Mens. Wow. Just Wow.

In all honesty, Ryan should be going to the Olympics. But…I get ahead of myself. Before we talk about the big four, some really great performances were put in by some fellows who will probably never stand on the podium and for whom this was likely their only/final shot at Nats. Maybe you can find their performances on you-tube or something like. We’re going to get Ice Network, just to take a second look at some of these never-televised folk. Michael Solonoski, for instance, doesn’t really have the reliable triples, and his footwork and spins tend to be levels 2 and 3, but he’s a pleasure to watch skate. A really good performer. Tommy Steenberg was another with attitude-plus and a killer  performance quality.  Parker Pennington attacked the William Tell Overture with style and great fun (esp the line work to the “giddy-up” section) Jonathan Cassar opened to a guitar version of Schindler’s List that was magical, both visually and…audio-ly. I don’t know if this hauntingly beautiful version is on the soundtrack as they say, but for someone who is getting really tired of the standard version, I was stunned. It was so beautiful and Jonathan interpretted it to perfection.

The upcoming lads were looking good. Brandon Mroz took this last year to totally revamp his skating technique. That’s a gutsy move, but I think it will pay off in the long run. His footwork was great. Might actually make it to level 4. And he has a quad-toe. Armin Mahbanoozadeh put in a solid performance, but fell a bit in the standings, Keegan Messing from Alaska continued to be a real crowd pleaser and if he gets his jumps and spins cleaned up so that he quits giving up points to downgrades, he’ll be great. And then, of course, there is Adam Rippon, who has it all and just ran into the wall. In the long, he kind of came apart just a bit and missed jumps he’s hit all season. If Brian Orser can manage to hold the artistic lad together, he’ll do very well.

The big four. First up was Ryan, and he, without question, stole the night. He always always always entertains, but words cannot express and the tv cameras cannot fully capture the brilliance of this performance. He skated to the music of Mozart (from the Amadeus soundtrack) and absolutely personified Mozart himself—at least as Mozart was represented in the movie/play Amadeus. From the moment he stepped onto the ice, he minced, trotted, and schmoozed his way into every heart in the arena. It was, without question, the funniest performance I’ve ever seen on the ice, live or on TV…(Sorry, Scotty and Kurt!) and yet, to start things off, he does a huge, brilliant quad somethingorother. In fact, I should probably mention that I think he actually did a quad combo, then a solo quad. (I didn’t write it down and don’t remember those things. I hate the quad. It’s fast and ugly and rips up skater’s hips…but I digress…)

Once that technical obstacle was out of the way, he just exploded into the character and while the program was technically brilliant, that was not what anyone in that arena…except, possibly, the technical crew…was thinking about. The performance will be available all over the internet. If you didn’t catch it on TV, find it on line…then magnify your giggle factor by about 1000 and you’ll begin to comprehend how wonderful it was to be in the arena that night. Everyone was roaring.

And his sheer technique was infinitely improved over his last time here, in 2007, when he hopped over Johnny to take silver.

(One of the best moments of the night was after the awards ceremony—where they actually award four medals, not three, BTW—when, as the lads stepped down from the podium, Johnny turns and “hands” Ryan down with a bow, as if Ryan were a grand duchess. Ryan, of course, played the moment to the hilt. My camera, of course, was turned off.)

Ryan’s scores were brilliant. Unfortunately, he’d had a disastrous short on Friday. Had he skated as he usually does on Friday, he’d have ended in second place and been going on to the Os, and the world would get a chance to share the magic. Personally, I think the O committee should have him come in and do it for the Championship exhibition! Or opening ceremonies. Anything to get it in front of the world!

Poor Adam had to follow that up. He’s a very different skater and very young, and he did OK, but made several mistakes.

Then Armin, who skated solidly, but he is a kid just up from Juniors. He’ll grow quickly, now he’s shown to himself he’s competitive. He ended up in the top ten…not sure where. But very respectable.

Then Evan. I have to say, I loved Evan when he first came on the Senior’s scene. He’s always had a great dance quality, used that long expressive body to perfection… and great technical. Unfortunately, to my eyes, he’s really become horribly commercial, both on the ice and off. It’s like you might as well plaster dollar signs all over his body, and esp in his eyes. Every piece of his choreography is calculated, both in design and execution, every word that comes out of his mouth sounds scripted to be the “perfect representative of America at the Olympics and beyond”…I keep expecting him to break out in a plea for world peace…when what he really wants is to make a lot of money. He even talks, very carefully, in the interviews about how his perspective changed when it became a business rather than a sport. Changed, folks. Past tense. He’s lost, IMO, everything it means to be an Oympian, and embraced some false facade that seriously turns me off.

Anyway, let’s talk about his skating. Good. Solid. Fell on his quad, flexed his (very nice) muscles frequently beneath his grey, Vera Wang ruching, and at the end, acknowledged his minions gracefully. I’m finding him creepier and creepier.

