Ladies Free Skate

 by Alexandra Stevenson

1.  Overall 189.94 Carolina Kostner 1.FS.128.94 (63.22+65.72); SP.3
Performing a very graceful routine, set to Mozart Piano Concertos, dressed in an unusual grey cat suit with scattered sparkles, the 25-year-old Kostner, who was lying third after the Short Program, became the first ever Italian Ladies World Champion. She soared through her initial jumps (triple loop, triple flip and double Axel to triple toe). She did not get stressed out when her sixth element turned into a combination of double flip and double toe loop instead of the planned triple-double. That was followed by a second double Axel and a triple Salchow. Her ninth element was her last jumping pass, a second triple Salchow combined with two double toe loops. None of her moves were given a negative average Grade of Execution and all her Levels were the maximum 4.

The 2008 World silver medalist who won bronze in 2005 and 2011, but did badly in both her Olympic Games appearances, brought both hands to her head at the end of the performance. She then had to wait for the remaining two competitors to skate their routines to make sure she had gained the title.
She said, “This is my 10th world championship and I can’t really describe how it finally feels to reach that dream. Deep in my heart, I knew I had a chance to win. I trained so hard and I have beautiful programs, but my main goal was to show how much I love figure skating.

“I am very, very happy. I was quite nervous going out on the ice. I knew I had skated some really good programs in practice, but it was so overwhelming to go out there and have so many people cheering for you. It was hard for me to stay focused. It reminded me so much of Torino (the 2006 Olympics), but I thought this time I can change that bad result. I just wanted to skate my best, straight from my heart. Now I can relax, but it's stressful to wait. I did my best and now it's not my decision anymore.

“Each season I learned something. Today it was my day and my competition. I would have been happy with the second place but I thought keep on dreaming to the end. Yesterday (when they had a day off after the Thursday’s Short Program, I had some pain in my leg, so my coach told me not to skate. I was a little worried about that but my friends took care of me. We went to Monaco. It was beautiful, so the time just flew by.

“My first feeling after winning was that now I am really tired. The tension is off and I feel that this was a long week. I guess I will fully appreciate the win tomorrow. It's indescribable now, that I finally reached my dream. Deep in my heart I knew I have a chance to win. But as soon as this thought reached reached my mind, I tried to put it away. There have been too many disappointments. Each competition starts from zero. This season I had two beautiful programs, so my main goal was to show how much I like figure skating and how much joy it gives me, so I hope I influence others and give this this joy to others. When I dream about figure skating, these dreams are not so good, more like nightmares. Either I am late to the warm up or I have problems with my laces. I think I will celebrate a lot tonight. I think that everybody who gets to the World championships has a lot of talent, so I am not the only one. When I stepped on the ice it was so loud, it reminded me of Torino 2006 (the Olympic Games). I was younger then, and it was a lot of pressure, and I didn’t do well, either there or in Vancouver (where she finished a disastrous 16th and thought that it was time to leave the sport.) I was glad that finally I can change this experience. I tried to forget about the audience and skate my heart out. And, for part of my program the audience was very quiet. I was hoping that was a good sign. And it, obviously, was!”

2.  Overall 184.28 Alena Leonova 4.FS 112.74 (60.57+59.10);1.SP.

This was the 21-year-old from St. Petersburg’s fourth world championship, but she has never held the Russian senior national title. Even this season, she was eclipsed in that event by a youngster who was not old enough to be entered for senior international championships. After winning the World Junior title in 2009, Leonova made a very promising debut in World Seniors just weeks later and earned seventh place.

After her win in the Short Program in Nice, she said, “I showed my maximum today. I think it was my best performance of my Short Program ever. It was certainly the cleanest one. I made not a single mistake, so I was very happy. I want to keep the same positive, calm mood for my free. I am competing in Nice for the sixth time because I have also taken part in five Coupe de Nice competitions and never left without a medal.”

Skating first of the top six in the final group on Saturday, Leonova gave an energetic performance set to Adagio for Strings and Requiem for a Tower. Her opening element, a combination of two triple toe loops, was very good and earned +1.30 over its base value. However, the following triple loop got a very slight negative and she almost fell on the triple Lutz, which got an “e” for wrong edge takeoff. A little later her blade on the second landing of her triple flip to double toe nearly scrapped the barrier. Two of her spins were Level 4 and the other one along with the steps were Level 3.

