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- <text id=92TT0317>
- <title>
- Feb. 10, 1992: Spinning Gold
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 10, 1992 Japan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- 1992 WINTER OLYMPICS, Page 54
- Spinning Gold
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Japan's queen of the ice will face off in a sublime showdown
- with a trio of American women skaters, possibly the best the
- U.S. has ever fielded
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Duffy--With reporting by Barry Hillenbrand/Nagoya
- and Ellie McGrath/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> Lucky the sport that the camera smiles on. Television's
- appetite for photogenic action is insatiable, and pursuits that
- were once mere cottage industries of athletics have been
- streamlined and glamorized for the diversion of millions of
- viewers.
- </p>
- <p> Take figure skating. It used to be an arcane discipline
- that grew out of skating on frozen ponds and swamps, where the
- ice was black and people could trace their names--or
- grapevines or Maltese crosses--on a winter evening. Those
- innocent exercises gradually evolved into amateur competitions
- in which painfully exacting school figures counted for much of
- a skater's score, the rest being determined by the more
- spectacular free skating.
- </p>
- <p> The camera did not like the slow, nearly invisible school
- figures, and neither did the skaters who, in the 1980s,
- performed them with declining skill and panache. This year,
- however, just in time for the Olympics, the sport is reborn with
- the banishment of the dreaded set patterns. What is left is an
- effortlessly pleasurable sight for the spectator. Don't know a
- Lutz from a Salchow? The TV commentators will tell you, or you
- can ignore the voice-over and just watch graceful young athletes
- interpret the music in wonderfully tricky ways.
- </p>
- <p> The elimination of school figures, which required years of
- concentration to perfect, has revitalized the sport in another
- way. Now anyone in the top talent pool can win any given
- competition. Says American coach Carol Heiss Jenkins: "It will
- be more like tennis--the winner will be whoever is good on
- that day." She should know: her pupil Lisa Ervin, a mere 14
- years old, leaped her way into fourth place at last month's U.S.
- National championships. Another two points and she would have
- been the youngest competitor at Albertville.
- </p>
- <p> Ervin was competing in the strongest field of U.S. skaters
- since 1956, when the Olympic women's team was Tenley Albright,
- Heiss (both future gold medalists) and Catherine Machado. This
- year's trio could sweep the medals, as they did at last year's
- World's Championship in Munich. If they do not, the reason will
- probably be Japan's Midori Ito, 21. She is 4 ft. 9 in. and built
- like a fireplug. But can she fly! At Munich her image was set
- indelibly, warts and all, when she took off and whirled,
- airborne, into the stands. That was the embarrassing part. Then
- she went back out again, her radiant smile lighting up the
- arena. Among the Americans, the national champ is Kristi
- Yamaguchi, 21, a 5-ft. sprite from Fremont, Calif., known for
- her precise, delicate artistry. Runner-up is Nancy Kerrigan, 22,
- of Stoneham, Mass., a Kate Hepburn-style beauty whose elegance
- carries over into her performing style. Third--but national
- champion in 1991--is Tonya Harding, 22, of Portland, Ore., a
- bold, natural athlete who pays little attention to nuance, less
- to music. Tonya gets out there and jumps.
- </p>
- <p> These four skaters, by most assessments, will be competing
- for just about the most glamorous gold medal in winter sports;
- the winner will be the reigning Ice Queen. There is a
- temptation among some followers of the sport to see the Olympic
- conflict in terms of athleticism (Ito) vs. artistry (Yamaguchi).
- This face-off would give Ito the edge. As ex-Olympic champ
- Dorothy Hamill puts it, "Kristi is graceful and musical. But
- when Midori skates, she has me on the edge of my seat." The
- excitement comes from the power of Ito's leaps. No skimming
- above the surface--her jumps pop. She could execute all the
- categories at age 11, and had perfected them at 12. As Canadian
- choreographer Sandra Bezic says, "She blows away most guys in
- the field."
- </p>
- <p> Ito lives in Nagoya, Japan's fourth largest city, working
- with just one coach, Machiko Yamada, and even living with her
- since Ito's parents separated 11 years ago. Albertville will be
- the culmination of 17 years' work for both women, and they are
- planning a program with somewhat more focus on artistry. It is
- unlikely, though, that they will try to imitate the lithe and
- pretty Yamaguchi. Says Yamada: "I always stress with Midori that
- this is a sport."
- </p>
- <p> Experts agree that Ito has set new jumping standards in
- the sport. Dick Button, a TV commentator and former Olympic
- winner, marvels at an Ito special: a triple Axel followed
- directly by a camel spin. Says he: "What's amazing is that she
- lands the jump at tremendous speed, arrests the forward motion
- and creates a rotation." Inevitably, others are catching up.
- Says Ito wistfully: "I cannot make a mistake because people not
- quite so good as I am can win since they have some higher
- artistry." It may not say so in the rule book, but smiles do
- have a way of counting, and Midori Ito has set some standards
- in that department too.
