Chan, Radionova, Yu/Zhang, Shibutani/Shibutani win at Audi Cup of China
In the
end, most of the top favorites prevailed at the Audi Cup of China in Beijing,
the fifth and penultimate event of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Series
in Beijing, but there were also a few upsets, most notably Ashley Wagner’s
failure to make the podium. Overall there were quite a few excellent
performances, but also some disappointments. The champions come from four different countries - Canada, Russia, China and USA and these four countries collected all medals at the event with Canada medaling in each discipline.
The Men: Patrick Chan once again on top
Patrick
Chan seems to have a history of struggling in the short and coming back strong
in the free skate. It happened again in Beijing: The Canadian messed up in his
Beatles short program. He put his hand down on the quad toe-triple toe
combination, which is a lesser mistake, then he stumbled badly on the triple
Axel, which was worse, but to cap it off, he doubled the Lutz. That really
shouldn’t happen to a skater at the level of Chan and the three-time World
Champion knows that he needs to put out two solid performances if he wants to
be competitive at events like the Grand Prix Final or World Championships. “I think I just lost a bit
my focus into the triple Lutz. In the short program those little mistakes
become very big mistakes. You do lose a lot of points,” Chan said. He called
himself lucky to be in the top three and was right. Most of the other skaters
also made mistakes: Russia’s Sergei Voronov stumbled on the triple loop (after
landing a nice quad-triple toe combo), Max Aaron (USA) stepped out of the
triple Lutz and Han Yan of China made an error on the triple Axel and singled
the Lutz, to name a few. Only three skaters had a “clean” short: Boyang Jin of
China, who landed a quad Lutz-triple toe combo, triple Axel and quad toe in his
program to “Spiderman” as well as Ross Miner (USA) and Alexander Petrov of
Russia, but these two did not risk a quad and downgraded their Lutz-toe
combination to triple-double. As a result, Jin led clearly, followed by World
Junior Champion Daniel Samohin, who went for two quads and missed the toe and
Chan.
In the
free once again, Chan proved his class. He had drawn to skate after Jin, who
obviously is very popular and got lots of toys. From the cheering of the crowd
and from the score, Patrick knew that the young Chinese skater had done well,
but he did not pay attention to it but got into his own zone. His performance
to Eric Radford’s wonderful piece “A Journey” was a true highlight of the whole
competition. Chan nailed his jumps (all but one), including a strong
quad-triple toe and another quad toe in the second half and even his “old
enemy”, the triple Axel was nice, and the only one he missed was the quad
Salchow that he only tried for the second time in competition. But he went for
it, he didn’t pop it, he rotated it and he carried on after the fall as if
nothing had happened. The jumps and spins were embedded into the choreography
and the Olympic silver medalist showed a real program, not just a collection of
elements. He got a big score of 196.31 points and racked up 279.72 to edge out
Jin by a little more than one point. “The program felt very methodical, I
didn’t give it more energy that it needed. I really just told myself to relax
and not rush, just to enjoy every element on its own and I think it worked.
Even with the fall on the quad Salchow I didn’t panic. I got up and started
doing the program as I do it at home, forget about the mistake and just move
on,” Patrick explained.
Since he is of Chinese
heritage and was even announced by the Chinese announcer with his Chinese name
“Chen Wei Qun”, he was
also warmly welcomed by the crowd and the fans didn’t seem too disappointed
that he overtook the cheerful “Tian Tian” (Jin’s nickname).
Jin was
most of all pleased with the progress he has made since Skate America. “I
worked very hard, because I wanted to skate better here”, the 19-year-old said.
He definitely did. After the solid short he followed up with a good long,
hitting three out of his four planned quads (Lutz, Salchow, one toe), and
falling only on one quad toe. “I felt that I skated very well. I made one mistake on the
quadruple toeloop that I underrotated and that influenced my score. It did not
feel pressure and I got a seasons best in both programs”, the World bronze
medalist commented. He really seems to enjoy his program to “La Strada” and it
suits his playful personality. Although Boyang is focused a lot on his jumps,
he does interpret the music and tries his best to bring the program across, but
obviously his presentation pales in comparison to the sophistication and
maturity of Patrick Chan.
