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Tag: figure skating

Is the Sports Media Turning Shawn and Nastia Into the New Michelle and Tara?

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Shawn Johnson and Nastia Lukin at the 2008 Olympics

Two weeks ago, the Los Angeles Times published a pair of articles contrasting the current careers of U.S. gymnasts Shawn Johnson and Nastia Lukin. The Times spoke to the “graceful” Lukin about the three Marta Karolyi run training camps she has attended since the Beijing Olympics, and her agent about the offer she turned down from Dancing with the Stars. They then profiled a Dancing with the Stars rehearsal that Johnson, not necessarily renowned for her artistic ability as a gymnast, was participating in, quoted her mother as saying as Johnson never wants to leave the Left Coast, and mentioning that serious gymnastics training doesn’t seem to be in the cards at the moment.

The short, less artistic little kid looking to take advantage of her 15 minutes of Olympic provided fame.  The lankier-only-by-comparison, more artistic, older teenager who looks to stay in the sport.

One would think we were back in 1998. Continue reading

Revisiting My Teenage Geeky Figure Skating Lovin’ Self #2: America Would Like Figure Skating Again If We All Watched Us Some Caroline Zhang

Updated 3/1/2009 – see end of post.

Programming Note: I can’t talk hockey right now. Can’t. Not after Saturday night’s BU-Northeastern game.  I’m too heated. Going to distract myself by writing another piece in my ongoing series, Revisiting My Teenage Geeky Figure Skating Lovin’ Self. I’ll resume hockey talk later, I promise.

I think one of the most redeeming aspects about me being a geeky figure skating lovin’ teenager was that I was not alone.  Back in the mid-1990s, everyone in the United States had jumped on the figure skating bandwagon.  Weekend afternoons in the late fall and winter would be filled with all sorts of figure skating shows and competitions on every single channel. The mainstream sports media covered the sport along with the big four professional sports. Everyone in America was jumping on the bandwagon, until they all jumped off disillusioned when Michelle Kwan didn’t win an Olympic gold medal again in 2002.

Now, the sport of figure skating suffers, having lost all of its relevance among the American viewing public. It gets about one prime time showing a year – the US National Championships on NBC. ESPN dropped all of its skating coverage.  Even the women’s networks – your Lifetimes, WEs and Oxygens – don’t show the sport. Current figure skating fans blame this downfall in popularity at the lack of a recognizable star – a Michelle Kwan, a Tara Lipinski, a Sarah Hughes, a Sasha Cohen.  I believe more of the blame sits on the marketers of the sport itself, but there is something to be said for the lack of a traditional “ice princess” over the past handful of years, which makes a sports marketers job a million times easier.

Well, America, I’d like to invite you back to figure skating. And here is the figure skater that is going to bring you back.

Continue reading

If He Coached Steve Young, He’s Good Enough For Me

Updated at the end of the post later in the day on 1/16/08: Quick post because I’m thrown off by going to a hockey game tonight (because my body now thinks its the weekend, and wants to stay up late, but alas, it’s only Tuesday): Norm Chow was fired as offensive coordinator of the Titans today, proving that he can only successfully work with one quarterback with the last name of Young in his lifetime. For those of you unfamiliar, Chow is one in a line of NFL coaches with time served at the one and only Brigham Young University. Other coaches with BYU roots include Andy Reid and Mike Holmgren (further proof that they are either twins or one and the same person.) Continue reading

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