Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us Winter Sports

 
  WORLD SPORT
  scoreboards
soccer S
golf plus S
tennis S
baseball S
hockey S
formula one
olympic sports
athletics
cricket
rugby
cycling
women's sports
more sports
ASIA SPORT
EUROPE SPORT
 U.S. SPORTS

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 Work in Sports

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 Television
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

Fortunate one

Despite sloppy performance, Kwan handed third national title

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Sunday February 13, 2000 01:04 AM

  Michelle Kwan Michelle Kwan's national title earns her the right to compete at next month's world championships in Nice, France. Brian Bahr/Allsport

CLEVELAND (AP) -- Instead of one Tara Lipinski to push Michelle Kwan, there were two. And push they did.

But Sasha Cohen and Sarah Hughes simply didn't have the clout with the judges to pull off what Lipinski did in the 1998 Olympics.

Skating cautiously and with little fire, never connecting with the audience, Kwan still won her third straight U.S. Figure Skating Championships crown Saturday night.

She should thank some generous judges for helping her stave off the wave of young Americans.

"I really feel I have to up the ante," Kwan said. "It's, I think, my seventh nationals and I feel ancient next to these people."

While the four-time champion skated tentatively and fell once in the free skate, her main competition - 15-year-old Cohen and 14-year-old Hughes - also had falls. But their performances weren't as uninspired as Kwan's.

They simply don't have the resumes quite yet. And Kwan, who has won more U.S. championships than the likes of Kristi Yamaguchi, Rosalynn Sumners and Dorothy Hamill, certainly does.

"I knew I wanted to go out and feel good about myself after the program," said Kwan, 19, who also has won two world titles. "I didn't want any pity."

Instead, she got charity.

Not only from the judges, eight of whom placed her first - Hughes got the other top spot - but from her competition.

Cohen fell on a triple toe loop 3:38 into her 4-minute program. She did hit six triples, but that crash was enough for Kwan to slip through.

"I was a little tired and when I came down on the landing I just couldn't save it," Cohen said. "I am pretty happy, but I am somewhat disappointed with the last jump. I thought the marks were fair."

Hughes already had fallen on a triple salchow, but otherwise was clean and was the only woman who attempted and completed a triple-triple combination. Even so, she got the nod from only one judge on her technical mark.

"I had a little trouble at the end, that was obvious," Hughes said. "I fought through the program and tried to make every moment count. If I didn't, I would regret it later.

"Any program you do, if you challenge yourself, you should be very tired at the end. Otherwise, you haven't given it your all."

While Kwan gave all she had, it appeared she was skating in a vacuum, never connecting with the audience. It wasn't anywhere near what she's presented in past nationals. Perhaps her hectic schedule as a freshman at UCLA, plus her burgeoning commercial obligations, have cut too deeply into her training.

"It's been a long week," Kwan admitted.

Kwan wasn't as lucky in the short program the previous day. She fell on the simplest of triple jumps, a toe loop, the first time she's done that in four years. That put her in a hole that Cohen skittered through with a brilliant routine, and Hughes glided through it with a superb program. Kwan seemed to need something special, something magical, in the free skate.

What she produced was flat. What she got was a championship built as much on reputation as performance.

She didn't attempt her triple-triple combo, but managed two triple-doubles. She fell on the triple loop, necessitating an improvised triple toe at the very end of a routine to "The Red Violins."

"I actually thought I would do the triple-triple, but I set up and hesitated and knew it right away I would only do the triple-double," Kwan, 19, said. "If I didn't add it, I would only have six triples."

Kwan will seek her third world title next month in Nice, France. But she will have trouble contending with anything similar to what she did in Cleveland.

Hughes is eligible for the worlds off her international results of 1999. But Cohen does not have such credentials and would need to finish in the top three in the junior worlds in three weeks to have a shot at the U.S. team for Nice.

If she can't go, fourth-place Angela Nikodinov will.


 
Related information
Multimedia
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CNNSI Copyright © 2000
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.