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AP/ February 23, 2010, 2:14 PM

American Takes Figure Skating Gold

Oklahoma City Thunder small forward Kevin Durant (35) looks at the scoreboard against the Miami Heat during the first half at Game 1 of the NBA finals basketball series, Tuesday, June 12, 2012, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Oklahoma City Thunder small forward Kevin Durant (35) looks at the scoreboard against the Miami Heat during the first half at Game 1 of the NBA finals basketball series, Tuesday, June 12, 2012, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson) / Jeff Roberson

Evan Lysacek won the Olympic gold. Evgeni Plushenko won the argument.

The quad, the toughest jump there is in figure skating, is the way of the future. It has to be for the sport to keep progressing. Plushenko is right there.

Only the judges didn't see it that way on Thursday night.

They made Lysacek the champion, even though he didn't land or even attempt the devilishly hard jump with four revolutions.

Special Report: 2010 Winter Olympics
Vancouver Daily Dispatch

Plushenko did do a quad, and he got only the silver, but he could still have the last word.

Take a look around.

In snowboarding, Shaun White is throwing down ever-crazier moves, pushing the boundaries of his sport.

In Alpine skiing, racers are putting life and limb on the line every time they click into their bindings and head downhill.

In the process, they helped NBC clobber "American Idol" in the television ratings.

Viewers, in short, like stuff that's new and they like risk.

But figure skating? Well, quads were a staple for the top men before the sport rewrote its points system after the Salt Lake City judging scandal in 2002.

Now, they are a dying breed.

No matter which way you spin it, and in skating they spin it better than anyone, that does not represent progress.

"It's not men's figure skating," Plushenko said contemptuously. "Now, it's dancing."

Lysacek's routine was super, but conservative, too. With his big frame, sleeked-back Pierce Brosnan hair and sober black costume, he oozed power and control. His opening combination of jumps was velvet-smooth.

It could not be said that he was an undeserved winner.

But it wasn't edge-of-seat stuff, either. His jumps were at best triples, not quads. The envelope was not pushed.

He micromanaged his way to gold. Plushenko went for a bigger bang, but his jumps weren't as clean.

In layman's terms, it would be the difference between a nice, solid and reliable pickup truck and the far edgier but not as practical Lamborghini that snowboarder White has in his garage.

Lysacek practically admitted as much, saying that he had shown "a complete package" of skating moves, not just giant jumps.

"If it was a jumping competition they'd give you 10 seconds to go and do your best jump," the American said.

As long as skating's points system stays as it is, this argument will rumble on and on.

At the moment, landing a quad properly can bring big rewards. Plushenko got 14.6 points for the quad and triple toeloop with which he opened his program.

It was a sight to behold. Plushenko spun so fast that it was a wonder he didn't drill into the ice on landing.

But quads are risky, because they are so hard to do well. Skaters who don't manage to pull them off, like bronze medalist Daisuke Takahashi, can be heavily penalized. Takahashi fell hard attempting his quad and got just one point for it.

So many skaters don't attempt them. They play it safe with easier moves they are more confident of landing.

But who, honestly, likes safe?

Not Plushenko.

"We need to change the system, judging system, because quad is quad. If Olympic champion, he doesn't know how to jump quad, no, I don't know."

His manager, Ari Zakarian, was more succinct: "We are going in the direction of becoming ballet on ice."

He suggested that in the wake of this defeat, Plushenko might not compete when the games move to his native Russia in four years time.

If "the quad is not going to be appreciated, probably (he) will never try to go for the Olympics," Zakarian said. "Now, he just finished (his program) and he says, 'You know what? That's it.' He says, 'I don't see any future here."'

Plushenko, asked later about those comments, said: "Who said? My manager? He lied to you, he is joking."'

Perhaps. Time will tell.

But the risk of skating standing still is not so funny.
AP
20 Comments Add a Comment
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nirak2-2009 says:
BAD LOSER that is! LOL
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nirak2-2009 says:
I have always been a Plushenko fan and I still think he is a good skater, but last night, Lysacek did the better job.
A Quad is not everything Plushenko and you are a very bas loser
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silentjestre says:
Figure Skating isn't just a sport, it's an art. Plushenko may have had all of the working of a slightly higher score on the technical side of things, but Lysacek was much more pleasing to the eye while still being technically superb. It was only 1 quad. A single extra rotation. That 1 extra rotation paired with the lack of fluidity that Plushenko presented, merits silver, not gold.
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olsongd says:
I have never seen a skater execute the polhold style that his jumps exhibited! I mean he looked like a tumbling planet spinning out of control into space! It wasn't pretty at all; he must have defied the laws of physics just to land them. There is more to skating than jumping; I like to see spins on the ice as much as seeing them above the ice. Lysacek was the better performer.
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ClarkeGrissom says:
Plushenko had the grace of a sledgehammer dropping on the ice. Seriously the 'people are gunning for me' gansta toug-guy routine is laughable coming from a male figure skater...however I would at all be suprised if he did a rainbow arm wave snap and commented on how 'that rag from vera wang' made Lysacek's thighs look fat.
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johnsole1 says:
It is the stuff in between the jumps that makes the skating interesting. This is figure skating, not skate-jumping. The jumps that are performed must be clean otherwise the whole thing is just a mess. Quads are impressive, the few times I have seen them done well. To me, it is the in between stuff that makes the sport worth watching. Plushenko did not skate clean, there was nothing of note in between the jumps and most of his jumps were poorly executed. He was slanted in the air, his free leg was swinging around, he landed his jumps without grace, and he had no flow out of the jumps. The better quality performance won the gold this time. Plushenko is wrong when he said figure skating is a sport, not a show, it is both indeed and that is why he did not prevail. He lacked showmanship.
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mollydtt says:
Plushenko is a bad sport. I watched him skate last night, and it wasn't his best. He should quit complaining.
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bciss says:
The writer of this article seems almost as bitter as the silver medalist. Just less obviously so. Fact is the quad is impressive, it also not landed more often than it is. Check the the stats of those attempted and actually landed. Further the remark about dancing versus skating,,, really? The lack of a quad is what now makes it frilly dancing or something?

If the points system needs another adjustment? Fine go for it. However don't act like it is all pointless or not a manly "figure" skater if a quad is not done. Besides clearly there are other things of import than a quad, in over all scores. Which would be why a man who did not do one. Won gold and two who did won silver and bronze. Because gold was a higher quality performance across the board.
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usaguy2010 says:
Another sore loser... What a shock.
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dnamj says:
Plushenko landed the quad, but really had some ugly triples. Had he nailed his routine, he would have won gold. A clean routine that contains a quad will still win. A shakier routine with one great quad should not win.
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