Russia not as dominant as in the past at
Rostelecom Cup
Rostelecom Cup in Moscow was the third event of the
ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series 2016/17 and thus some of the medalists
qualified for the Final or at least have a very good chance. Russian skaters
were not as dominant as in some previous years, however the host country still
got five out of twelve medals: gold and silver in the Ladies, gold in Ice
Dance, silver and bronze in the Pairs event. But the competition showed also
that the Ladies are still Russia’s top discipline and the only one that almost
guarantees medals and victories.
The event moved back to the modern Megasport ice rink,
that had been closed the past three years for renovations as the construction
of a new metro line led to structural problems of the building. The metro
station right next to Megasport is supposed to open next year. Rostelecom Cup,
which is formerly known and by many still referred to as “Cup of Russia”, was
very well attended with overall 30,400 spectators on the three days. On
Saturday alone 9,900 fans came to watch the free skating. Megasport is a much
friendlier and more convenient building than the old Luzhniki Hall that served
as the venue before Megasport was built and during its renovation.
Golden comeback for Russia’s Ekaterina Bobrova/Dmitri Soloviev
Compared to their dominance in
the past, Russian ice dance is in a crisis these days. Instead of having two
teams that fight for gold and silver, they have been on the World podium only
once after 2009 when Ekaterina Bobrova/Dmitri Soloviev got the bronze in 2013. Oksana
Domnina/Maxim Shabalin won Russia’s last World Ice Dance title back in 2009. Elena
Ilinykh/Nikita Katsalapov had huge potential and took Olympic bronze in Sochi,
but then split up and so far have not been as successful with their new partners.
Meanwhile, Bobrova/ Soloviev are seasoned competitors and usually very
consistent, but they faced serious challenges in their career. First they
missed the entire 2014/15 season as Soloviev recovered from a knee injury, then
they fought their way back into the top group of dance teams only to miss
Worlds for the third consecutive time since 2013 when Bobrova tested positive
at the European Championships 2016 for a banned substance. She was cleared
later, but Worlds had taken place without them and the other two Russian
couples had finished 9 th (Victoria Sinitsina/Nikita Katsalapov) and
10 th (Alexandra Stepanova/Ivan Bukin). As a result, Russia didn’t
get a third dance spot back.
Now Bobrova/Soloviev nurture
the hope that they are competitive with the World’s best teams by winning
Rostelecom Cup. The Muscovites had not competed at their home Grand Prix since
2013, first because of Soloviev’s injury and then a year ago they were selected
for two other Grand Prix events. “It feels so nice being back here, because at
home the crowd support always helps a lot”, Bobrova said. The 2013 European
Champions turned in two strong performances and set new personal best scores in
both short and free dance to accumulate 186.68 points. The couple picked up
good levels, too, a level four for their lifts, twizzles and spin and a level
three for their step sequences in the free dance to “Prelude No. 20” by
Frederic Chopin and “Four Seasons” in an arrangement by Nigel Kennedy. In the
short dance to the Blues “Mercy on Me” and Swing “Sing Sing Sing”,
Bobrova/Soloviev earned a level four for their lift, twizzles and Blues
pattern. They trailed World bronze medalists Madison Chock/Evan Bates (USA) by
just 0.12 points in the short dance and then overtook them in the free dance
after Bates stumbled on the twizzles. “But winning this event doesn’t yet mean
anything. Right now, ice dance is extremely competitive and there are so many
strong couples”, Bobrova said. “The programs make the difference.” This is very
true. Bobrova/Soloviev had a little home advantage on their side, too. While
their programs were really well skated, they are not as innovative as
Chock/Bates’. But so far, the Americans weren’t really rewarded for that and
the judges still seemed to prefer the more conservative styles other couples
present. Plus, of course, at that level you cannot make such a big mistake as
Bates did. In the short dance to the Blues “Bad to the Bone” and Hip Hop
“Uptown Funk” the 2015 World silver medalists collected the same levels as did
the Russians. The free dance
to “Under Pressure”,
choreographed by Christopher Dean, included four level-four elements, but the
twizzles with the stumble merited only a level two. Chock/Bates were ranked
third in the free dance and overall dropped to second at 182.13 points.