Veteran
Voronov, who already had skated very well in the long at Skate America, proved
again that he is still a force to be reckoned with. Since joining his new coach
Inna Goncharenko last spring, the now 29-year-old from Moscow has become more
consistent again. He landed the quad toe both short and long plus big triple
Axels, but he also made a stupid mistake and did one triple toe too many.
“Honestly my plan was to do two quad toes in the free today. But not only I
tripled the first toe, but I also added an extra triple toe. I really should
not do these kind of stupid mistakes anymore. It almost cost me the medal. But
I’m glad that I’m on the podium with these two great skaters – Patrick is a
multiple World Champion and Boyang is a rising star in the sport,” the Russian
skater noted. This also should help him to strengthen his position in Russia,
because so far he is the only Russian man that won a medal in the Grand Prix
series and he also finished ahead of his younger teammates Alexander Petrov and
Maxim Kovtun. Petrov was solid in both programs, but he was a little “tame”,
not very exciting and captivating, and he did not try a quad (6 th ).
Kovtun had followed Voronov and switched to Goncharenko last May, but so far he
has not built up more confidence and consistency. He missed the take-off for
the quad toe in the short and singled it. The free was better with three quads
(a good toe and Salchow and step out on the second Salchow), a triple Axel, but
a single Lutz. So he pulled up from 10 th and last to 7 th
place.
Max Aaron
could be pleased with his overall performance, although he narrowly missed the
podium. The short was much better than at Rostelecom Cup and the long was not
bad either, although the American struggled with one triple Axel and a triple
loop (4 th ). Han Yan popped an Axel and stumbled on the quad toe, he
is still not consistent (5 th ). Daniel Samohin, who surprisingly
stood in second place following the short obviously could not deal yet with the
pressure and his own expectations. The 18-year-old, who had to skate last after
Chan’s impressive free, had a rough performance, fell on his two quad attempts
and singled both Axels and so he plummeted all the way to 8 th .
Usually he is a fearless competitor and attacks his elements not matter what,
but this time he seemed intimidated and probably wanted to stay on the podium
too much. Alexei Mishin called him “hurricane”, appreciative of his fire and
aggressiveness. But it was an important lesson and experience for the World
Junior Champion who has a lot of potential not only technically, but also as a
performer on the ice. Ross Miner (9 th ) and Michal Brezina (10 th )
disappointed and made unnecessary and costly mistakes like popping jumps.
The Ladies: Radionova rallies to gold
Elena Radionova is
still battling the effects of puberty and growth, plus she fell sick in
September and lost some training time. But the two-time European silver
medalist is not one that gives up easily. She grits her teeth and fights for
each element. The 17-year-old was ranked
second in the short to “Porgy and Bess” as her triple toe in the combination
with a triple Lutz was called underrotated and also overall she looked slower
and less confident than Kaetlyn Osmond. The powerful Canadian has big jumps and
rightfully earns +2 and +3 GOEs for them when she lands them. So Osmond won the
short with her characteristic performance to “Sous le ciel de Paris” and
“Milord”. However, Kaetlyn still does not have so much experience in competing
for podium spots and sometimes struggles to keep her focus. After a strong
start into her “La Boheme” free with triple flip-triple toe and double
Axel-triple toe, she landed forward on the Lutz and almost fell and later
crashed on a triple loop that was underrotated. The Canadian slipped to second
place, but she qualified for her first Grand Prix Final with two silver medals.
“I started off really strong, it was the first time
that I did those two jumps (combinations) together in competition. After that I
did two mistakes that were really uncharacteristic for me. I know that is
something I just have to work on leading into the next few competitions,
hopefully keeping my focus a little bit longer,” Osmond said.
Radionova
has upped the difficulty of her program and moved five jumping passes into the
second half and also exchanged her triple loop-half loop-triple Salchow
combination with a triple Lutz-half loop-triple Salchow. “To learn the
combination was not difficult, but the five jumps in the second half are a bit
hard, most of all mentally. You feel like you’ve skated half your program, but
the whole program (jumping content) is still to come”, the Muscovite explained.
She dealt well with the challenge this time, the only technical error in her
performance to “Turandot” was another underrotation in her first triple
Lutz-triple toe combination. “Usually I don’t have a problem with
underrorations, since we’ve been taught to do the jumps correctly from the very
beginning,” Radionova commented. “But it just means I have to look at it and
work harder.” Overall the blond teenager that loves to pose for photos and
always has a smile for the camera seems back on track. Now her program need
more mileage and more speed and power, then she can compete with anyone.
