Friday, November 5, 2010

“REFILING: 2ND LD: Figure Skating: Kozuka tops short program at Cup of China+ - Big Hollywood” plus 2 more


REFILING: 2ND LD: Figure Skating: Kozuka tops short program at Cup of China+ - Big Hollywood

Posted: 05 Nov 2010 09:10 AM PDT

China+ (AP) - BEIJING, Nov. 5 (Kyodo)—(EDS: CHANGING ORDER OF WINNER'S NAME)

Japan's Takahiko Kozuka topped the men's short program at the Cup of China, the third event of the Grand Prix figure skating series, on Friday.

Kozuka delivered a near perfect performance to earn 77.40 points, 2.60 clear of world bronze medalist Brian Joubert of France in second. Compatriot Tatsuki Machida placed seventh with 66.78 on his Grand Prix senior debut.

"Throughout the program, I skated very well," Kozuka said. He placed eighth at the Vancouver Olympic Games and 10th at the world championships last season.

"I'm happy that I could get a level four on my spin, which I had been struggling with," he said. "I myself like the free program so I hope I can skate in a way that everyone would feel the same about my performance."

Machida said, "I'm disappointed that I couldn't earn points because of my mistake on the triple lutz. I was nervous and my body didn't move well in the last half of the program."

In women's action, Japanese figure skaters Akiko Suzuki and Miki Ando placed second and third, respectively.

Suzuki, last year's surprise champion, collected 57.97 points while Ando, runner-up at the Grand Prix Final last season, had 56.11 for her routine.

"I'm surprised that I managed to get points even though I made mistakes," said Suzuki, who failed to land cleanly on her triple lutz.

"China is a place of luck to me. My moves were a little tense today so I want to relax in the free program," she added.

Ando said, "I'm glad I could land my triple-triple combination jump but it's disappointing that the second one was ruled as under- rotated."

American Mirai Nagasu, whose parents are Japanese, took the lead in the competition with 58.76.

In the ice dance, Nathalie Pechalat and Fabian Bourzat of France topped the short dance with 64.12. Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali of Italy followed in second with 57.21.

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French figure skating pair wins Cup of China short program - CBS Sports

Posted: 05 Nov 2010 05:00 AM PDT

BEIJING -- France's ice dance pair of Nathalie Pechalat and Fabian Bourzat won the short program at the Cup of China on Friday, beating favorites Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali of Italy.

The French pair, who have yet to win a Grand Prix event, impressed judges with a waltz to the tune from Dr. Zhivago, ending with a powerful rotational lift while gliding past the judges stand, receiving a score of 64.12 points.

Faiella and Scali, who have won multiple Grand Prix events, including a gold medal, were a distant second with 57.21 points.

Russia's Ekateria Bobrova and Dmitri Soloviev were third with 55.85 points.

"We changed our dance two weeks ago, so I wasn't so confident," said Pechalat. "I am not very happy, because we can do better, but I am happy because we had good marks."

Faiella and Scali's performance was marred when Scali's boot got caught on Faiella's dress, resulting in a two-point deduction.

"I'm disappointed with the problems we faced, but what happened today will not affect tomorrow's performance," said Scali.

The Cup of China, the third of six Grand Prix events, ends Saturday.

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Figure skating still part of Kerrigan's life - CharlotteObserver.com

Posted: 05 Nov 2010 09:28 PM PDT

Posted: Saturday, Nov. 06, 2010

People who don't know Nancy Kerrigan sometimes think it is funny to approach the former Olympic figure skater, laugh heartily and say, "How's the knee?"

Even 16 years after the event everyone remembers, Kerrigan doesn't find a lot of humor in this.

"I really don't know what's funny about getting attacked," she told me this week during her visit to Charlotte - which served as a sort of unofficial kickoff to what is to be a huge three months for her sport in this state. The U.S. Figure Skating Championships will be Jan.22-30 in Greensboro - the first time that competition has occurred in North Carolina.

Back to the knee. Kerrigan doesn't really say what she thinks when people ask how it is. To avoid the awkwardness, she has a standard reply.

"The knee is fine," she will say. "It's everything else that hurts."

At 41, now raising three children in Massachusetts and long retired from competition, Kerrigan remains instantly recognizable. Her flashy smile and icy gracefulness helped claim millions of fans during the 1990s, when she won two Olympic medals (one silver, one bronze) for the U.S. in the Olympics.

There's no getting around this, either - part of Kerrigan's fame comes because she was the sympathetic victim in one of the strangest, high-profile assaults in sports history.

It was the ex-husband of Kerrigan rival Tonya Harding who arranged the metal-baton attack on Kerrigan's knee not long before the 1994 Olympics. The whack heard around the world was designed to ensure Kerrigan wouldn't compete and steal Harding's thunder.

But Kerrigan recovered. Both she and Harding - who denied prior knowledge of the attack - competed during the 1994 Winter Olympics and ultimately scored some of the highest ratings in the history of TV. Kerrigan finished second and won worldwide acclaim. Harding was eighth, was eventually banned for life from U.S. Figure Skating events and has been a punchline ever since.

Kerrigan was in Charlotte this week to work with longtime friend Paul Wylie, another former Olympic silver medalist who now is a coach and has lived in Charlotte the past five years.

The two practiced a pairs routine together at Extreme Ice in Indian Trail, which is Wylie's home rink, in preparation for a "Golden Age of Skating" Christmas special that will be filmed in New Jersey and aired Christmas Day on NBC. They still looked very graceful together.

Neither will compete at the Greensboro nationals - there is no "legends" division. But Wylie, 46, is its honorary chairman.

"It's huge to have it here for the first time," Wylie said. "This is the crown jewel of figure skating in this country - the U.S. Olympians not only for the 2014 team but also 2018 will no doubt be competing. It's surprising, really, that our state got this. It's almost like we don't know what to make of it, but we better make something of it pretty quickly because it's coming in January."

As for Kerrigan, her life mostly revolves around her husband and their children (ages 13, 5 and 2). But she has had her share of tragedy. During January, her father, Daniel Kerrigan, died of heart problems shortly after he and her brother fought. Her brother, Mark, has been charged with manslaughter, although the Kerrigan family has said it doesn't blame Mark for the death.

Kerrigan said she doesn't think about Harding and the attack on her knee anymore unless others bring it up.

"It's sort of sad to be remembered for being attacked instead of being one of six U.S. women to have two figure skating medals," Kerrigan said. "That's too bad, because I worked really hard. I didn't work hard to be attacked."

I would argue, though, that Kerrigan is remembered as much more than a victim.

She has lived a life hard for most of us to imagine, both for its peaks and its valleys. And she has persevered.

Scott Fowler: 704-358-5140; sfowler@charlotteobserver.com

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