“I am very happy. I did my best the day before yesterday and today. There was one small mistake on my Lutz, but I am glad, I could pull myself together. I had a really bad warm up, doing single jumps, so about three minutes before my skating I started to think about the performance so I could concentrate on it. During the warm up I was nervous, but then, before the music played I was absolutely calm. Now I am relieved.” Although she was fourth in this section, she dropped only to second, 5.66 behind Kostner.
She said, “The medal was a surprise for me. I skated first on the last group and after that I gave a lot of interviews, so I didn't see how the other girls skated, I just looked at the screen all the time to see the results. Only after Akiko (Suzuki, who skated next to last before Leonova’s team mate and friend Ksenia Markarova) skated did I realize I was in a top three. At the beginning I couldn't believe it, but then I looked at the final result and realized how happy I am. I would have been happy with bronze medal, but silver is much better.

“After the Short Program and the day between, I tried to think, that I just came to this was a different competition. I was not in the lead because it had just started. I put my small gold medal for the Short Program win out of my mind. Anyway the competition is not only the short program. As my coach told me the program begins with every single element. The support of the audience always helps me. I love very much when there are a lot of fans who cheer. It does help. Here the audience was very supportive and I wanted to show them what I can do.

“I am very happy. I did my best the day before yesterday and today. There was one small mistake on my Lutz, but I am glad, I could pull myself together. I had really bad warm up, made single jumps, so about three minutes before my skating I started to think about the performance so I could concentrate on it. During the warm up I was nervous, but then, before the music played I was absolutely calm. Now I am relieved. My (new) coach (Nikolai Morozov) told me, “Consider free program as the beginning of the competition, and also every new element also should be as a new beginning. Getting the silver was amazing. I still can't really believe it.”

3.  Overall 180.68 Akiko Suzuki 2.FS 121.30 (62.06+59.24); SP.5

Akiko Suzuki gave a charming performance to the overture to Johann Strauss’ Die Fledermaus overture, which was ranked second only to Kostner’s performance. It advanced her from fifth place after the Short Program to earn bronze, 3.6 points behind Leonova. She said, “I was very happy. Last season I wasn't able to compete in the Worlds and this was a lovely present for me after just turning 27. This is the first present I got after turning 27 three days ago. In my Short Program, I was so happy after landing my triple-triple combination, that I lost concentration and singled my triple Lutz, which is not something I normally do. Today I really wanted to nail it, but again, I couldn't. I still need to work on it.

“Today the audience was very loud and excited. I could hear the cheering. I could feel their enthusiasm, they really gave me support. When Carolina skated I could feel the arena was shaking with all these cheers. And I thought, I want to skate well to make the audience as enthusiastic and happy as during Carolina's performance. At first, when I heard I got the bronze, I couldn't believe it. I was a little frustrated about my performance. I only started to feel the joy during the medal ceremony. Now I want to put this medal on my coach's neck.

I am very, very happy to have won a medal. The first person to share my hapiness is my coach Mr. (Hiroshi) Nagakubo. I think I missing last year's World team gave me a lot of motivation to train harder. Because of that sadness I am here right now. This is my first World medal and I am 27 years old. Others win their first medal at 17 years old, like Yuzuru (Hanyu) did here. So it is a ten years difference.

4.  Overall 176.77 Ashley Wagner 3.FS 120.35 (62.91+57.44); SP.8

The new US and Four Continents Champion gave a dynamic and graceful performance to Swan Lake, dressed in black and opening with a +0.80 triple flip to double toe to double loop. On her second element, a double Axel to triple toe, she was given an arrow for slight under-rotation on the second jump and the following triple Lutz was saddled with an “e” for wrong edge takeoff. However, the rest of the performance, which contained five more triples including two loops, the second of which, late in the program, was attached to a double toe loop, was flawless, emotional and enjoyable.

She said, “I was ecstatic with that performance! I was so nervous before I went out but my coach, Mr. (John) Nicks, told me that I had done this a million times, that I'd been practicing all year. I'm extremely pleased, I skated my heart out and I was solid, which is what you want in a free skate. It was a great way to end the season and it was so much better than my last (first) time at worlds (she was 16th in 2008 when she was a replacement entry).

