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Just watching that shit makes my skin crawl
I know, you just want us to overlook your recent purchase of figure skates, it's ok, you can admit it... you just wanna wear the tights.
I like figure skating and I must confess, I never really got into it until the Tonya Harding fiasco.
a few years ago me and my friends were all in a hotel room watching doubles and we turned the sound down and put our own words into what was happening, we made it all sexual

watching it like that is fun but other than that i cant stand it
Actually I like watching the figure skating, but I can't stand the Ice Dancing.

I like all the jumps and spins and shit.
i'll admit it, i like the pairs figure skating like they did the other night. That Canadian chick is pretty hot. I just like how the guy just tosses the girl across the ice and she does 3 or so spins in the air.

Its not a sport though, its an activity. And you wont catch we watching it EVER except at the olympics.
I like it in the Olympics as well. As far as sports go, it is not much of one. It falls under the same category as diving, I don't think any thing is truely a sport when it is on an individual level. The cometition is not scored based on how you do against some one, it is scored on how a group of shitheads think you did.

Pffft! :fuckoff:
Sean Cold Wrote:I like it in the Olympics as well. As far as sports go, it is not much of one. It falls under the same category as diving, I don't think any thing is truely a sport when it is on an individual level. The cometition is not scored based on how you do against some one, it is scored on how a group of shitheads think you did.

Pffft! :fuckoff:
You're saying you don't think that it's a sport if it's on an individual level? Or you don't think it's a sport if there are judges?
Maynard Wrote:You're saying you don't think that it's a sport if it's on an individual level? Or you don't think it's a sport if there are judges?
I mean that I have a hard time considering it a sport at all when both things are an issue.

Leave me alone, it's Monday damn it! :fuckoff:
I think that whenever a competition comes down to a group of judges it loses some luster for me. I prefer sports where the competitors truly hold their fate in their own hands. Boxing is a sport I enjoy and great fights often get fucked when it goes to the cards.
Quote:Actually I like watching the figure skating,
example number 432 of why maymay is a fag.
Either way, I think it is pretty. :loveya: Watching it now.

That whole fighting & leg breaking thing turned me off though. I couldn't watch it that year (or the time after too, I think.)
Gymnastics was like that too for me, when the media made a big deal about them, I had to stop watching.

ps. this is post #420



Edited By Hey Ladi on Feb. 11 2002 at 9:42
I never, ever thought I would say this, but that Canadian couple got abso-fucking-lutely robbed by those piece of shit judges. How the fuck can they have a flawless performance, while the russian pair make 4 individual mistakes and the russians still win????? I don't know whether it's a sport or not but all in all, its a very artistic thing to watch. Its also interesting how attractive Tara Lapinski's gotten since she looked like a geeky young girl at the last olympics. Sorry about the last comment, I am a guy after all
They were beyond rooked tonight. This is why it is a bullshit sport. I was just proud of the fact that the American crowd didn't dump on the whole thing. It is right up their with Roy Jones Jr. getting rooked! :disappointed: :disappointed: :disappointed:
Quote:I think that whenever a competition comes down to a group of judges it loses some luster for me. I prefer sports where the competitors truly hold their fate in their own hands. Boxing is a sport I enjoy and great fights often get fucked when it goes to the cards.

I'm impressed by how wonderfully my statement, written before the event, came true after what happened last night.

Fucking judges ruin everything.



Edited By Keyser Soze on Feb. 12 2002 at 10:17
I went to high school with one of the women figure skaters. I watch during the olympics for lack of anything else to watch, and also it is kinda cool to see someone you know on the olympic team.
Quote:Sources say Russian and French judges made deal

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Cynthia Faulkner
ESPN.com


SALT LAKE CITY -- Sources within the International Skating Union have told ESPN/ABC Sports figure skating reporter Christine Brennan that a collaboration between the French and Russian judges helped spark the controversy that has the skating world and the Winter Olympics abuzz.


The Canadian Olympic delegation on Tuesday requested an investigation into why Russians Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze won the gold medal when many observers feel that Canadians Jamie Sale and David Pelletier were more worthy.

Brennan, one of the world's leading authorities on figure skating, says that reliable sources within the ISU told her that a collaboration between the French and Russian judges did happen.

"When (figure skating officials) investigate, I think they're going to find out that the French judge worked a deal with the Russians," said Brennan, one of the world's leading authorities on figure skating.

"There's absolutely no doubt that the Canadians should have won. Their 'Love Story' program was just marvelous. The performance was perfect.

"The Russian pair made small errors including a small mistake on one jump. To me it's clear. It should have been crystal clear for the Canadians."

Brennan said she watched the tapes again and the Canadians' performance only gets better.

"I was shocked the moment I saw the scores and I'm still shocked," she said. "I ran into three international judges, all of them judging at the Olympics, within three minutes after the competition. 'This is an outrage,' they said in unison. I've never seen judges come up to a reporter -- as opposed to going away from them -- and say this is an outrage."

Until Monday, only a few diehard figure skating fans in North America knew who Sale and Pelletier were. That's all changed.

"Their agent told me he's had about a hundred calls," Brennan said. "I'm guessing they are now a household name, which never would have been if they'd won the gold medal with no controversy. I would imagine that they became millionaires in the last 24 hours. The sympathy factor is huge."

The scandal already is drawing comparisons to figure skating's most famous pair of all -- Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. The story could grow if the United States were to get involved because it's conceivable that if Sale and Pelletier should have won gold, Americans Kyoko Ina and John Zimmerman could have won bronze, Brennan said.

