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Olympic Insider
ICE DANCING
SKATING TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT?
Pasha Grishuk, 25, and Evgeny Platov, 30, have won all the
competitions they have entered--21 in all--since capturing the
Olympic gold medal in ice dancing at Lillehammer in 1994. What
sets the Russians apart from most rivals in the sport--a
combination of ballroom dancing and skating--is not only their
innovative choreography but also their breathtaking speed.
Grishuk, an aspiring actress who has changed her first name from
Oksana to avoid confusion with singles skater Oksana Baiul, is
particularly admired for her quick, clean-edge turns known as
"twizzles." The high technical difficulty of the pair's programs
has resulted in a few falls this season, but they accept the
risk. "If we made our dance easier, we would never fall," says
Platov. "But we have some footwork that is extremely difficult.
It is so fast and has so many turns that it makes us unique and
unbeatable."
Not if Anjelika Krylova, 24, and Oleg Ovsiannikov, 28, can help
it. The younger Russian pair train with the coach that Grishuk
and Platov used to have. Despite their relatively brief
partnership, they have already won the Russian ice-dancing title
and collected two silver medals at the world championships. This
week they hope to glide ahead of the favorites. So fierce is the
rivalry that at last month's European championships in Milan,
the two pairs engaged in a game of intimidation during the
warm-ups, whipping by each other so closely that costumes were
torn by flashing skate blades.
CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING
FAR FROM MOUNT KILIMANJARO
Cross-country-skiing coaches dream of athletes like Philip Boit,
26, who is blessed with a long stride, a powerful upper body,
endurance and stamina. One problem: Boit, a Kenyan
middle-distance runner, had never seen snow until 1996, when he
was recruited by Nike to test the proposition that good runners
make good skiers. He has cut his time for the 10-km classic race
from 2 hr. to a creditable 30 min. But Boit has no illusions
about challenging Norway's Bjorn Daehlie, who won the 1994 gold
with a time of 24:20.1. "Even if I finish dead last," says Boit,
"I will be proud of myself as long as I improve my time."
TWO SKATES CLAPPING
When a sport is transformed overnight by the arrival of new
technology--graphite tennis racquets, fiber-glass vaulting
poles, high-backed ski boots--the change makes everyone queasy.
But performance trumps sentiment. The sport of speed skating is
at one of those pivotal junctures, with good old tradition being
upended by a Dutch contraption called the clap skate. Unlike the
conventional skate heel, the heel of the clap skate's boot
detaches from the blade like a one-way seesaw. The skater's heel
lifts off the blade, lengthening the blade's contact time on the
ice, then the blade snaps back to its original position with a
noisy "clap." The result: 16 world records fell in a two-month
period--some by more than a second.
Purists cry foul. "I liked knowing that I won more on my power
and my technique versus what was on my feet and what kind of
springs I had," says Olympian Bonnie Blair, who is glad clap
skates came after her six Olympic medals. "It doesn't look like
they're going back on it. It's time for those youngsters to take
over."
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