Wagner’s fourth, along with Czisny’s 22nd, meant the US will also be permitted two entries next year’s Worlds the results of which will determine the number of Olympics entries permitted each country. “I’m through the roof right now,’’ she said immediately leaving the ice. “I was so nervous going into the event. I think I managed my nerves very well. I did what I needed to do and that’s huge for me.”

5.  Overall 175.41 Kanako Murakami 5. FS 112.74 (55.53+57.21); SP.2

The 17-year-old, who is taught by Machiko Yamada, made her debut in the Worlds last year finishing 8th.
The 2010 World Junior champion from Japan said, “I'm not totally satisfied with this performance, (which was set to a Violin Concerto) because I singled both Axels (one in a sequence with a triple flip and the other as the following element). I was confident about this free program because I was training so hard, but, of course, I was so nervous as it is such a big competition. I am especially pleased that I landed the triple-triple (toe-toe) combination (although the second jump received an arrow for under-rotation.)

6.  Overall 164.52 Mao Asada 6.105.03 (45.01+60.02); SP.4

OH! How the mighty have fallen. The Japanese wunderkid, who threw off such wonderful triple Axels when she was young, can no longer do them. At 21, she is not old but handicapping herself by trying to return to her former glory is not accomplishing a satisfactory goal. She would be better served making the most of what she can do! She is turning herself into an also-ran instead of a contender.

Skating to Liebestraum by Franz Liszt, immediately after Leonova, Asada tried the triple Axel as her first move. The resulting single earned its base value of only 1.10. Her second element, the triple flip to double loop, earned an impressive +0.90 over its base value of 7.10. Her third element, a triple Lutz received an “e” for wrong edge takeoff. Her next three jumps made her really look weak, a double Axel to double toe (+0.50); a double flip; and a triple Salchow which got an arrow for slight under-rotation. Her final jump was a single loop. Although all four Level moves were given the maximum 4, she was lucky competitors behind her weren’t that strong.

She said, “I was prepared and trained hard for this competition. Since I came to Nice somehow something went very wrong, I don't really know what it is. I am really, really disappointed.”

7.  Overall 157.57 Kexin Zhang 7.FS 102.57 (58.07+45.50 -1); SP.9

The 16-year-old from China, who was making her debut in this event, said, “I fell hard on my first triple Lutz but I didn't feel it too much. But I was worried because the very next jump was another triple Lutz, but fortunately I landed it. It was not my highest free skate score today but I'm satisfied with the majority of my performance for my first worlds. There's still room for improvement in the future.”

8.  Overall 150.10 Valentina Marchi 9.FS 97.96 (48.87+49.09); SP.11

The Italian 25-year-old, who now trains at the Detroit FSC alongside Czisny, skated a lively number to music by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy. She said, “I am quite happy with my performance today, the free skate was ok. I felt very nervous. It was a long and stressful week (with having to compete in the qualifying round) and we had a long trip to come here. Moreover, I don't like to skate first in the group. I had to do that in both the Qualification and the Short Program, but I am glad I did everything in my program. I am really looking forward to the new season since everything in Detroit where I am training runs very well.”

9.  Overall 149.48 Ksenia Markarova 14.FS 90.97 (39.78+53.19 -2); SP.6

Markarova drew to skate her Marilyn Monroe Free last of the 24 allowed into this section. She is the daughter of Olympic pair medalists, who represented the Soviet Union but moved from St. Petersburg to the United States when their daughter was eight. She returned to Russia in 2009 and won the 2010 Russian championship, which earned her an Olympic and world championship berth where she finished 10th in Vancouver and 8th in the Torino Worlds.

However, she lost her Russian title the following season to a competitor too young to be entered in World seniors. This showing in Nice was unfortunate with two falls. Three of her jumps received unanimous -3s. One was for her initial triple Lutz attempt, which got two arrows meaning it was downgraded to a double and an “e” for wrong edge take-off. She also got straight -3s for the second element, a triple toe, and for a later triple Salchow. She singled the first of her two attempts at double Axels.

She said, “I don't know what happened today. It was just not my season. My coach told me, ‘You are still young. You have plenty of time,’ and that's what I think too.”