(and after the award ceremony and the group picture where each medalist is given a flag, he signed one autograph of someone there with the photographers, then simply skated off the ice without so much as a backward glance or wave, his flag and flowers wadded in his arms. Probably had interviews scheduled. Gotta get that solo airtime, yes? Compare that with the other three, who went immediately to the fans to sign autographs and take pictures and had to be run out by the Zamboni, and you might begin to get a feeling for my impression of Evan. Now maybe he had promised that afore-suspected interview, but I guarantee you, the other three would have received the same requests for interviews, and they put the fans first, not the dollar signs.)

Back to the competition: Next up was Johnny. Oh, dear. In all honesty, I think the biggest difference between Johnny’s success or lack there of and the other three is that, to hear him talk, he never has truly embraced the new system. I think he’s resisting to the bitter end turning his art into numbers, and that’s affecting his approach to his programs.The problem is, his art is also a sport and to compete, you need to have quantifiable elements.

And yet, I so felt for him as he came out on the ice. It had to be a horrible moment. The last time he was here, it was the culmination of a disastrous season with a routine that, I believe anyway, completely confused his skating muse and had him truly lost as an artist. It was, I believe, the first constructed for the new scoring system, tho I c/b wrong. The outfit he’d been skating in all season was, in a word, hideous. He was supposed to be portraying Jesus, which I think was a serious mistake in the first place, for a lot of reasons, but it inevitably raised a controversy in the press and among fundies he simply didn’t need at that point in his career, but the outfit itself turned that elegant, sylphlike body into an ugly grey block. Quite an accomplishment. His entire self image had to have been called into question that season and his performances of this routine routinely showed that. I thought the first time I saw it that it was in every possible way so counter to what made him special that it was no wonder he couldn’t skate it.

He showed up here in Spokane with a whole new costume. Black. Sleek. Much more Johnny…but it was the same program with the same spiritual (you should pardon the term) baggage. His short program that year was beautiful. He came into the free skate neck and neck with Evan…and Evan put down the best performance of his life…the best I’ve ever seen him skate, before or since…right before Johnny had to skate.

He tried to ignore it. You could see determination written all over him. But he’d been fighting this program all season, and he just couldn’t lay it down that night. A fall. Some minor errors, and he was in third place.

Well…Sunday 2010 it was deja vu all over again. He had to skate right after Evan again, and Evan had laid it down, not nearly as brilliantly, but very well. Talk about spiritual baggage. Did he meet the challenge? Well, he didn’t fall down. But he did lose a lot of points when he singled a triple axel combo. And he wasn’t magical. He was wonderful, as his skating always is, but it wasn’t enough to overtake Evan, tho it did keep him ahead, barely, of Ryan, whose short had put both Evan and Johnny to shame.

After all this drama, poor, quiet Jeremy came out and did nothing except skate an absolutely flawless program with quads and highest level spins and footwork, and, well, he won. I hate to say it, but that’s about all I can say about Jeremy. He’s a hell of a skater. He’ll represent us well in Vancouver. Will he change the sport? I don’t think so. Will his skating change lives? Probably not. But then, neither will most skaters. Johnny will. Johnny has.

Ryan? Frankly, Ryan might be able to give professional skating a much needed shot in the arm. He could just be the best thing since Scotty Hamilton, in that respect. I just hope Stars picks him up and gives him the chance because National Championship or not, his star shines the brightest.

Ryan, you were unbelievable.

tan_n_chau_exhibition-17

Tracy Tanovich & Michael Chau from 2007 exhibition

Phooey. I was hoping to post daily, but I’m getting home exhausted and up barely in time to get myself out the door. I started this Saturday AM and almost missed the beginning of the Champ Pairs finals because I thought I had an hour more than I did. Guess I’ll try to catch up now.

Friday: Missed the 8:30 curtain call for Junior men’s short. Darn it. I love watching the younger skaters, and the men and dance are my favorites, regardless the level. But I wanted to get the Sandy post written, and we knew it would be a late night, so we slept in a bit, then got over to the arena in time for the Championship Pairs short program.

As I try to write this, I’ve decided I really do need to spring for a program. I didn’t take notes and I don’t remember names worth a plug nickel. Aw, well, for the free programs, I’ll be better on the names.

Pairs short: Not what you’d call world class, but some really wonderful moments along with some lows. Our champions from 2007, who had a dream competition that year, have just never come back after her injury the following year. They were good, but not great. Our current 2x national champs, Keauna McLaughlin and Rockne Brubaker, screwed up royally and had to have their component scores padded (IMO) just to keep them in the final flight for the free…which I don’t think they managed even with the help from the judges. I think they’re in seventh right now.

Their component score, compared with the component scores of the subsequent skaters, is my first serious beef with the new judging system since it went into effect. That second mark is where the judges, if they’re all on a mission, can seriously fudge the standings, and it looked to these old eyes like that was going on last night. But they’ll have to pull some serious magic out of the hat and the teams ahead of them will seriously have to screw up for them to be in the top two.

Personally, the way they’ve been skating, I doubt they’ll make it.