“Overall we have to take a lot of positives from this week and from the last
two weeks having done our two Grand Prix in a row. Obviously I’m very
disappointed to have made a such a big mistake in the twizzles in the free dance,
which obviously cost us greatly in this competition”, Bates said. He added that
they hopefully will make it to the Grand Prix Final with their two silver
medals and that they want to look for redemption there.
Canadians Kaitlyn
Weaver/Andrew Poje didn’t do any Challenger Series events as they used to,
because they changed their short dance completely and also because they needed
to adjust as they are now mostly working with Nikolai Morozov and switched
training locations.
Their short dance to “The Way You
Make Me Feel” (Blues) and “Dangerous” and “Jam” (Hip Hop) by Michael Jackson
was an eye-catcher, especially the side by side footwork. But the 2015 World
bronze medalists lost points for their twizzles that the technical panel rated
a level two. For the free dance, Weaver/Poje chose a style that suits them
perfectly – passionate and romantic. Obviously, the music “Concierto de
Aranjuez” has been heard many times, but the program looks fresh. This time,
the Canadians had no trouble with levels and like the other top teams produced
level-four lifts, twizzles and a level-four spin. They were second in the Free
Dance, but overall remained in third place at 178.57 points. “Andrew and I are
feeling very satisfied with our performance today. This program really speaks
to us, not only with the music, but with the theme and the story. We’re so
happy to go into a story and a program that we feel is representative of our
skating, our style. With our new location, new coach (Morozov), so many new
things we feel very happy today that we could perform under pressure today,”
Weaver said. The team stayed in Novogorsk near Moscow to train and wanted to go
from Russia to China for their second Grand Prix directly.
Charlene Guignard/Marco Fabbri
finished fourth like they had a Skate America (170.45 points). The Italians are
strong technically and usually have no troubles with the levels. Both short
dance (Blues “There Are Worse Things I Could Do” and Swing “Grease Lightning”)
and free dance “The Nutcracker” were well executed. However, the classical
ballet program is not such a good choice for Guignard and Fabbri as they are
not tall and do not have the classical look of other teams. To put it short,
this program does not play to their strengths.
Tiffany Zahorski/ Jonathan
Guerreiro of Russia came fifth at 156.95 points. Their short dance was solid,
but the side by side footwork and the partial step sequence garnered only a
level two. In the free dance to “Bohemian Rhapsody”, last year’s program they
decided to keep as they felt it suits them better than the new program they
first did, Zahorski had a few wobbles in the circular steps and the spin and so
the British born dancer and her Russian-Portuguese-Australian partner remained
almost ten points below their personal and seasons best.
Elliana Pogrebinsky/Alex Benoit (USA) left a good impression in their second
senior Grand Prix event and finished sixth with 153.92 points.
“Golden boy” Javier Fernandez means trouble for Shoma Uno
Javier Fernandez of Spain once
more proved what an excellent competitor he is. Sitting in second after the
short, trailing leader Shoma Uno of Japan by seven points, he came out, skating
last and nailed his program to win. In the short program, Fernandez landed a
quad-triple toe combo, but he tripled the Salchow and had a shaky landing,
while Uno hit a quadruple flip (that appeared underrotated, but was recognized
by the technical panel) with a touch down and quad toe-triple toe with a step
out on the triple. The triple Axel however was excellent. “I think it is
possible to win, it depends on what the other skaters are doing and obviously I
need to skate really well,” the Spaniard said after the short program. Skating
to “Trouble”, “Fever” and “Jailhouse Rock” performed by Elvis Presley, the
two-time World Champion meant indeed trouble for his competitors and hit three
quads (two Salchows, one toe) plus two triple Axels as well as four more triples.
He only gave away two levels on his combination spin and one level on the
footwork. The four-time European Champion rackedup 292.98 points. “My
performance today was really, really good. There are not many bad things I have
to say. There are a few levels missing that we have to practice. I’m glad I
fought through the program. When you fight you always have a reward, so this
was the reward today,” Fernandez commented. His strong performance came a bit
unexpected for him and now he has to reset his mind for the Trophee de France
in Paris next week. “I thought if my long program is not going so well here, I
know what to do to make it better in France. Now my program was so good and I
don’t even know what to think. I hope to do a better short and a really good
free again (in Paris),” Javier pointed out. He is a true golden boy, with an
easy, genuine smile and a lot of patience for his mostly female fans. And he
has a lot of fans in Russia. “I don’t know how often I competed a Cup of Russia
and I also lived here for a year. I have quite a big support group here and
with every year they become more and more,” he shared.
