2023-24 US Men’s Figure Skating | Page 4 | Golden Skate

2023-24 US Men’s Figure Skating

saine

Medalist
Joined
Jun 11, 2023
Country
Canada
I think the saving figure skating headline is coming from this paragraph:

Malinin is also eager to take on an even greater challenge: helping to restore figure skating’s popularity in the US, which has declined precipitously since the 1990s when Nancy Kerrigan, Tonya Harding, Michelle Kwan and Kristi Yamaguchi were household names and Stars on Ice touring shows packed arenas nationwide. It won’t be easy. Malinin says the biggest obstacles include the timing of events, which often take place overnight in US time zones. An even more obvious barrier for the casual fan is the complicated scoring system. Having replaced the old 6.0 system in 2004, the more complex ISU judging system involves a three-person technical panel and a nine-person judging panel, plus various programme component factors.
So saving figure skating comes from wanting to make it more popular in his home country. He does have a good point about the timing of events, especially with the issues of Peacock not keeping the events up to watch at later times.

I liked the profile on him here, it was interesting to read about the times where it wasn't easy for him and he wanted to quit.
 

BlissfulSynergy

Record Breaker
Joined
Sep 1, 2020
Country
Olympics
I have to say the headline "mission to save figure skating" sounds incredibly arrogant.

And yet, when I read the article, Ilia Malinin says nothing of the sort. He says he'd like to push the technical boundaries - and that is certainly not the same thing.

Some say any publicity is good publicity, but this is not a responsible headline from The Guardian. I wonder how many will be turned off by the headline and pass it up.
Yes, for sure. These mainstream publications do not really cover the sport of figure skating on a regular basis, only tangentially. They don't know much about figure skating, past or present. They have only learned that Ilia performs an unheard of jump called 'quad axel.' And it has crossed into the mainstream that Ilia did something amazing at the recent World figure skating championships. So, The Guardian, apparently approached Ilia to do a feature on him and his skating. Maybe they did some background research, but clearly not enough to get the headline and other interpretations fully accurate. Headlines are generally not written by the person who writes the article, in any case.

Of course, even in the writing of the article, there is hype and exaggeration, not coming from Ilia, necessarily. I just see Ilia as young, ambitious, and sincere about his desire to break through technical limitations of the sport, while also working on improving personal artistry. His ambitions are admirable.

Sadly, the sport itself is run in a way that does not incorporate helping audiences learn more about the sport's history in order to gain a broader understanding of and connection to the sport's present. We as fans, mostly have to rely on other knowledgeable fans to cover the sport with greater understanding and authenticity.

This reminds me of a fun teen skating romance book I have heard others raving about. I picked it up to read for fun. In the first chapter, I found myself rolling my eyes, shaking my head, and laughing at the inaccuracies and misinterpretations, including the baffling casual reference to two pairs skaters including sbs quad lutzes as a normal tech element in their free program. 😳😝 The writer also suggests that it's the pairs skaters' choreographer (not their coach) who included quad lutzes in the program, when obviously the choreographer is more concerned with music, concept, moves, transitions, storytelling, and overall program layout, not specifically with the jump elements that will be included. 🤦‍♀️ I am sure the misinterpretations will get worse as the book continues. 😂
 
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BlissfulSynergy

Record Breaker
Joined
Sep 1, 2020
Country
Olympics
What caught my attention in The Guardian article at first read is how Ilia mentions that his parents did not push him to skate. The writer points out that Ilia's parents hesitated about him pursuing the same path that they had both charted in the sport. It's interesting how his parents, Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov, were able to balance and ground Ilia's trajectory in the sport by allowing their son to advance at his own pace and interest. As evidence of his talent became more and more apparent, and as Ilia became more serious about his skating, Tatiana and Roman began setting more serious goals with his training and competition schedules. I think his parents' relaxed guidance and full support based on Ilia's own individual aspirations has been most helpful to Ilia's steady growth and success in the sport.

It's wonderful that it has worked for them all as a family unit in how they have been able to separate and balance parenting from coaching, and Ilia being a regular kid growing up from being a high level competitive athlete. Even sitting in the kiss 'n cry with his son, Roman gives off the vibe of incredulous gratitude, love, and joy for his son, without any sense of desiring to live through his son's outsized success. He just seems grateful to be able to guide him, and to experience these moments with him. Well, at least, that's my impression, as a distant observer.



The second article is from a Nigerian publication. Wow, Ilia's fame is traveling far and wide. That particular article was published in December 2023, but it details Ilia's early career, with a lovely photo of Ilia with his parents when he was younger and not towering over his parents in height. LOL! The first linked article was published even earlier. It's from April 2022, right after Ilia won Junior Worlds. There's a nice picture of Ilia with his two main coaches, Roman and Raf. 😍
 

Arigato

Final Flight
Joined
Nov 13, 2021
Country
United-States
"Will his incredible athleticism revive a tarnished sport?"

Tarnished sport. Yeah, right. Coming from a guy who once wrote that no one cares about Tennis and an article on the evolution of Roger Federer's hair, I find it difficult to take this so-called writer's comments seriously.
 

el henry

Go have some cake. And come back with jollity.
Record Breaker
Joined
Mar 3, 2014
Country
United-States
Bless him (or his team) for the sentiment, but Ilia is not going to "save" figure skating in the US, not if he skates a clean five quint program at the Olys. And it has nothing to do with USFS or how it is run, but with American viewing habits, sporting preferences, and the culture in general.

I wish I knew the answer. Anyone who says they do, hey, get going with it. I'll be the first to applaud when it works. :)
 

cailuj365

On the Ice
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
There's more discourse about The Guardian article here than on the Ilia Malinin fan thread, lol. As Chazz Michael Michaels once said, "No one really knows what [insert "save skating"] means, but it's PROVOCATIVE. It gets the people going."

Honestly, I'm just delighted that we have publications featuring figure skaters like this at all. I think the only people who are going to be turned off by this headline are figure skating fans who follow and debate the daily happenings of figure skating on social media and message boards and who already have a lot of opinions about the sport. 😄 This article wasn't really meant for us here on GoldenSkate. Rather, I think this article and headline are very much aimed for people with a very casual passing interest in skating and who probably do agree that skating needs "saving" because they don't hear much about it outside the Olympics these days, so maybe they'll click on it because they're curious about this guy and had heard about his world record quad axel. If that isn't the purpose of general publicity, then I don't know what is.

Plus, as others have pointed out, Ilia doesn't actually say that he's here to "save" skating. That's a loaded word, and it was a very deliberate choice by the publication to pique interest and generate clicks. I think Ilia respects his competitors and the history of the sport too much to say something like that, more that he just wants to excite new and old audience viewers with his tricks and bring back some attention to the sport. Personally, I think he's done just that! And I'm sure he'll continue to do so.

Ilia is also scheduled to attend the ESPYs in July, which makes me wonder if he might be nominated for something, and that honestly seems unheard of for a figure skater during a non-Olympic year. The best thing for Ilia to do now though is to stay healthy and continue to skate well and build on what he did at Worlds. All of this media attention goes away if the results don't continue. If they don't, the media attention can turn ugly and work against you.
 
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