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- <text id=94TT0257>
- <title>
- Feb. 28, 1994: High Flyers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 28, 1994 Ministry of Rage:Louis Farrakhan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 56
- High Flyers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As a veteran pair triumphs, a new triumvirate emerges
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Duffy--Reported by Susanna Schrobsdorff/Hamar
- </p>
- <p> In an Olympics where the women's practice sessions grabbed the
- headlines, an important change of guard took place in skating.
- The kids--relatively speaking--took over the men's field
- four years before they were expected to claim dominance. Lillehammer
- was heralded as the final showdown among veteran champions.
- Instead they fell away, and the gold went to Russia's 20-year-old
- Alexei Urmanov, a fledgling classicist who was not tipped to
- win anything. The silver skater was an aerial whiz from Canada,
- Elvis Stojko, 21. Philippe Candeloro, 22, a blithe and showy
- Frenchman, took the bronze after an incendiary program to Godfather
- music ended with a fall on a triple Axel near the end.
- </p>
- <p> The established masters did not disgrace themselves. Viktor
- Petrenko, Kurt Browning and Brian Boitano had virtually lost
- their medal hopes two days earlier by skating weak short programs.
- But experience still counts: each was able to draw on reserves
- of seasoning in international competition to deliver a smooth,
- clean long routine. They placed fourth, fifth and sixth, respectively.
- That kind of finesse was what U.S. champion Scott Davis, 22,
- could not summon. Nervous and spill-prone, he wound up eighth.
- </p>
- <p> The jumps told the story, and Urmanov had them--all eight
- of his planned triples. Stojko achieved higher elevation, and
- Candeloro's leaps were mighty, but both had bobbles. As two-time
- Olympic champion and TV commentator Dick Button put it, "The
- judges consider first whether you've completed your triples.
- After that, the overall impact of the program. Last of all comes
- skating: footwork, spins and musicality." If these priorities
- prevail, there will be more and more Stojkos and Candeloros
- at the top. Only the sky is their limit.
- </p>
- <p> The young gun with the gold was the most balletic in his approach,
- triples notwithstanding. Urmanov is no firecracker, but his
- program had pleasing balance. A native of St. Petersburg, he
- trains with one of his country's best, Alexei Mishin. For his
- efforts, Urmanov gets about $30 a month. Not for long.
- </p>
- <p> Stojko and Candeloro provided the color in the competition:
- theirs should develop into a rich and fervent rivalry. Stojko
- is not so handsome as his eponym or so graceful. But could the
- Pelvis jump like a cat? Stojko can. And he shares Presley's
- taste for loud music and louder costumes. But at the rink he
- is determined. "I'm very hungry for what I want," he says.
- "Nothing's going to stand in my way." His parents, Steve and
- Irene, emigrated from Eastern Europe to Ontario in the mid-1950s.
- Maybe his flair has been inherited; they named their first son
- Attila. At age 2, Elvis looked at skating on TV and announced
- that he wanted to do that. It was nearly three years before
- the Stojkos relented, but the rest is history: Elvis has been
- in high-level competition for six years.
- </p>
- <p> Candeloro fancies himself a young Corleone. His approach to
- a program is freer-than-freestyle, and he is the most crowd-pleasing
- male skater to come along since Browning, radiating a cheeky
- sense of the ridiculous. At one point Candeloro's answering-machine
- tape told callers to leave a message because he might be with
- a beautiful young woman. At the moment he sports a tiny cross
- in his ear, "so small," he says with relish, "the judges can't
- see it."
- </p>
- <p> Veterans did prevail at the pairs event. In the best competition
- in years, experience told the story, with returning Russian
- pros still setting the standard for grace and synchronization.
- The gold went to Ekaterina Gordeeva, 22, and her husband Sergei
- Grinkov, 27. Not much to quarrel with on that score, because
- the couple delivered a long program of seamless beauty.
- </p>
- <p> Still there was some old-fashioned second-guessing afterward.
- Another returning Russian pair, the 1992 Olympic winners Natalia
- Mishkutienok, 23, and Artur Dmitriev, 26, rated silver for a
- showier, sexier program. One sequence resembled gymnastics on
- ice, lacking only the parallel bars and pommel horse. The couple's
- coach, Tamara Moskvina, plotted the splashy routine to draw
- attention to her underdog pair with "a single piece of theater."
- As for the winners' chaste presentation, she said enigmatically,
- "Some prefer the priest; some prefer the priest's wife."
- </p>
- <p> The bronze went to Canadians Isabelle Brasseur, 23, and Lloyd
- Eisler, 30, but as far as Eisler was concerned, they won gold
- too. A tireless critic of the rule change that allows professional
- skaters into the Olympics, he declared, "We feel bad for the
- younger ones who came in fourth and fifth, because the pros
- came back."
- </p>
- <p> It was an exciting week, that is, if world-class skating is
- what you're looking for. This week promises more--and less.
- In the dance competition, which Jayne Torvill and Christopher
- Dean turned into a glamour event, the distance between the three
- top couples is minuscule. Then comes the real showdown, the
- ladies' championship. At last the world can judge whether Nancy
- Kerrigan came back all the way from the clubbing attack. Often
- depicted as a fragile blossom, she showed a formidable dramatic
- streak when, on her first practice with Harding, she wore the
- white costume in which she was attacked. "I want her to see
- me in it again," she told her startled coach. Now that's infighting.
- As for Harding, she will have to demonstrate that her triple
- jumps equal her superb media balance. A pesky ankle has bothered
- her lately. In Hamar a silver cross was swinging from her neck,
- and at a press conference she invoked God in her cause.
- </p>
- <p> But don't get too distracted by the Americans. Keep your eye
- on Surya Bonaly of France, Chen Lu of China and Oksana Baiul
- of Ukraine. They may hold the whole Olympic world in their hands.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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