Skating to the two Piazzolla Tangos
“Buenos Aires Hora Cero” and “Barada para un loco”, Uno opened with a quad flip
and followed up with a quad toe and six more triples including two Axels, but
he crashed on the second quad toeloop. The program is ambitious for him and the
music not easy to skate to and obviously not as entertaining as Fernandez’
Elvis Presley medley. With a total score of 285.07, Uno slipped to second.
“Like my short, my free skating wasn’t quite perfect. I am not completely
satisfied with today’s program”, the Japanese skater noted.
Irael’s Alexei Bychenko proved
with a well deserved bronze medal that his silver from Europeans in the past
season was not a fluke. The Ukrainian-born skater put out two solid programs,
showing his fun side in the short to “Chambermaid Swing” and his more dramatic
side in “Pagliacchi” in the long. Bychenko landed overall three quad toes,
three triple Axels and made no major error. He collected 255.52 points. At age
28, Bychenko won his first Grand Prix medal 20 years after Michael Shmerkin had
won the last one for an Israeli single skater, a silver at Skate Canada. “I am
proud to have done something for Israeli figure skating and hopefully there
will be more medals”, the 2016 European silver medalist said.
Mikhail Kolyada is currently
Russia’s big hope in the Men’s category as he finished fourth at Worlds 2016
with great jumps, good spins and strong presentation skills. So he was a top
contender for the podium in Moscow and he did stand in third following the
short thanks to an excellent quad-triple toe and triple Lutz. The skater from
St. Petersburg started strongly into his free skating with a quad toe, but lost
steam in the last minute, falling on a triple Lutz, doubling a loop and
singling an Axel. That was not enough to keep Bychenko at bay and Kolyada
dropped to fourth.
Max Aaron was only ranked
eighth in the short after he fell on his quad Salchow and had low levels on his
spins. In his free program to “The Lion King” the former U.S. Champion hit all
his jumps including two quad Salchows and two triple Axels to pull up to fifth
with 235.58 points. Elladj Balde of Canada risked no quad in the short, but
went for one quad toe in the long. He underrotated as he also underrotated a
triple Axel, but overall the impression was positive. Balde, who was born in
Moscow to a Russian mother and Guinean father and speaks fluent Russian, placed
sixth with 225.45 points. Always popular in shows, he was invited to the
exhibition gala.
Golden Grand Prix debut for Aliona Savchenko/Bruno Massot
Aliona Savchenko is one of the
most accomplished pair skaters of our time and nevertheless, after five world
titles and two Olympic bronze medals with previous partner Robin Szolkowy, she
decided to continue her career to have one probably last shot at that elusive
Olympic gold medal. The Ukrainian-born skater, who had moved to Germany in
spring 2003, had two potential partners on her mind: Frenchman Bruno Massot and
Russian Alexander Enbert when Szolkowy decided to retire from competing. Enbert
did not receive her message or just did not respond, Massot did. The Frenchman
joined Savchenko in Germany in spring 2014. Now, two and a half years later,
the pair debuted at the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating in Moscow, twelve
years after Aljona had competed in her first Grand Prix in Moscow with Robin
Szolkowy. “I do not know how often I’ve been at Cup of Russia, even back then
in St. Petersburg with my previous partner Stanislav Morozov”, Savchenko said.
Savchenko/Massot already had
won a silver at Europeans and bronze at Worlds in the past season, but since
Massot did not receive his release from France until late fall last year, they
had no chance to compete on the Grand Prix. The ice in Moscow was as so often a
lucky place for the diminutive pair skater with the iron will, although it did
not look like that at the beginning as the team had a rough short program. They
fell both on the side by side triple Salchow, something that never happened to
them before, and stunned them, then they struggled with their lift as the
material of Savchenko’s new costume turned out to be too slippery. The lift
only got the base value and Savchenko also stumbled on the throw triple Axel. The
quality of their overall skating, the triple twist and the interpretation and choreography
of their routine to “That Man” by Caro Emerald kept the German pair in second
place, close behind Natalia Zabiiako/Alexander Enbert of Russia.
Savchenko/Massot improved a lot in their long program to “Lighthouse” by
Patrick Watson, even though they still made some mistakes. The triple twist,
side by side triple toe, the lift, spins and death spiral were excellent.