Following Skate
Canada, Elizaveta (Lisa) Tuktamysheva went back to last year’s program “Peer
Gynt”. “The coaches told me that and at first I was shocked. I really liked the
character of Cleopatra. But I never skated the program really well and so it
was perceived as mediocre, not a winning program”, the 2015 World Champion
said. So she agreed to go back to “Peer Gynt” and went to Moscow during
Rostelecom Cup to work on it with Stéphane Lambiel. The change paid off, the program
was more dynamic and the music is more pleasant and building, too. Lisa
delivered a strong performance with six triples (she touched down on a triple
Salchow) and only doubled the second Lutz. “Both Lutzes are now in the second
half, usually they were my first jumps,” Tuktamysheva pointed out. The Russian
originally wanted to try the triple Axel again in competition in Beijing, but
since she had fallen sick after her visit in Moscow, she had no time to prepare
it. The bronze medal was a good step forward for the 2015 European Champion. In
the short, she was fourth as she had overrotated her triple toe-triple toe
combination.
Mai Mihara, a pleasant
young skater from Japan, like at Skate America convinced in the short with
triple Lutz-triple toe. In the “Cinderella” long program she singled a Lutz and
stepped out of the triple loop and dropped from third to fourth, but she can be
more than happy with her debut at the senior Grand Prix. At the closing banquet
she took her picture with Ashley Wagner and radiated with joy when Ashley
complimented her for her performances. Her teammate Rika Hongo made a few
little errors on jumps and still needs to work on her posture (5 th ).
Ashley Wagner seemed
like a given for the Final after winning Skate America and looking good there.
However, in China the World silver medalist suddenly seemed to have lost her
confidence. In the short program, the landing of her triple flip was somewhat
shaky and she didn’t go for the triple toe in combination, but added a double
to the loop later in the program. The American came fifth. In the long not less
than six out of seven triples were called underrotated and also the two last
spins got only a level two (6 th ). Zijun Li of China and Courtney
Hicks (USA) skated less well than in their first Grand Prix events and placed 8 th
and 9 th respectively. Li wants to join Alexei Mishin’s training
group in Russia, time will tell if she really gets to go.
The Pairs: Success for new Chinese teams Yu/Zhang and Peng/Jin
Last spring the news
of the partner swapping of the Chinese pairs Cheng Peng/Hao Zhang and Xiaoyu
Yu/Yang Jin upset many fans. Judging from some messages in Chinese social media
(that soon disappeared again) it seemed like that especially Yu was unhappy
with the change. Now, about six months later, everyone has to admit that the
partner change so far has worked out well. Both teams appear very well matched
and they skated well, too. Nobody seemed unhappy either. Asked at the press
conference about the change, Zhang, the oldest and “leader” among the Chinese
skaters explained: “The partner change was a decision of our skating federation
after last season. They saw that we would be a better match that way
physically. There was a lot of talk about it, but now everyone can see that we
skate really well with our new partners.” It seems amazing how fast they
adjusted to each other and had no difficulty in performing their big throws,
which usually takes a lot of time with a new partner. On the other hand,
obviously they all come from the same school and use the same technique, which
makes it a lot easier. Yu/Zhang had clean short and made only one mistake in
the long, when he fell on the side by side triple toe. At first Zhang didn’t
even remember when he had fallen like that the last time in competition and
finally said that it must have been almost seven years ago at the 2010 Olympic
Winter Games. So Yu/Zhang celebrated victory in their second Grand Prix event
as a team and qualified for the Final that they both had attended last year
with their previous partners.
Peng/Jin competed in
their first competition and came out with the silver medal, which is also a big
accomplishment. The couple did not make any major mistakes. Their short program
to “My Drag” is cute and full of humour, the long program to the somewhat sappy
song “I Will Wait For You” from “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg” featured a double
Axel jumped not side by side, but crossing over and good throws. Peng only
stepped out of the side by side triple toe. “Lori Nichol choreographed this
program for us,” Jin said about the short. “While we were practicing steps, we
heard the music playing in the background and we wanted to dance to it right
away. So we asked Lori if we can skate to it and she agreed. It is a cheerful
program with humor and acting. We enjoy it very much,” he continued.
