Oct 18, 2012 00:32
a carefree boy ready to kill everyone,
this video is brilliant watch it now,
russia/usa otp,
sk8er w/ amazing hair who is ttly awesom,
fuckload of skaters in this post,
ice dance,
i don't know you but i love you,
super nice guy in person btw,
it's great feelings,
the only safe place for skaters to look,
he's gonna make you cry he's so good,
i think fs are some of the best looking,
infamy here we come,
figured out how to work the google,
i don't even know who this guy is,
ship so hard,
spelling out "macho" in russian,
teamwork makes the dreamwork,
u wld appreciate the class these 2 exude,
first name greatest last name ever,
really jizzed about men's figure skating,
i wish they were doing it on the ice,
hello soviet suprise package!
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I'm kinda desperate to see them get the recognition they both deserve - Josh especially is under-rated IMO, but I agree with you, I don't want to see them fried by the pressure. *confused*
I agree with your assessment of the situation, which is why as much as I would love to see Josh and Jason become the new superstars - because they have the potential and skill and talent to be - I also don't want them to. I think Josh was onto something with his reasoning for refusing a single GP assignment - his theory was that if he didn't do that great, he might not get one the next year.
Abbott makes me sad. He is such a lovely, wonderful skater...but OMG headcase.
lol for me the main part of the season is over now - it was all about Josh and Jason and their JGPs, and now they have to wait for the final :P. However, it will be interesting to see how things shake out on the GP - are the problems Chan suffered at JO real and caused by his coaching scenario, or were they just rust? Can Artur prove he has the right to go to Worlds again and fight for more spots for Russia? Where is Takahashi really at?
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I'm really torn between sending veterans vs. sending young kids. The young ones don't always fare so well at their first Worlds, especially if they're in the position of either being a sudden, unexpected National champ, or under the gun to win back a third spot, or both. So it boils down to: do you send the perpetual cock-up veteran in the hopes they'll have a Paul Wylie-like breakthrough? Or do you send the newbie, hoping they'll handle the pressure at least well enough to stand up? It's such a crapshoot. And if something goes wrong, it's always, "Well, the USFSA should've sent _______." Look at all the shit they got last year for not sending Gracie Gold to senior Worlds. And she was just a kid! It was like, "Save us, Gracie! Save us!" :::headdesk:::
The importance of kids getting experience at the senior level can't be overstated. Look at Michelle Kwan--she went to 1994 Worlds as an alternate, and the next year she was second banana to Nicole Bobek. That gave her two years to grow and develop without the pressure of being national champion. Can you imagine how things might've unfolded if she'd gone to Lilihammer as a 13-year-old brand-new national champion, expected to deliver the goods at an Olympics?
If the USA's veteran men's skaters melt down on the GP circuit this fall, I think we'll be hearing a similar groundswell of claims that the USFSA should send Josh to Worlds--because a teenager who's just transitioning from juniors to seniors can solve all the USA's troubles. Who would've guessed he had SUCH POWER?????? LOL.
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