"This is really starting to remind me of Tonya and Nancy, but it's not there yet," Brennan said. "There's something about this that's starting to build and there's the sense that the pace with which it's starting is like it was with Tonya and Nancy. Now there's an investigation and the story has legs."

And ladies and gentlemen, we have our selves a scandel!!! :fuckoff:
Olympics and scandal in the same sentence? Pish-posh I say.
Quote:ISU says it will conduct 'internal assessment'




SALT LAKE CITY -- Figure skating judges have drawn criticism for years, their whims and shenanigans raising questions about whether the sport even belongs in the Olympics.


The latest flap sure isn't going to help.


David Pelletier skated a virtual flawless long program, but only had silver to show for it.

A day after the Russians narrowly beat the Canadians for the gold medal in pairs despite an obvious technical error, Canada's Olympic delegation demanded an investigation.

The International Skating Union said Tuesday it would conduct a rare "internal assessment" of the way the two performances were judged, but it wasn't clear if that was enough to satisfy the Canadians.

Others in the sport, meanwhile, said figure skating needs to make changes to ensure an "embarrassment" like this doesn't happen again.

"You need to look at everything," said Scott Hamilton, the 1984 gold medalist who was working as a commentator for NBC at event Monday night.

"You really need to analyze the entire sport from top to bottom and see how something like this could happen. Now is the time -- get through the Olympics, and then just have some really fundamental changes in the organization and structure of figure skating."

Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze won the gold medal by the tiniest of margins over Jamie Sale and David Pelletier.

"We were the first to skate, and there was nothing to keep our rivals from getting a 6.0 presentation mark for skating after us," Sikharulidze told the Sport Express, a Russian newspaper.

"But they didn't, and that means they were not head and shoulders above us. ... So let me repeat, I think that our victory is a worthy one."

But not only did Sale and Pelletier skate cleanly, they displayed the kind of passion fans will remember years from now. The winners, meanwhile, made an error when Sikharulidze stepped out of a double axel.

The crowd was already chanting "Six! Six!" by the time Sale and Pelletier finished, begging the judges to award the Canadians a perfect score.

"When Jamie and David finished, I thought, 'That's easy. They made it easy,"' said Sally Rehorick, Canada's chief of mission, a former skater and judge for 25 years.

Instead, they lost a 5-4 split of the judges, getting only four 5.9s for artistry compared with seven 5.9s for the Russians.

Chinese judge Yang Jiasheng, who favored the Russians, also was supposed to judge the men's short program Tuesday night. But he withdrew a few hours before the competition "due to illness," according to an advisory on the Olympic information network.

Boos rained down as the Canadians' marks flashed, and Pelletier hid his face in his hands as Sale's eyes filled with tears.

"This is not good for the sport," Pelletier said Tuesday. "It is the same in track and field and boxing. Every time there is a controversy like this, it's not good for the sport."

The skating union wouldn't discuss how the Russians and Canadians were judged, saying only that it was looking into the matter. Union president Ottavio Cinquanta planned a Wednesday news conference.

It wasn't clear when the union's review would be completed or what, if any, action it could take.

Skating has a history of controversies. Ice dancing is the usual culprit, with many believing results are set before competitions begin.

At the Nagano Olympics, Canadian ice dancers Shae-Lynn Bourne and Victor Kraatz contended the Russians and French conspired to keep them off the medals podium. The couple who won the bronze, Marina Anissina and Gwendal Peizerat, represented France, and Anissina was born in Russia.

At the world championships last March, some fans turned their backs to the ice to protest Barbara Fusar Poli and Maurizio Margaglio's victory.

Dick Pound, former International Olympic Committee vice president, said in December ice dancing could easily be dropped from the Olympics if improvements weren't made.

But ice dancing isn't the only problem. Two pairs judges at the 1999 world championships -- Sviatoslav Babenko of Russia and Alfred Korytek of Ukraine -- were suspended after TV footage showed them glancing at each other and appearing to talk before marks were announced.

And coach Frank Carroll remains convinced American Linda Fratianne lost the gold medal in 1980 because judges traded votes along geopolitical lines. Annette Poetzsch of East Germany won instead, while Fratianne settled for silver.

"This is the worst thing that's happened in a long time in figure skating," Carroll said Tuesday. "I can understand where, watching that, if the International Olympic Committee said, 'We don't want figure skating in the Olympics anymore.' Who's going to argue with that?"

Hamilton added: "The judges really weren't judging the program. Maybe they'd come in with preconceived notions that they didn't want to dismiss."

Or maybe this is one cold war that hasn't ended.

On Monday night, the Russian, Chinese, French, Polish and Ukrainian judges all favored Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze. The American, Canadian, German and Japanese judges put Sale and Pelletier first.

Carroll said changes are needed.

"It's over with and done," he said. "It's what goes on from here. How do they stop this? What are they going to do?"

I love it! Turmoil and disaray so rule! I watched Bob Costas review the tapes and it was clear that the Canadians performed nearly flawless and certianly better than the Russians did.
I do have one intresting Olympic stat today. Yesterday, The U.S. women's hockey team beat down Germany 10-0. Now, while that in it's self is fuckin funny, The Uber chicks only had 8 shots on goal for them game. Now, I am no math major, but, that means Team USA could have played without a goalie and still won by two. :bouncer:
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