![]() “The worst aspect to this is that most of the time, in skating and gymnastics and maybe other sports, you grow up in a culture that’s very authoritarian,” Korpi says. First, rather than a skating competition for women, are we now dealing with a jumping competition for girls? Second, and much more importantly, what’s the cost of success – physically, emotionally and psychologically – for this collection of raw, developing children? Trusova and Shcherbakova have both mastered skating’s holy grail: the quad, an exhaustive element – and up until recently an unheard-of feat for ladies, which is four full rotations in the air. What makes them so good? Well, owing to their remarkable jumps, they maximize the technical points on offer. They repeated the trick at the European championships the following month their opponents left dumbstruck by their dominance. In the Grand Prix final last December, Kostornaia claimed gold while Shcherbakova and Trusova rounded out the medals. They only made their senior debuts last year but blitzed through the sport, ensuring a multitude of headlines. The trio have revolutionized figure skating. Unintentionally, it may have shifted the landscape of women’s figure skating in the process.īarring a minor miracle, three Russian teenagers would have battled it out for the podium places: 16-year-old Alena Kostornaia and a pair of 15-year-olds, Anna Shcherbakova and Alexandra Trusova. Last week should have seen the world championships take place in Montreal, but the Covid-19 pandemic put paid to that. ![]()
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