Savchenko popped the throw triple Axel into a double, but there was a reason
for it. “I got into a tracing on the ice on the take off and I had such a lean
in the air that I had to open the Axel. If I had done a triple, I would have
fallen badly”, Savchenko explained. The team from Oberstdorf also went for the
throw quad Salchow for the first time in competition, as the last element, but
Savchenko fell. Nevertheless it was a good attempt. “She landed on one foot and
rotated, but she couldn’t hold the landing”, Massot analyzed. Savchenko/Massot
had no problem in overtaking Zabiiako/Enbert and won their first Grand Prix
gold with 207.89 points. “Today was better than yesterday, we made a little
progress. Not everything was a 100 percent yet, but we are improving step by
step our result. We had prepared the throw quad Salchow at home and we decided
to include it into the program here,” Savchenko noted. The huge potential of
both programs was obvious in spite of the mistakes. If the German couple skates
clean, they will be hard to beat – technically and also artistically.
Zabiiako/Enbert have been
skating together since spring 2015 and were already fifth in their debut at
2016 Russian Nationals. In the off season, Natalia suffered a severe injury
while practicing a throw triple Axel, but luckily she is recovered now. They
are a promising team and train in Nina Mozer’s school under Mozer, Vladislav
Zhovnirski and also Robin Szolkowy. Their short program to “The Snowstorm”
suits their classical, very “Russian” style of skating and they turned in a
clean performance. Their long program to “Cry Me a River” went also very well,
the only major mistake came when she missed the take-off for the triple Salchow
while he executed the jump, but fell. The Estonian-born Zabiiako and her
partner from St. Petersburg still achieved a new personal best score and
claimed the silver, their first Grand Prix medal, with 197.77 points. “There
was serious error on the Salchow. We did a double Salchow before in
competition, now we went for the triple, we did it in practice. It didn’t work
in competition today, but we know we can do it”, Enbert said. With their
performances and result, Zabiiako/Enbert have established themselves as serious
contenders for the Russian team at Europeans and Worlds and want to follow up
with another strong performance at Trophee de France in Paris.
Russians Kristina
Astakhova/Alexei Rogonov are known for expressive and original programs and did
not disappoint again. In the short to music from “Paganini vs Garrett” she
underrotated the side by side triple Salchow and the duo stood in fourth place.
In their long, which is the continuation of last year’s program “The Doll”, the
solo jumps again were difficult for the Muscovites. Their side by side triple
loop was not clean, but at least fully rotated, and she doubled the Salchow.
The throws were strong, but the last lift was shaky. It was still enough to
overtake Valentina Marchei/Ondrej Hotarek of Italy and to secure the bronze
with 188.74 points. “To skate at home helped us. Too bad for the errors on the
jumps, we can do them in training”, Rogonov commented.
Marchei/Hotarek had struggled
at Skate America, but looked stronger this time. Their short program to “Seven
Nation Army” was clean with a triple Salchow, triple twist and somewhat shaky
throw triple Lutz. “We came here a few days earlier and trained in Moscow. That
gave us a big push. We’re happy that we were able to do what we can do in
practice”, Hotarek commented. They had a rough start into their long to
“Skyfall” and “Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation” when Marchei fell on the exit
of the triple twist and also on the triple toe. But the Italians recovered to
complete all the other elements without further errors. Nevertheless they
slipped to fourth place at 187.61 points.
Coming in, Skate America
Champions Julianne Seguin/Charlie Bilodeau were expected to be the toughest
competitors for Savchenko/Massot, but the Canadians disappointed and in the end
finished fifth with 183.37 points. In the short program, they fell on the side
by side loop (which she doubled on top of that). Their “Cinema Paradiso” long
program went better, with good lifts and spins, but he fell on the side by side
triple Salchow and both throw triple flip (touch down) and throw triple loop
(two-footed) were not completely clean.
