lee, Australia, 137.78.

18. Elene Gedevanishvili, Georgia, 137.33.

19. Kiira Korpi, Finland, 134.49.

20. Sonia Lafuente, Spain, 133.31.

21. Elena Glebova, Estonia, 132.85.

22. Kwak Min-jung, South Korea, 120.47.

23. Anastasia Gimazetdinova, Uzbekistan, 113.89.

24. Manouk Gijsman, Netherlands, 111.94.


Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index

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Asada topples Queen Kim to reclaim world figure skating ... - YAHOO!

Posted: 27 Mar 2010 12:09 PM PDT

TURIN (AFP) – Japanese teenager Mao Asada toppled Olympic champion Kim Yu-Na to make up in some way for her Vancouver disappointment by claiming a second world title at the world championships here on Saturday.

Olympic runner-up Asada, 19, added to the world title she won in Gothenburg in 2008, as Japan claimed a double on the final day of worlds after Daisuke Takahashi won their first men's gold earlier in the week.

It was the first defeat for Kim since the Grand Prix Final in December 2008 when Asada also beat her.

The favourite had struggled in seventh after a disastrous short programme and could not follow her Olympic exploits in the free skate as she fell during her routine to finish nearly 38 points off the world record total she achieved in Vancouver.

As Kim struggled, the feisty Asada, who had placed second in the short programme, was determined to seize her chance.

Skating to Rachmaninov's "Bells of Moscow" she gave an error-free performance, which included the triple axel which she is the only woman to land in competition, to achieve 129.50 points for the free skate and 197.58 overall.

She finished 6.80 points ahead of her long-time rival.

"I didn't think I would be sitting here," admitted Asada, who has had a mixed season before rebounding by claiming a fourth Japanese national title and the Olympic silver.

"I had to continue to challenge myself and push myself to try the triple Axel. The spirit of challenge has helped me to get where I was today.

"I'm very happy because I've done perfectly in both long and short programme. I'm satisfied with this competition and it is a relief after the Olympic Games."

She added: "I wanted to follow Takahashi's success. I think that Europe is a lucky place for me. Next year the World Championships are in Japan and I think this is a good start to the new season."

Skating in the earlier group, the 19-year-old Kim, known to her fans as 'Queen Yu-Na,' needed something exceptional to defend her title.

But she was far from her majestic best and after her fall on the triple salchow she did not attempt the final double axel jump in her performance to Gershwin's "Concerto in F".

She nevertheless scored the best marks in the free skate with 130.49 for 190.78 overall.

In Vancouver Kim scored 228.56 overall and 150.06 in the free skate.

"These championships were mentally the most difficult for me," said Kim as she left the ice at the Palavela, struggling to manage a smile.

"For the moment I'm just happy to have finished the season. This morning practice didn't go well, I was worried, I couldn't concentrate. I even thought of pulling out."

Kim, who completed her world medal collection after already holding two bronze, refused to be drawn on her future plans amid reports she was planning to retire.

"The Olympic Games were the biggest goal in my life. After winning the gold medal I thought there was nothing more, but I was happy to come to Turin and I wanted to give my best.

"It was a mental and physical struggle after the Olympic Games. At the Olympics my condition was at its peak, but I felt I can do one more competition.

"I'm going to go to Korea to spend time with my family and have fun and I'll decide afterwards," she said."

Laura Lepisto giving Finland their first world medal with bronze, as American Mirai Nagasu, who had led the short programme, finished seventh.

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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!"

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Takahashi wins men's title - Post-Bulletin

Posted: 26 Mar 2010 06:05 AM PDT

Associated Press
TURIN, Italy — Evan Lysacek, the men's figure skating gold medalist at the Vancouver Games, did not try to defend his title at the world championship this week He had other plans. While Japan's Daisuke Takahashi became world champion on Thursday, clinching the title with a dazzling long program, Lysacek continued to soak up his Olympic glory.

He was practicing his ballroom dancing skills for his role on the ABC television show "Dancing With the Stars." He was preparing to headline the Stars on Ice tour. And on Friday, he will be celebrating in Naperville, Ill., his hometown, during what has been called Evan Lysacek day.

Lysacek, though, is not alone in playing hooky from this world championship, which is being held without some of the Vancouver Games' biggest stars. In an Olympic year, that is nothing new.

In all, five of the 12 medalists — including two gold medalists — have skipped the worlds, which will conclude Saturday with the women's final.

''There's always been that question, why hold a world championships in an Olympic year because it is just not as satisfying as it usually is?" Scott Hamilton, the 1984 Olympic champion, said. "Some of the top skaters don't go. After the Olympic Games, people are fried and exhausted — not only the athletes, but also the spectators. I understand why the worlds have become an anticlimax."

Still, some superstar skaters like Kim Yu-na of South Korea are scheduled to compete. Kim, the Olympic gold medalist who was nearly flawless in Vancouver, will attempt to defend her world title and build on her reputation as one of the most dominant skaters in history.

Her longtime rival and the silver medalist in Vancouver, Mao Asada of Japan, will also be there. But the Olympic bronze medalist, Joannie Rochette, whose mother died of a heart attack during the Games, is taking a break from competition.

On Thursday, Canada's Patrick Chan won the men's silver. France's Brian Joubert won the bronze. Jeremy Abbott, the two-time U.S. national champion, was fifth. He was ninth at the Olympics.

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