Tuesday 5 April 2016

Hall of fame: Pair skating perfection of Gordeeva and Grinkov


Worlds are just gone. Boston hosted great championships like USA always does. North America has done great things to figure skating and skaters however I still prefer the Russian deep soul. One of the most touching figure skating story is about my all-time favorite pair skaters Ekaterina Gordeeva and Sergei Grinkov. We all know them as G&G.

They were the last generation of pure Soviet products. They had grown within the system where talented skaters just had to skate. They potentially could have had that grey Soviet glance in their eyes but on the contrary they both had a character and they both seemingly loved skating regardless the pretty ruthless system. They were one huge man and one tiny girl as they started. They went from win to win from 1986 to 1987.

photo: www.gordeeva.com
1988 was Olympic year and Galgary hosted the games. Canada is all about Ice hockey and figure skating. Soviet people could explore the western world very limited at that time but athletes had the luxury of being on the competitions. Gordeeva and Grinkov just melted the Calgary audience with their genuine, fresh and clean programs. Especially Ekaterina was the one to draw the attention. They won Olympics with the ages of 16 and 21. This victory gained them North American relations and ever since they were invited to North American tours. America just loved them. 


One would think that this is the story, but the story only starts here. They had age difference of 4-5 years and Ekaterina had been like a tiny girl. However after Olympics her body became to change and her skating suffered. Sergei realized that Ekaterina was not only getting the attention because of her open and honest personality but she truly was becoming a very beautiful woman. They became a couple, married and got a child while being professional skaters in US in the early 90’s.

For 1994 it was made possible for professionals to reinstate and make a comeback to competitive skating. So the duo did. They come back as husband and wife, parents of a baby, with a magic that was never seen on ice before. G&G had the programs of all times choreographed by Marina Zueva. She started together with G&G in the Soviet Union but turned out to be the most famous and successful choreographer and coach of ice dance during past fifteen years in North America. Their Olympic free skate on Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, telling a story of their lives and hunger for more, was just pure perfection – it had it all. (The video is from European championships since they skate this cleaner than in Olympics)


Pair made a golden comeback and was crowned as Olympic Champions again in Lillehammer despite some errors in the Olympic skate. They return to pros and continue in North American show of Stars on Ice. Just one and a half years later Sergei collapses on ice and dies of a massive heart attack with the age of 28. Ekaterina loses her husband, father of their child and her partner on ice. This brought a tragic end to their love story that Americans had just loved. Their skating truly had the best qualities of pair skating all times.

For me it is still not the love story that shines through. It is actually the deep russian soul that they could bring on ice from the very pressure of the soviet system. Sergei and Marina were the artistic engine of the couple where Ekaterina had the shine of a star. She has the capability to draw attention and embrace the ideas of those two. Sergei was the perfect partner for her. Marina Zueva describes him as the pure ideal of a male pair skater. Almost like a statue of Ancient Greece. This exhibition program of Lillehammer is one of my favourites and brings out their quality of skating.


Well, and the heartbreaking tribute to Sergei was skated just couple of months after his death and Ekaterina was seen alone on ice - skating for the memory of her husband.



I really enjoyed watching this couple when they were skating and I still do – thanks for youtube. Ekaterina has stayed on ice and has made performances as a single skater, continued life and found a new partner. However the magic was gone together with Sergei. I’m still waiting a couple to beat that or come even close. 

Great site about this couple: www.gordeeva.com 

Monday 4 April 2016

What is Finnstep?

Finnstep is a blog that has been planned long before a web blog as a medium was invented. It was maybe 1984, Sarajevo Olympics and I am a kid watching YLE's (Finland Public Broadcast) coverage for Olympic Figure Skating.

It is Jane Torvill and Christopher Dean dancing their out of the box Bolero and earning their clean row of 6,0s from artistic impression. It is Katarina Witt and her legendary coach Jutta Müller on the screen. It is Valova and Vasiljev in pairs and Scott Hamilton in men. They were crowned as Olympic Champions but I was bit by a figure skating buzz.

Ever since I have followed figure skating. I have had my favorites and my opinions on the judges' favorites. This is a blog that reaches to history to embrace current skaters. This is about my reflections on this ever so interesting sport. On my behalf I want to be building a great momentum for Helsinki World Figure Skating Championships 2017 and hopefully long after that.

And myself. In the 80's I was a lot on skates but unfortunately I wasn't put on a figure skating club. Luckily it is never too late. I skate in an adult synchronized skating team and slowly start learning my individuals. There is a lot to gain on that area :)

But what Finnstep really is despite my figure skating blog nowadays. It is maybe the most recently invented compulsory dance in ice dancing. Yes - we don’t have compulsory discipline in ice dance any more - but in the short dance there are always compulsory rhythms embedded to program. Finnstep was one of the rhythms in Vancouver Olympics. The dance is created by Finnish ice dance heroes Susanna Rahkamo and Petri Kokko. It is a variation of quick step which was their short dance on the golden season of 1994-1995. 


What a delightful dance that is. That was the ultimate gift to the judges who were begging for ballroom dance in the early 90's and Rahkamo-Kokko kept on delivering theatrical un-ball-room-like performances. But this is ballroom dance, you can almost feel the bounce from floor! 

P.S. More about Finnstep from a fellow blogger The Wrong Edge