10.  Overall 149.20 Elena Gedevanishvili 15.FS 90.71 (41.51+51.20 -2); SP.7

Born in Georgia, while it was still in the Soviet Union, Gedevanishvili came to live in the United States. She was training in New Jersey but this season moved to Canada to train with Brian Orser. She had won two bronze medals in the 2010 and 2012 European championships but this showing in Nice was nothing like her flamboyant style. She said, “I don't know really what happened. Maybe I just stressed out, wanting to do well too much. Before the performance I was feeling well, but then, during skating, I didn't really feel my legs.

“The season was good for me, I had more good competitions, and I had only two bad performance, the short program in Skate America and then the free skating here. But compared to some of my previous results I think this season went well.

12.  Overall 148.18 Yretha Silete, France, 8.FS 99.76 (55.85+44.91 -1); 15.SP

Silete, 17, whose parents are from Togo, dethroned the French national champion this season and made her debut in this event. She said, “I am really happy with that performance, even though there were a few errors still. I was quite nervous before I went out on the ice, but my coach kept me calm. It was an extraordinary feeling out there on the ice performing in front of my home crountry, because their applause made me finish my choreography in a more energetic way that would not have been possible without their enthusiasm.”

16.  Overall 138.60 Amélie Lacoste 17.FS 89.23 (44.89+46.34 -2); SP.13


Amélie Lacoste, 23, from Delson in Quebec Province, dethroned the 2004 and 2011 Canadian champion Cynthia Phaneuf by such a narrow margin in this season’s nationals that Skate Canada decided to let them fight it out again at the Four Continents Championships for the one slot to compete here. They again finished with less than a point apart.

Unfortunately for Canada, Lacoste finished 16th here so the country will be entitled to send only one entry in Ladies again to next year’s world championships, which will be held at the John Labatt Centre, in London, Ontario. Lacoste said, “Both the short program and the free program were not as good as I wanted and I am very disappointed. But I have to get over it and look ahead to the next season.”

In the Free, which she executed to Don’t Cry For Me Argentina, although her triple loop was good, she fell on her first triple Salchow and, later, also on a double Axel. Her triple Lutz was doubled and got a wrong take off edge.”

19.  Overall 129.98 Polina Korobeynikoza of Russia, 19.FS 129.98 (83.27+42.53); 19.SP

The 15-year-old Korobeynikoza is the 2012 Junior Grand Prix bronze medalist and was expected to make an impression here as a future contender. But, with her coach Victoria Volshkova side-lined, since she had just had a baby, the youngster did not show the promise she had in Quebec City in early December. She said, “I was unable to show at this championship what I am able to do. I don't really know why. The practice this morning went well. (On getting experience) It is very important for me to get more experience. This is my first season competing at the senior level. To be honest, I didn't really feel a difference between junior and senior events and Europeans and World also felt the same for me.”


22.  Overall 124.11 Alissa Czisny 22.FS 75.80 (33.13+47.67 -5); SP.16

What do you say about an imploding star? The 24-year-old twin has two skating personae. When she is in form, she is absolutely unmatchable. Her spins and steps are recognized as to die for. But the jumps, where are they? They stuck around to bring her the 2009 and 2011 US titles, but they went missing in 2010 when, with an Olympic berth at stake, she collapsed and finished tenth nationally. But last year she was fifth in Worlds. On Saturday night, skating rather appropriately to Sibelius’ Valse Triste (Sad Waltz) she fell five times in her Free Skate.

On her opening element, a triple Lutz, which one judge didn’t view properly and punched in -2 GoE instead of the compulsory -3; on the second element, a triple loop; on the third element, a triple flip; and later, on her planned second triple Lutz and second triple loop. She also doubled and put two hands on the ice on her triple toe loop which was going to be a three-jump combo but was also penalized with across the board -3 GoEs.

However, she did leave the audience with something to cheer about. Her Level 4 layback spin earned five of the maximum +3s. She said, “I'm not really sure what happened today. Part of it may have been due to my injury during the Grand Prix Final which left me not as prepared as I would have liked for nationals. I did what I had to do at nationals to make it here, but did not feel as ready for this year's worlds compared to last year.”

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