Lysacek clinches figure skating gold
By Pritha Sarkar Pritha Sarkar – Fri Feb 19, 8:18 am ET[/i]
VANCOUVER (Reuters) – American Evan Lysacek ended Yevgeny Plushenko's imperious reign as Olympic champion with a spell-binding free skate on Thursday to clinch the men's figure skating gold.
Plushenko, looking to become the first man in almost six decades to win back-to-back titles, had been swaggering around all week with the air of a man who had already won gold but Lysacek wowed the judges with an enchanting performance to Sheherazade that brought the roaring crowd to their feet.
Unlike the Russian, he did not attempt any quadruple jumps but was handsomely rewarded for his wobble-free jumps, his exquisite footwork, transitions and artistry.
His score of 257.67 eclipsed Plushenko by 1.31 points, leaving the Russian to moan. "An Olympic champion who doesn't know how to jump a quad, well I don't know.... it's not men's figure skating," he told reporters. "It's dancing."
Lysacek, who jumped up and down backstage when Plushenko's combined score of 256.36 flashed up, did not care what the Russian thought.
"I had so much fun tonight," he said. "I love this crowd, I love this ice, it was definitely my best. Mission accomplished. I was feeling more relaxed after the first jump. "I couldn't have asked for much more than that. To get a personal best in the most important moment of my life, you dream about it."
Daisuke Takahashi won Japan's first medal in the event when he finished third with 247.23 despite falling over on his quad. Switzerland's Stephane Lambiel was fourth.
Brian Boitano was the last American man to win the Olympic title, when the Games were also held in Canada in Calgary in 1988.
Lysacek wiped away 22 years of hurt, and Russian and Soviet domination, with the performance of his life.
GOOD AND EVIL
The American, the first of the main medal contenders to skate, took to the ice after being given a pep talk by his coach Frank Carroll and with two black and white crystal-encrusted snakes -- representing good and evil -- around his neck sparkling under the lights.
As soon as he landed his opening triple Lutz-triple toeloop combination, he closed his eyes in relief and flew through his routine which featured 12 jumps, including seven in combination.
Midway through his final spin, he started to punch the air even before the final notes of his music had finished. He squeezed his eyes shut and punched the air five times with clenched fists as he shouted "yes, yes, yes, yes, yes".
LAST COMPETITOR
However, he still had to wait for Plushenko, the last competitor to skate.
The Russian had held a slim 0.55 advantage over Lysacek going into the free skate. He had also come out of a 3-1/2 year retirement determined to prove that the Olympic title -- unlike the last two world crowns -- could not be won by an athlete who did not perform the high-risk quads.
The 27-year-old showman, sporting a sequined bodysuit with red waistcoat and silver tie pattern, flirted with the camera, winked at the crowd and blew a kiss toward the judges but all that could not hide the faults in his routine.
Plushenko dropped the double loop from his opening quad-triple-double combination and drew gasps as he wobbled out of his triple Axel. He performed 11 jumps, but also had another snatched landing midway through his display.
The Russian clearly thought he had won, ending his final spin by blowing a kiss into the camera before holding aloft his two gloved index fingers high in the air.
Lysacek, the 2009 world champion, soon wiped the grin off Plushenko's face.
"I think we need to change the judging system, a quad is a quad," Plushenko continued to grumble, referring to the revamped judging system in which complex footwork, dizzying spins and artistic choreography can compensate for the lack of quads.
Despite being dethroned, the Russian would not give up the spotlight. As his name was called for the silver medal, he cheekily scuttled over the gold medalist's podium to take his place on the lower platform.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100219/...NhY2VrY2xpbmM-
Lysacek not true champion: Plushenko
By Gennady Fyodorov Gennady Fyodorov – 2 hrs 53 mins ago
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Olympic men's figure skating gold medalist Evan Lysacek is not a "true champion," his predecessor and Vancouver runner-up Yevgeny Plushenko has told Russian media.
Plushenko, hoping to become the first man in almost six decades to win back-to-back titles, lost to the American by 1.31 points on Thursday.
"You can't be considered a true men's champion without a quad," the 27-year-old told Russian state television RTR.
Lysacek did not attempt a quadruple jump, considered the most difficult in figure skating, in either Tuesday's short or Thursday's free programs, instead wowing the judges with artistry and exquisite footwork.
"For someone to stand on top of the podium with the gold medal around his neck with just doing triple jumps, to me it's not progress, it's a regress because we've done triples 10 or even 20 years ago," Plushenko said.
"Just doing nice transitions and being artistic is not enough because figure skating is a sport, not a show," he said.
"Of all the men who had competed tonight, only two -- myself and (Japan's) Takahiro Kozuka (who finished eighth) -- were able to land a clean quad.
"Later, when I saw Kozuka I shook his hand and congratulated him, saying 'Well done'. I also have a lot of respect for (Japan's bronze medalist) Daisuke Takahashi for trying to attempt a quad. That's a sign of a (future) champion."
PLUSHENKO ROBBED
Plushenko, who came out of a 3-1/2-year retirement last month, said he was a victim of prejudicial judging.
"I did a great short program but didn't get the marks I deserved. When I asked why they told me I was skating early and they had to retain top marks for the last group," he said. "Then, in the free program I was the last to skate, did everything clean and still didn't get the marks. That's prejudice. I thought I had done enough to get the gold but the judges gave it to someone else."
Most Russian TV analysts and commentators said Plushenko was robbed of a deserved gold by the judges.
When Plushenko walked into the RTR studio in Vancouver, host Alexei Popov presented him with a symbolic medal. "You already have one gold and one silver so here's a platinum medal for you," Popov told the skater. "You are the real champion."
Another commentator called the decision scandalous, in the same mold as judging controversies at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics.
"We'd seen this before. In 2002 Irina Slutskaya unfairly was placed second in the short program so that Sarah Hughes could get a better shot at winning the gold," Alexei Vasilyev said.
Russia's Slutskaya, a favorite for the women's title in Salt Lake City, finished second behind American Hughes.
Incensed by what they thought was poor and biased judging, the Russians filed a protest, arguing Slutskaya had skated as well as, if not better than, Hughes. It was rejected.
"So what if Slutskaya lost?" asked the commentator. "Who now remembers Hughes? Similarly, in a few years' time nobody will remember Lysacek while Plushenko would go down in history as one of the greatest of all time."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100219/...YtbHlzYWNla25v