When the ladies figure skating competition takes the ice
at the Sochi Winter Olympics on February 20, viewers around the world will be
treated to one of the most stirring and spectacular sporting summits in
decades.
Although
accomplished lady skaters from the U.S., Russia, Italy, and others will also be
competing, all eyes will focus on the latest dramatic clash between the two
world-renowned Ice Queens of East Asia -- Yuna Kim of the Republic of Korea and
Mao Asada of Japan.
Both
ladies are 23 years old, and both are precisely 5-feet 4-inches tall. They are not only the undisputed top lady
figure skaters in the world, but both are super celebrities in their
respective countries, with commercial
endorsements and pop stature that easily rival that of the top pro sports
superstars in the United States.
They
are especially the idols of teen and pre-teen girls in their countries, and
both are lady-like and likeable young women who serve as admirable role
models. Both have won an extensive list
of international championships and both
are possessed of astonishing and unusual athletic skill and grace, not to
mention the winsome charm and beauty that makes them natural queens of the ice.
Miss Kim is indeed widely known as Queen Yuna in South Korea, and with good reason. Her national stature is such that she has served as a host Ambassador for Visit Korea and was a key member of the ROK delegation that successfully persuaded the International Olympic Committee to award the 2018 Winter Olympics to Pyeongchang, ROK. Her celebrity and ladylike appeal make her a natural international ambassador of goodwill (not to mention commerce and tourism) for South Korea.
Notwithstanding Mao Asada's astonishing jumping and athletic skills, Miss Kim is almost universally acknowledged as the world's greatest ladies figure skater – perhaps even the greatest ever – and she will be the strong favorite when the ladies take the ice at the spectacular Iceberg Skating Palace in Sochi. She won the gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver with the astonishing total score of 228 points, far ahead of Miss Asada's second place. She has also won two World Championships, in 2009 and 2013.
Yuna Kim performs her layback Ina Bauer
Some
doubts about Miss Kim's readiness for the Olympics were raised last September,
when she suffered an injury to her right foot.
The injury resulted in her withdrawal from the 2013-14 Grand Prix
series, which was dominated primarily by Miss Asada in Kim's absence.
Ominously
for her competition, however, Miss Kim's stellar performance at the recent
Korean National championships left little doubt that she has fully recovered and
returned to superstar form. She easily
defeated a field of improving ROK competitors with a reported score of 227.86
points, according to the Korean Times. See
koreantimesus.com/?p=5083. Although that rather startlingly high reported score
may well have been inflated by a panel of friendly ROK judges, it nonetheless
sends an alarming signal that Miss Kim is in prime form for the Olympic
showdown.
Notwithstanding
Miss Kim's status as a formidable favorite in Sochi, it would be foolhardy to
dismiss the gold medal prospects of Mao Asada in light of her unearthly raw
talent and superlative accomplishments during her eight years in the
international skating arena.
Mao Asada landing one of her gorgeous triple jumps
Indeed,
Mao was a more remarkable youthful skating prodigy than Miss Kim, and, for
better or worse, much of her early fame and reputation was associated with her
amazing mastery of the triple axel. Named for Norwegian skater Axel Paulsen who
first performed the jump (a mere "single axel") wearing speed skates
in 1882, the triple axel is performed with a forward takeoff followed by three
and one-half aerial rotations. After the
legendary Midori Ito landed the first lady's triple axel in 1988, only four
additional women have performed the maneuver in competition (not including Miss
Kim, who apparently does not attempt it).
The triple axel could be considered the gold standard of feats in ladies
figure skating, while the four-rotation quad – which has been performed in
competition by only one female, Miki Ando of Japan (Mao Asada has reportedly
landed quads in practice only) – could be considered its Holy Grail.
Mao
Asada performed her first triple axel in practice at the age of 12 and her first in competition at the
age of 14. By the age of 15, she had won
her first Grand Prix Final in 2005, and even finished ahead of the ultimate
2006 Olympic champion, Shizuka Arakawa, in Japan's National Championships (which
also served as Japan's Olympic trials that year). Although she was then considered by many to
be the leading lady skater in the world,
she was some three months too young to be eligible to compete in the 2006 Olympics
under IOC rules. Fellow countrywoman
Arakawa thus became the first Japanese lady to win the figure skating gold
medal with her memorably gorgeous performance to Puccini's Tarandot before an enthralled audience in Turin, Italy, and on
worldwide television (see video insert below).
In
the current 2013-14 Grand Prix season, Miss Asada won both of her assigned
events (Skate America with 204.55 points and NHK with 207.59), and went on to
win the Grand Prix Final for the fourth time.
In her final official pre-Olympic performance, however, she finished a very
disappointing third in the Japanese National championships, where she was edged
out by Akiko Suzuki and Kanako Murakami, who will be her Olympic teammates at
Sochi.
Miss
Asada's occasional setbacks on the ice are commonly attributed to
under-rotating her triple jumps, especially the axel, and for other arcane
technical landing errors that are a mystery to non-experts like this writer. Knowledgeable observers, however, attribute
some of her difficulties in this area to increasingly strict new judging
criteria that are especially problematic for a daring jumper like Miss
Asada. This factor, and the relentless
pressure of years of competition at the very highest levels, seem to have
somewhat undercut the insouciant and joyful style that was the charming
hallmark of Mao's performances as a younger prodigy. While the youthful teenage Mao seemed to
smile and almost prance her way through her joyful performances – she even
carried a teddy bear during part of one competition -- she has sometimes seemed
more grim and tentative in the high-pressure meets of more recent years. This is certainly understandable, however,
when one is constantly measured against so imposing and formidable a rival as
Yuna Kim.
As
if the stakes in the forthcoming competition between these two Ice Queens were
not sufficiently high, the intensity is exacerbated to some degree by the
strained state of relations between their respective countries. Diplomatic efforts to ease tensions between
Japan and the ROK have been frustrated by, among other things, a lingering
territorial dispute over two volcanic islands and continuing bitterness over
what South Korea considers to be inadequate expression of Japanese remorse over
the Japanese Army's abuse of young Korean girls known as "comfort
women" during World War II.
Although the skating fans of both nations are sufficiently knowledgeable
and open-minded to appreciate and admire the accomplishments of both Miss Kim
and Miss Asada, it is inescapable that the broader enmities between the two
great East Asian democracies tend to infect their competition on the ice with
an extra element of intensity. So on top
of everything else, the patriotic hopes and emotions of the nations of Japan
and the Republic of Korea will be at maximum focus when Yuna and Mao take the
ice at Sochi.
Multiply
that feeling five-fold to approximate the pressure that will surround Mao Asada
when she glides into the takeoff of her triple axel before hundreds of millions
of world-wide television viewers, and a suspenseful Japanese nation, in the
free-skate finals at Sochi. Her Olympic
fate will likely hang on the knife-like edge of a skater's blade when she
descends, hopefully with controlled grace, upon the cold blue ice of the
Iceberg Skating Palace. And if she lands
it perfectly, and proceeds to nail the rest of her program, an atmosphere of similarly
intense pressure will fall upon Yuna Kim.
It
should be a competition worthy of the ages.
It is only a shame that both of these excellent ladies cannot emerge
from Sochi with Olympic Gold.
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