Last year’s silver medalists, Caydee Denney and Jeremy Barrett, were magnificent. And they’ve only been skating together for two years!!!!! They skated to Firebird and were truly on fire. Her costume was a wonderful number with orange, red, yellow “feathers” of snippets of fabric that fluttered grandly, but what I loved most about their look was her new “do”. Last year she had the long blond, uninspired hair. This year, it’s bobbed, razored, sassy…with bright red or orange bits. I don’t know it those are colored or extensions that will come out after last night, but I loved it.

But the main thing was their skating which was wonderful. Fabulous choreography, brilliantly performed, fast, clean…and the most amazing save of a jump I think I’ve ever seen. It was a throw triple something or other, right in front of us. She had a lean in the air that I thought spelled total disaster, but she pulled it up into not only a saved landing, but gave it a really good runout.

Needless to say, they got a spontaneous standing O when they finished.

But the best moment of that short was the reappearance of the winners of the Novice Pairs from 2007. I’m kicking myself because I can’t remember their names, (I’ll get it up later) (Later: Tracy Tanovich & Michael Chau)  but they were one only a handful of skaters/teams I was seriously hoping to see, those I’d marked in 2007 as skaters to watch. There weren’t many. I haven’t known what happened to them after 2007, and was hoping they’d be here. They didn’t disappoint. Turns out they took second in Juniors in 2008 and first in Juniors in 2009. They’ve now moved up to Seniors. They’re still very young—she’s all of 13!—and tiny, but they’re crackerjacks on the ice with innovative choreography and personality plus…both of them. They’re out of Florida. I wish I had their “Drive” short program from 2007 on DVD. It was one of the most fun and innovative shorts I’ve ever seen…at any level. But of course, the TV coverage never showed that. Even tho they did it for the exhibition. But noooo…all we got on the TV coverage were the seniors, who were exhausted and hung over after partying,(That’s not true, Johnny and Alyssa were amazing in the 2007 exhibition skate…but I digress…) and the novice and junior ladies.

Well, last night, the magic was still there. They were a little slow in places, their unison was a bit off (I think she’s probably grown a lot in the last year…she’s that age and had the look) but it was a charming, exciting performance that gained them an even bigger standing O than the eventual winners of the short, and resounding boos when the scores were posted. I think the scores were probably legit…but it was a fabulous moment, and I can’t wait for their long program.

One of the neatest things about them is, it’s not all about her. He’s a very strong skater with beautiful split jumps and other moves that are highlighted in the between tricks moves.

Men’s…oh…boy. Have we got some depth appearing there. The future looks really bright for post Olympics competition.  The “big three” Jeremy Abbot, Johnny Weir, and Evan Lysecek (I put them in the order I think they s/b standing) were all very “on.” Perfect programs all of them except for Evan who stepped out of a triple axel.

I think Johnny, who skated second in a field of about 20, suffered a bit from skating so early, scorewise. He was absolutely brilliant last night, earning another spontaneous standing O. His skating has suffered in recent years from the attempts to turn him into a “manly man” skater in 2007. (My opinion, here, folks! based on nothing other than my own interpretation of how his entire demeanor changed that year.) And he’s finally “living” his programs again.

And yet, I’m worried for him if he makes the Olympic team. I’m just not sure he’s stepped up to the plate the way he needs to in order to be competitive with Evan and Jeremy, let alone the rest of the world. As stunning as his artistry is, they give the same component markings to Evan, and Evan’s a machine on all his jumps (save the quad) And I’m the base difficulty just isn’t there in his program to compete with Jeremy, who has the most amazing one-foot foot work into and out of his jumps, and gawd knows Johnny’s capable of just about anything…even a quad, if he’d ever put it in his program.

And there’s a couple of lads hungry to leap into the mix. Adam Rippon has been an extremely interesting skater to watch all season. He’s coached by Brian Orser and skates with a haunting magic that doesn’t fully come across on the telly. He’s got all the skills, and a triple lutz already named after him. It’s one step harder than the tano-lutz, named after Brian Boitano, which is a lutz with one hand raised above the head. The Rippon-lutz is done with both hands extended overhead.

Adam was wonderful last night…magical…until he ran into the boards following that lutz. He didn’t fall, and running into the boards isn’t really a deduction (tho it has to affect the component score), but he was shaken and went down on his final footwork sequence, causing a point deduction.

Nonetheless, he’s sitting in fourth place right now, and we no longer live in the era where the long program is basically sorting out the order on the podium of the top three coming out of the short. These days, where the results are based on total points earned by the sum of all elements performed in both programs…those podium blocks are up for grabs until the final skater skates.

And then there’s the adorable Armin Mahbanoozadeh. He’s another I had marked in 2007 as a skater to watch and he made his senior debut this year. He’s currently sitting in fourth, and looking very strong. He’s a very gentle skater. I think to be really competitive in the senior world ranks, he needs to find a fire inside and translate it to the ice…just for variety. I’d never want him to deny the gentleness he brings.

Another little cracker-jack skater comes down to us from Alaska. Keegan Messing took third in Novice men in 2007, and has moved up to the senior ranks this year. He’s being slightly downgraded on a few of his elements, but an enormous crowd pleaser. He’s very charmingly cocky.

Sunday’s finals should be lots of fun!

And tomorrow…championship pairs!