Anna Pogorilaya rises to the occasion to win gold
When Russia’s Anna Pogorilaya competed
at the Rostelecom Cup two years ago, she was a top contender for the gold, but
she struggled with the pressure and came second. This time it was different and
the World bronze medalist put out two excellent, confident performances to
claim the gold. Her triple-triple combinations were solid, she includes a
triple Lutz-triple to in both short and long and also a triple Lutz-single
loop-triple Salchow in the long. The short is an elegant Tango to “Scent of a
Woman” while the long, set to “The Modigliani Suite” and “Memorial” is a
“tragic love story”, as the skater said. She always stands out with beautiful
costumes (and off the ice as well shows up in very tasteful outfits. Anna
remains a bit in the shadow of the much-talked about the “wondergirls” such as
Julia Lipnitskaia, Elena Radionova and now Evgenia Medvedeva, but she has
beaten most of them in competition at least once and at Worlds she came out to
take the silver medal behind Medvedeva. So she might not be the “eternal number
three” on the Russian team anymore.
Radionova had a tough start
into the season as she fell ill with a bad cold during the test skates in
September and needed time to recover. Therefore the two-time European silver
medalist did not compete in any Challenger Series events this season and
straight went to her first Grand Prix. Last year it was similar, there she also
had to overcome some health problems. Radionova looked not completely ready yet
in Moscow, but she is on a good path. In the short to “Porgy and Bess”,
choreographed by Shae-Lynn Bourne, Elena stepped out of the double Axel, but
the other elements were fine. In her long to “Turandot”, choreographed by
Nadezhda Kanaeva, the 2015 World bronze medalist landed five clean triples
including a triple flip-triple toe that she threw in when her opening triple
Lutz, meant to be in combination, wasn’t ideal. However, Radionova fell on an
underrotated triple loop and was quite upset about it. The reigning European
silver medalist earned 95.60 points overall. “I can’t say that I’m satisfied
with my program, there was that regretful fall and some other small errors. But
this was my first Grand Prix. I hope I can prepare well for my next Grand Prix
in China”, the 17-year-old said.
Courtney Hicks (USA) step by
step becomes more consistent and the results come with it. The American turned
in two clean performances. She landed six triple jumps in her long to “The
Hunchback of Notre Dame” and picked up a new personal best score with 119.30
points. The Californian totaled 182.98 points to pull up from sixth to take the
second Grand Prix medal of her career. “I was very pleased with how I skated. I
thought I stayed with the program through the whole thing and I was really
happy to go out and do two solid programs in this competition. It’s really the
first time I felt I was able to put the jumps and the skating together”, Hicks
told the post-event press conference.
Zijun Li of China came fourth
with 181.83 points and had less problems with underrotated jumps than in the
past. There was only one underrotated triple Salchow and double toe in her long
program. Kazakhstan’s Elizabet Tursynbaeva took an unfortunate fall on the
double Axel in the short program, but stood in fourth place. She lost her
chances for the podium with some wobbles on stumbles on jumps in the free
skating and dropped to fifth with 181.32 points. Yura Matsuda of Japan is an interesting young
skater from Japan that goes for the unusual combination double Axel-triple
toe-triple loop in the free skating. However, the triple toe was underrotated
as was a triple Salchow. The Japanese placed sixth in her Grand Prix debut at
177.65 points.
There was some drama around Julia
Lipnitskaia. The Russian star looked very good in practices and started with a
strong short program into the competition. She was third in the short. Disaster
struck in the long program. Already during the warm up, Lipnitskaia apparently
felt discomfort in her left leg and coach Alexei Urmanov massaged it. Then
Julia opened her program to “Kill Bill” with a solid triple Lutz-double toe and
a triple loop followed by a double Axel and (underrotated) triple flip. But
when going into her next planned double Axel, she did just a hop, seemed to
hesitate, then continued her program, popped the Lutz and finally stopped,
obviously having trouble with her leg. After a short conversation with her
coach she went over to the referee Diana Barbacci-Levy (SUI) who told her that
she has three minutes to resume her program. Lipnitskaia eventually did
continue to the cheers of the audience, even tried a double Axel (but fell).
However, the Russian skater received a five-point deduction for interruption in
excess and also had left out three elements so that she dropped to 12 th
and last. She could have withdrawn, of course, that would have been the easier
solution, but she decided to finish her program. Coach Alexei Urmanov told the
press that Julia had felt numbness in her leg, but that they didn’t think about
withdrawing as the problem did not appear to be so serious. Julia now will stay
in Moscow for the next days to undergo a medical check up to find out the
source of the problem and the right treatment for her.
(Article written by our writer and originally published on http://www.iceskatingintnl.com/)