ISU World Figure Skating Championships 2008
Day Five
The competition at the ISU World Figure Skating Championships
2008 concluded Saturday with the Men’s Free Skating.
The Scandinavium Arena in Gothenburg was sold out with 9555
spectators.
Men, Free Skating
The Men were the last to crown their Champions. In what was
an exciting competition until the very end, Jeffrey Buttle
of Canada claimed the gold medal. France’s Brian Joubert
soared from sixth to second and Johnny Weir (USA) earned the
bronze.
Overnight leader Buttle had drawn to skate last in the final
group. The Canadian opened his performance to the “Ararat”
soundtrack with a solid triple Axel-double toe-double loop
followed by a triple flip-triple toe and another triple Axel.
He went on to produce a triple Lutz-double toe, a triple loop,
Salchow and another Lutz as well as excellent spins. At the
end of his program, he happily punched the ice in triumph.
The 2006 Olympic bronze medalist was awarded a level four
for all four spins and a level three for both step sequences
to post a new personal best of 163.07 points (84.29 element
score/78.78 program component score). The 25-year-old improved
his previous personal best by 11.27 points and racked up a
total score of 245.17 points to take his first World title.
The Canadian waited anxiously in the Kiss & Cry for the
score, and when it came up he looked in disbelief and jumped
up to wave to the crowd. Buttle had won the silver at the
2005 World Championships but was ranked sixth in 2006 and
2007. His title is the first gold medal for a Canadian man
since 1997, when Elvis Stojko won. “It doesn’t
feel real yet. I was just very happy with how I skated. That’s
how I’ve been training at home. When I went on the ice
it felt just like home. Just go out there. The most important
thing was training and I came in for this so well trained.
I stepped on the ice and it didn’t matter that I skated
last, I adapted to that, I’ve done it at home and I
was ready. There were no excuses”, the athlete said.
Joubert, who stood in sixth place after the Short Program
skated next to last and was ready to fight when he took the
ice. He had followed the competition and knew exactly what
he had to do. The defending World Champion nailed his opening
quadruple toeloop, a triple Salchow and triple Axel as well
as a triple flip-triple toeloop combination, a triple Lutz,
loop and flip in his Metallica medley program. The crowd was
with him when he went into his straight line step sequence
and when he finished the program he knelt down onto the ice
and kissed it. The two-time European Champion earned a level
three for his footwork and two spins and scored 153.47 points
(74.11/79.36) which added up to a total of 231.12 points.
It was Joubert’s third World silver medal after 2004
and 2006.
“I changed it (the strategy) after I saw how the others
did and I decided to not take a lot of risks and not to do
a quad Salchow, just wanted to skate clean. The competition
was great, the audience was great and I will remember this
all my life”, the Frenchman commented.
Skating to “Love is War” by Yoav Gordon, Weir
produced a two triple Axels, two triple Lutzes, a triple Salchow,
loop and flip as well as strong spins, two of which were graded
a level four. However, his opening quadruple toeloop was underrotated
and downgraded and overall Weir appeared somewhat hesitant.
The American picked up 141.05 points (67.21/73.84) for this
performance and accumulated 221.84 points to win his first
World medal. “I’m so excited. It was not my strongest
performance, but I am just proud for myself and for my coaches
and I am proud to bring back the only medal for the USA”,
the 23-year-old said. “I was a little tired towards
the end and I had much nervous energy. When I was going into
my starting position, my legs were still shaking. Two years
ago, I definitely would have fallen apart. I tried to be as
spectacular as possible. (At the end) I was very relieved
as the season has been difficult and there was a lot of pressure
on me”, he explained.
Daisuke Takahashi (JPN) finished fourth at 220.11 points.
He landed a quadruple toeloop and four clean triple jumps,
but he fell on his second quad toe attempt and stumbled on
a triple Axel and loop. A triple Lutz-double toeloop didn’t
count as it was considered as a fourth, not allowed combination
after the second quad, second Axel and a triple flip-triple
toe. Stéphane Lambiel (SUI) came in fifth after some
errors on his jumps (217.88 points). Kevin van der Perren
(BEL) gave a strong performance to finish sixth. He completed
eight triple jumps including a triple flip-triple toe-triple
loop combination (216.02 points) and was ranked third in the
Free Skating. Sergei Voronov (RUS) was ranked fourth in the
Free Skating and seventh overall (209.93 points). He hit a
quad toeloop and seven triples to move up from 15th place
after the Short Program. European Champion Tomas Verner (CZE)
faded to 15th after popping some jumps (191.94 points).
The ISU World Figure Skating Championships 2008 conclude
Sunday with the Exhibition Gala
|