A day for comeback kids pairs at U.S. Figure Skating championships

It was an afternoon for four comeback kids in the pairs competition at the 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships to shine.

Except one of those kids -- who had returned to pairs after time away from the sport -- is 33, another 27, another 26 and the youngest, 21.

And that made their comeback skates Thursday at the Sprint Center in Kansas City even more striking. Especially since both couples involved -- Ashley Cain and Timothy LeDuc, and Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Nathan Bartholomay -- began their partnerships less than eight months ago.

The oldest of the group, Stellato-Dudek, had never skated pairs until then.

"Certain things in pairs don't relate at all to singles skating," Stellato-Dudek said. "It was like you were a really good pitcher and retired for 16 years and came back as a first baseman."

She had, in fact, been away from skating for 16 years after her singles career ended in 2001.

Cain, 21, who dropped pairs after 2012 to concentrate on singles, and LeDuc, 26, a show skater on cruise ships the past two years, won the short program with 69.33 points for a program that included impressive side-by-side triple loop jumps.

Stellato-Dudek and Bartholomay -- a 2014 Olympian who was out of competition last season -- were third at 65.04. They stand a whisker behind favored Haven Denney and Brandon Frazier, who achieved 65.39 points, with Denney putting a hand down on the throw triple loop landing and stepping out of her landing on a side-by-side triple salchow.

Denney and Frazier are also making a more traditional kind of comeback: They missed last season after she underwent knee surgery.

Defending champions Tarah Kayne and Danny O'Shea stumbled into fifth place with 61.80 points after receiving negative grades on three of seven elements, the lowest coming on their throw triple flip, on which Kayne took a hard fall.

Cain began the season trying to compete in both singles and pairs, which she had done until age 16. Her decision to drop singles in September fit into what LeDuc described as a plan to "triage" their training.

"Because we're a new team, we have to triage everything so we don't push ourselves too hard," LeDuc said. "There is this much work and this much time, so we're trying to focus on the things that need to be done right now."

After she did both singles and pairs with LeDuc at a low-level event in New York last September, she realized it was too much.

"Because I did it for such a long part of my life, I thought I could do it again, but my body is no longer 16 years old," Cain said. "There was a lot of fatigue, and I was really burned out."

Why pairs over singles?

"His beard," Cain said, laughing. "Timothy brings out strengths in me and in my confidence. In singles, I was a little tentative in my jumping."

After two years of skating with his sister in Willy Bietak productions for Royal Caribbean cruise line, LeDuc decided he wanted to compete again. He was searching for a partner when Mitch Moyer, U.S. Figure Skating's high performance director, suggested Cain.

"Everything happened so fast," Cain said. "Our tryout was Thursday, we teamed up Monday, and Timothy moved to Dallas (where they are coached by her parents) that week."

The Stellato-Dudek partnership with Bartholomay was more accidental.

After winning the U.S. junior title and world junior silver crown in 2000, Stellato-Dudek competed part of the next season before injuries ended her singles career. She went on to work for 12 years as an aesthetician for a Chicago plastic surgeon and married Michael Dudek, a consultant, three years ago.

Last March, she dragged out her old skates and boots to take a spin on a suburban Chicago rink.

"I always thought about skating when I was off," she said. "I would hear music on the radio and think about skating to it. I was getting these skating vibes from all over the place. It was like the universe was trying to tell me something."

She then brought her vintage skates along on a trip to visit her old Chicago-area coach, Cindy Watson Caprel, at the Ellenton, Florida, rink where Watson Caprel now works.

Bartholomay, who had trained there with his Olympic partner, Felicia Zhang, also was working at the Florida rink and casting about for a way to come back after splitting with his post-Olympic partner, Gretchen Donlan, after one season.

Once again, Moyer played matchmaker.

"We had been looking at partner options on YouTube, and the week Deanna came down, Mitch Moyer was there, and he said, 'Why don't you try out?''' Bartholomay said. "As soon as our coaches saw us together, they said, 'You look compatible.'''

Still, a partner who hadn't skated for 16 years? And U.S. championships sixth months later?

"I've dreamt about this moment," Stellato-Dudek said.

But making it come true?

"I'd say surreal is a good word to use," the thirtysomething comeback kid said.

(This article originally appeared on icenetwork.)

With short program win, Karen Chen rebounds from previous hardships in style

With short program win, Karen Chen rebounds from previous hardships in style

Karen Chen had next.