After taking the
bronze at Skate Canada, Liubov Iliushchechkina/Dylan Moscovitch had a chance to
make it to the Final and maybe put too much pressure on themselves. In the
short, they stood in second. Their side by side triple toes were wobbly, but
the other elements in their Tango routine were strong. Their long program did
not go too well, though. They both made errors on the side by side jumps (for
some reason the Technical Panel called their first jump, a toe, as a Salchow),
and both throw triple Lutz and throw triple loop were not clean. “It was a rough go
for us today. It was unfortunate and disappointing and it wasn’t depicting how
we’ve been training and how we’ve been practicing here. The program got kind of
broken up by the mistakes,” Moscovitch said. They settled for the bronze, which
will be not enough for the Final.
Xuehan
Wang/Lei Wang of China confirmed the strength of the Chinese pair skating team
by coming fourth, but they made mistakes on the solo jumps in the free skating.
Italians Nicole Della Monica/Matteo Guarise had a good short, but in the long
to “Love Story” they made several errors including her fall on the throw triple
loop and him aborting a lift. Yuko Kavaguti/Alexander Smirnov of Russia had
missed some training time as her foot where she had suffered a ruptured
Achilles tendon last January, had bothered her and looked not quite ready. In
the free she landed her jumps, but he singled an Axel and aborted a lift so that
they could not move up from sixth place. Mari Vartmann/Ruben Blommaert of
Germany overall were quite solid, but she missed the throw triple flip in both
programs. Jessica Pfund/Joshua Santillan (USA) were not really competitive in
this field.
Ice Dance: Shibutanis dance to gold
The Ice Dance
competition once more proved how competitive and exciting the discipline currently
is and how close the couples are in ability and how quickly results can change.
World silver medalists Maia and Alex Shibutani, the “ShibSibs”, obviously were
the top contenders and also had won Skate America. However, the brother and
sister team found themselves in second place, edged out narrowly for first
place by Canada’s Kaitlyn Weaver/Andrew Poje. Both team had turned in enjoyable
and excellent performances to Blues and Hip Hop. The Americans had used “That’s
Life” in the original version performed by Frank Sinatra for the Blues and then
in a Hip Hop version by Jay Z. The Canadians started out with the Blues “The
Way You Make Me Feel” and then continued with the cool songs “Dangerous” and
“Jam” by Michael Jackson for the Hip Hop.
The Shibutanis got
only a level two for their partial step sequence, that made the difference
here. But in the free dance the American overtook Weaver/Poje thanks to better
levels and also higher component scores. Weaver/Poje also looked strong in
their dance to “Concierto de Aranjuez”, and when they meet again next time, the
outcome might be different.
“We love our material
this year, and so we’re able to step out on the ice very confident and we were
confident going into today’s free dance that we would be happy with our
performance,” Alex Shibutani commented.
“This season is all
about building. We had a coaching change and change of location. We started learning
again from the beginning, building out technique from step one. And that takes
time. It is not always an instantaneous result. I think now that we have time
to go back again and keep building. We didn’t make any major mistakes here
today, but everything can get better. We have to max out every single level,”
Weaver said. The Canadians are now training with Nikolai Morozov in Hackensack
but also spent time with him in Novogorsk near Moscow.
Alexandra
Stepanova/Ivan Bukin continue to draw attention and put out two strong
performances that earned them the bronze medal. The young Russian dancers look
suddenly more grown up and not anymore like a team that just came out of
juniors, especially in their passionate Argentine Tango free dance. Also their
confidence level is increasing. “We got personal best scores in the short and
free dance here and that motivates us a lot. We know now that we are
competitive with the top teams”, Stepanova noted.
Their teammates
Victoria Sinitsina/Nikita Katsalapov had a late start into the season as he
underwent shoulder surgery last spring. The couple has relocated back to
Moscow, also because of financial reasons as the medical treatment and ongoing
physical therapy he needs are expensive in the USA. In Moscow, they train with
Oleg Volkov, but are in close touch with Marina Zueva, as they pointed out. The
Russians came fourth with good levels, but got a bit less positive GOEs and
lower components than their national rivals.
Natalia
Kaliszek/Maksym Spodirev from Poland were solid fifth. The crowd enjoyed their
“Dirty Dancing” program in the free dance. Not far behind were the top Chinese
dancers Shiyue Wang/Xinyu Liu in sixth.
This article originally has been written for Iceskating International by our writer and is published there as well.