Russia continued its winning streak in the men's figure skating
as Evgeni Plushenko easily claimed the gold medal in the Turin
Winter Olympic Games in Turin on Thursday.
The first skater among the medal contenders to take to the ice,
Plushenko nailed 12 jumps, including seven in combination, to
surpass Stephane Lambiel of Switzerland by a huge margin of 27.12
points with a personal best of 258.33, and Jeffrey Buttle from
Canada took the bronze medal.
After skating an almost perfect program, Plushenko neither
punched the air in victory nor roared with pleasure but sagged his
shoulders in exhaustion as the tension poured off.
As hordes of fans yelled "Rus-si-a", he made the sign of the
cross on his chest, kissed his wedding ring, touched the ice and
kissed his hand in respect to the arena where that elusive gold was
won.
"I felt great. I am happy with the result and the performance
today," Plushenko said.
"Though I did a double flip instead of a triple flip, I did a
lot of good moves tonight. That's enough."
"I will surely to compete in the 2010 Olympics," he added.
Russia has won four consecutive Olympic men's golds in figure
skating: Alexei Yagudin in 2002, Ilia Kulik in 1998, Alexei Urmanov
in 1994 and Plushenko in Turin.
Plushenko, 23, put out a strong performance to E. Marton's music
"The Godfather" that featured an excellent quadruple toe loop and
triple toe loop as well as a triple axel, triple loop and an
impressive change foot combination spin.
The three-time world champion also showed a triple salchow and
earned a personal best of 167.67 points (85.25 technical
score/82.42 component score), totaling at 258.33 points.
Born in Volograd, Russia, Plushenko started skating at 4.
Quickly identified as a talent, he went to St. Petersburg to train
with Russian coach Alexei Mishin at 11, who has described him back
then as "slim, like a cheap chicken."
Lambiel, the world champion last year, skated to Antonio
Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons", opened with a graceful triple axel,
followed by a quadruple toe loop and triple toe loop. He then
pulled off a double axel, circular step sequence and an expressive
triple salchow.
He picked up 152.17 points in the free skating, thus was given
the silver with a total result of 231.21 points.
The 20-year-old Lambiel is the first Swiss man to win the Worlds
since 1947 and he pulled ligaments in his right knee two weeks
ago.
Buttle, the silver medalist at the 2005 Worlds, earned a total
result of 227.59 points, jumping from the six place in the short
program to the bronze medal.
"I am proud of myself. I had a good start. Though I slipped in
one move, it was the best you can ask for," Buttle said.
"A medal is not very important for me. I am happy I had a great
performance."
In Turin, Russia won the pairs gold with a victory by Tatiana
Totmianina and Maxim Marinin on Monday. After the men's final, the
Russians will go for the gold in both the ice dancing and the
women's competition.
Two Chinese skaters competed in the men's figure skating. Zhang
Min finished with 196.27 points in the 10th place and Li Chengjiang
skated to the 16th place.
(Xinhua News Agency February 17, 2006)