That is how it looked after the 2015 U.S. Championships, as Chen, then 15, stole the show in the free skate and took third overall in her first U.S. championship as a senior, when she was too young to go to senior worlds.

And, if the only performance you'd seen of Chen's since then was during Thursday's short program at the 2017 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Kansas City, you would have thought to yourself, "Just what everyone expected."

The 4-foot-11-inch Chen was commanding. Her jumps were powerful, her body positions eye-catching, her spins compelling, and her edge work exquisite, all creating the essence of the swan she embodied while skating to music from the film, On Golden Pond, a program she choreographed herself.

She took first place with 72.82 points, the highest short program score ever recorded at the U.S. championships, topping the previous mark of 72.12 Gracie Gold set in 2014. Mirai Nagasu finished second at 71.95, and three-time champion Ashley Wagner rounded out the top three with 70.94 points.

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Mirai Nagasu finds herself in a better place

Mirai Nagasu finds herself in a better place

The connection had only audio, but you still could see Mirai Nagasu smiling during a media teleconference last week.

Both the tone of her voice and the content of her answers transmitted an image of happiness.

It was an emotion that long had been muted publicly in Nagasu, making the sound of it the most pleasant of surprises, especially since her Grand Prix results this season would not seem a cause for joy.

"This is the first time in a couple years I'm actually really excited to go to nationals and show everyone what I am practicing and what I am capable of," Nagasu told the media on the call.

At age 23 -- yes, still only 23 and about to make a 10th straight appearance in the senior division at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships -- it felt as if the 13-year-old version of Mirai Nagasu was with us again.

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Rot at the core threatens future of Olympics

Rot at the core threatens future of Olympics

Sixteen years ago, when the Olympics were beset by leadership corruption, ethical laxity and doping, my perspicacious colleague Jere Longman of the New York Times suggested the possibility of the Games’ crumbling under the weight of rotten moral underpinnings.

“Future drug and corruption scandals seem inevitable. Preparations for the 2004 Summer Games in Athens remain precarious. The Olympic Games are as decayed as a bad tooth, perhaps facing permanent extraction sometime in the future,” Longman wrote in a May 17, 2000 Times story headlined, “Lack of I.O.C. Ethics Is Business as Usual.”

The Olympics may still be standing, but the rot has gotten so much worse in the past two years that it no longer seems a stretch to envision their demise.

Such a vision may be peculiar to the United States, where the much-trumpeted notions of an Olympic movement with Olympic ideals have no traction, where the coverage of Olympic-related events (and the Olympics themselves) in major media is continually shrinking, where the presence of more than one major pro sport and of all-but-pro college sports adds competition for attention that the Olympics face nowhere else in the world.

How can one have ideals when the leaders of the International Olympic Committee, notably its president, Thomas Bach, have mastered the art of moral equivocation and of what I call Candide-ism: saying all is for the best in this best of all possible worlds?

I am moved to this doom saying by events of the last few weeks involving Olympic costs and doping, the latter now known to be so pervasive as to have invalidated dozens of results from the 2008 and 2012 Summer Games.

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In long term, radical change needed to reduce Olympic host burden

In long term, radical change needed to reduce Olympic host burden

If the International Olympic Committee thought the bidding process changes in its Agenda 2020 reforms would end the negativity about being a host of the Summer or Winter Games, it has been sadly mistaken.

The frightening new financial projections about the cost of the 2020 Tokyo Summer Games and Rome’s withdrawal from the 2024 race on financial grounds make it clear the IOC still has a long way to go in convincing citizens of democracies that being a host of the ever-more-bloated Olympic Games is worth the time, money and hassle.

 The italicized passage above was the opening of my Friday column, which dealt with short- and long-term solutions to a mess so bad that six of the 10 official candidates to be host of the 2022 Winter Games and 2024 Summer Games withdrew after formalizing candidatures – and another, Boston, dropped out before filing its paperwork.

In the short term – for the 2024 vote coming next September – I borrowed an idea from my colleague Alan Abrahamson, who posited that the IOC should award the next two Summer Games at the same time, with Los Angeles getting 2024 and Paris 2028.

I suggested that the order makes no difference (click here for that column).  The important thing is doubling down will give the IOC more time to sort out its future.

The long-term answer?  Dramatic changes should be considered.

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