icebrat001
<font color=teal>Foot flusher<br><font color=orang
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2005
- Messages
- 2,609
LJC1861 said:She is a true champion and will always be one of the greatest skaters to step on the ice....Olympic gold medal or not.
Linda
Very true

LJC1861 said:She is a true champion and will always be one of the greatest skaters to step on the ice....Olympic gold medal or not.
Linda

va32h said:I'm seeing some misinformation in this thread that needs correcting.
First, a skater petitioning to be placed on the US team due to injury is not a "just-for-Michelle" rule. Todd Eldredge was placed on the US Olympic Team in 1992 even though he was unable to compete at Nationals. Although it is traditionally the top 3 skaters at Nats who go on to compete at Olympics and Worlds, this is not an actual "rule". The team is always chosen by the USFSA.
Second, Michelle would not be "automatically" placed on the team. She will have to skate in front of a committee, and prove her worthiness. The Olympic team is not named ten minutes after the long program ends. There is a deadline, and if Michelle can't prove she is healthy enough to compete by that deadline, she won't get a spot.
Third - the Olympics is not a reward for one's performance at Nationals. It's an international competition, to which the USFSA wants to send the team most likely to place best. Nancy Kerrigan wasn't put on the team because they felt sorry for her, or because it would make a good story, but because she was more likely to place well than the silver medal winner (who was at that time, Michelle Kwan).
I don't know what to say about the mean-spirited personal comments directed at Michelle, except to say that my daughter and I were lucky enough to meet her at the US Nationals in Dallas, three years ago, and she is incredibly nice, friendly, and gracious. In the skating world, she is absolutely beloved. I can't think of anyone I know in skating who would call Michelle Kwan selfish, washed up, or anything of that sort.
Consider this as well - the current World Champion, Olympic Silver Medalist, and favorite for Turino is Irina Slutskaya, who is older than Kwan, and has come back to competition from a life-threatening auto-immune illness.
Age (although my goodness, Kwan is all of 25!) and illness are not obstacles to the athlete who is determined to succeed.

icebrat001 said:I think Nationals, Worlds and the Olympics are all very important. However, when you start skating at a young age, you are told about the Olympics and how great it is, so you set your site at that medal, it's a major honor. As you grow older, I think you really aim to just make it to nationals or worlds and making it to the olympics is a huge honor. A lot of skaters don't make it there because a lot of skaters get skater burn out, look at AP and Jenny Kirk. It's really easy to get burnout.
I remember I was so burn out and couldn't even watch skating on tv. After a while, i started coaching at Berkeley Iceland but I was still burnout. It is a tiring sport and you have to give it your all.
So if the choice comes down between Michelle Kwan, who is injured and really not able to skate well, and another younger skater who might have a shot at developing into something special 4 years from now but needs to start getting out there in front of the World Judges, when does it become time to move onto the next generation?
Keggy said:I believe Michelle should go. It is her last shot.
Obviously, Sash Cohen is going to go.
For the third spot there are a number of other skaters who could go. I DVR'ed last nights programs, I wasn't able to watch them yet, but have heard that only Sasha skated well. Personally, as a BGSU alum I would love to see Alissa Czisny go - but not over Michelle Kwan.
Kelly
Deb in IA said:Sentimentally, I had hoped that she would go.
She had made it no secret that she wants desparately to win an Olympic Gold. And it seems somewhat unfair that while she is still skating beautifully (when not injured) if not with the technicality needed to win anymore, the two American women who beat her out (Tara Lipinski and Sara Hughes) promptly up and retired shortly after winning their golds.
But realistically, no, I don't think she should go. I'm pretty much a stickler for rules, and if she doesn't place in the top 3 for Nationals, sadly, she doesn't make the team.
missypie said:I have such mixed feelings about the "Olympic Dream." I have a little competitive gymnast. I go to the meets and there are hundreds of little girls, all with the Olympic Dream. And I know that across town at the same time there is another meet going on with more girls with the same dream. And I know that only the youngest among them at their level will go ANYWHERE...yet they all train 12-15 hours a week...many of them are home schooled and train 30-35 hours a week...and this is the lowest levels.
Is it good for them to work so hard at something? To make so many sacrifices? Or is it bad?
Do you regret the time you devoted to skating, or are you just glad it's over now?
hey icebrat......I took my first lesson at age 39
my dd skates, im in basic level 9
my dd and I compete in family spotlight and have a blast..... 
Deb in IA said:But realistically, no, I don't think she should go. I'm pretty much a stickler for rules, and if she doesn't place in the top 3 for Nationals, sadly, she doesn't make the team.
She was the issue,she was a canadian citizen and as such they were not olympic eligable.... The American dance couples were very upset that that team might potentially take the place of one of them..In fact the mother of one of the other american teams wrote some letters to the gov trying to convice them not to give the bill special treatmentAlicnwondrln said:whats there deal
isnt he a us citizen now