- </p>
- <p> Tonya Harding has not been as consistent a performer as
- Ito, but they have a lot in common: ice is native ground to
- both, and they take to it without fear. Harding's story is a
- rare one: she is a scrappy kid from the wrong side of the
- tracks who has had to battle herself, her family and the high
- price of skating mastery to become an international performer.
- </p>
- <p> Figure skating is not really a rich man's sport. Most
- families of successful competitors have had to make sacrifices
- and seek outside help. But skaters usually have backgrounds more
- stable than Harding's. Her father, a laborer, was her mother's
- fourth husband; there have been two more since. A coach took
- over in Tonya's teen years, but the girl rebelled and entered
- what has been an off-again on-again marriage. That alone makes
- her unusual. So deep is their dedication that many female
- competitors could be called the Skating Nuns. A married Ice
- Queen is a very rare creature indeed.
- </p>
- <p> At last month's U.S. National championships in Orlando,
- Fla., Harding was several pounds overweight, and she sustained
- an ankle injury in practice. But with typical grit she stuck to
- her program, which includes a triple Axel, a 3 1/2-revolution
- trap of a jump that only Ito and she have landed in
- competition. In the short program she fell. In the long program,
- she tumbled again and lost any chance of catching Kerrigan. Was
- she foolhardy to try? Maybe, but she gave notice that, win or
- lose, she means business.
- </p>
- <p> Triples are now the yardstick of the sport. They range in
- difficulty from the toe loop and Salchow, through the loop, flip
- and Lutz to the Axel, the ultimate challenge. Senior male
- competitors do triples routinely, but they are very tough for
- women who lack sufficient strength. One difference between
- watching on TV and seeing a competition is that at rinkside,
- spectators see all 20-odd contenders, not just the top handful.
- Among the lower rankings the number of falls is shocking.
- "There's a big element of risk," says Don Laws, who coached
- Scott Hamilton and knows that you cannot hold back and win.
- "They're not out there doing 60% in a polished way. They're
- doing 100% of their capability, and it's not quite under their
- belts."
- </p>
- <p> Of all the top ladies, Nancy Kerrigan is the closest to
- having a cult. Purists love her. She does graceful jumps,
- finishing them with an open, ample spread of her arms. She
- doesn't have a triple Axel and doesn't jar judges or spectators
- by trying one. She just skates as if annealed to the music. In
- some respects she is a throwback to Peggy Fleming, who gave the
- impression that she would skate with exactly the same purity if
- she were alone on a pond. To Kerrigan, the great advantage of
- her elevated status is that she usually gets to practice on an
- empty rink. "You can get artsy and try things out," she says.
- "Maybe what you really want is to show the music off." Spoken
- like an artist.
- </p>
- <p> Kristi Yamaguchi does not have a triple Axel either, but
- that's about the only weapon her arsenal lacks, and in the past
- year she has completed the transition from a cute kid trickster
- to a poised and elegant stylist. She too had to leave her home
- as a teenager and pursue superior coaching at Edmonton, Alta.
- Canadian champion Kurt Browning, who also trains there, is a pal
- and a one-man cheering squad. Bezic, who has worked out many
- routines for the likes of Katarina Witt and Brian Boitano, is
- also on Yamaguchi's team. Bezic devised a short program for her
- that was the most distinctive at the U.S. Nationals.
- </p>
- <p> The choice of the Blue Danube waltz at first appeared to
- be cliche, but both its beauty and familiarity make it a
- challenge that Yamaguchi lives up to. "It's strong music," she
- observes, "so I have to move strongly to it, using deeper plies
- for more power and smoothness." Bezic found the inspiration for
- her choreography not in any "story" or dramatic line, but simply
- in the thought of a girl at a mirror realizing that she is now
- a woman. It seems that when Yamaguchi boards with Bezic to work
- on the routines, she ends the day in front of the mirror in her
- room, going over her moves. Her coach calls her an ideal pupil.
- "She never forgets any nuance," says Bezic. "Last July I asked
- her to look straight at the judges over her shoulder at a
- certain moment, and in January there she was on TV doing it."
- </p>
- <p> They are at their most beautiful, these rarefied athletes,
- in the six-minute practice session where competitors warm up,
- a few at a time. Done by a Kerrigan, the waltz jump, a mere
- half revolution, is a perfection of grace. A double Axel is
- clear and open, not the whipped-up whir that a triple must be.
- Yamaguchi and Harding may land perfect leaps in tandem, a few
- feet apart on the ice. All the women are intently absorbed, and
- their jumps look less like stunts than whitecaps bubbling out
- of waves. To a purist, Ito and Harding may lack finesse,
- Yamaguchi passion, Kerrigan the competitive killer instinct. But
- one of them will harness her painfully acquired skills to her
- natural effervescence and skate away with the gold medal. It
- could be one of the Olympics' great performances.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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