Cape Breton Post

That’s a big score’

Virtue and Moir nearly perfect in the short dance at the nationals

- BY LORI EWING

A month before the curtain closes on their outstandin­g career, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir might be closer to perfection than ever before.

But the three-time world champions still see room for improvemen­t.

Skating to an upbeat medley of “Sympathy For The Devil,” “Hotel California,” and Santana’s “Oye Como Va,” Virtue and Moir scored a whopping 85.12 points in the short dance Friday at the Canadian figure skating championsh­ips. A perfect score for their program, Moir said, is about 86 points.

“It’s a great boost and we’ll have to maintain that momentum, but we’ll watch the video, and we know we’ll still have a lot of things we want to improve,” Virtue said.

“We still have five points (in us),” Moir added, laughing.

The score tops their world short dance record of 82.68, set at Skate Canada Internatio­nal in October, but national championsh­ip marks don’t qualify for records.

Still, they’ll take it. “That’s a big score. We’re not quite there yet. Maybe in a month,” Moir said.

A day after she was diagnosed with pneumonia, Gabrielle Daleman won the women’s short program. Skating to a French rendition of “Carmen,” the world bronze medallist scored 77.88 points to take a six-point lead over Kaetlyn Osmond into Saturday’s free program.

“I am just most proud of how I’ve handled everything, I didn’t find out how sick I was (until Thursday), I just knew I couldn’t breathe properly,” said Daleman, who saw the Canadian team doctor after practice

Thursday.

In pairs, two-time world champions Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford have a huge 13-point lead after the short program.

In ice dance, Toronto’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier are second with 78.37, Carolane Soucissse of Chateaugua­y, Que., and Shane Firus of North Vancouver, B.C., are third, while perennial runners-up Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje of Waterloo, Ont., are fourth after Poje fell during the make-orbreak twizzles - side-by-side travelling spins that are worth major marks in ice dance.

“It happened so quick that it’s kind of hard to analyze (what happened), but I lost an edge, and all of sudden hands on the ice,” Poje said. “It shocks you for a second, but you just have to be profession­al and get back into the performanc­e and just try your hardest to bring the audience

back into what you’re trying to create.”

Waiting in the wings, Moir heard the gasp of the crowd.

“It was a good thing for me to refocus in after that,” he said. “As friends you feel bad for them, but we know what program they have (Saturday), we have no doubt they’re going to climb into the spot they belong in.”

Virtue, from London, Ont., and Moir, from Ilderton, Ont., won gold in the same west coast city at the 2010 Olympics, but had to settle for silver in 2014 in Sochi. They took a two-year hiatus then returned with a vengeance, winning every event but the Grand Prix Final in December, where they finished behind France’s Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron.

Friday’s program was the perfect Olympic tuneup, Virtue and Moir said, because it didn’t come easy.

“That’s just the way it is sometimes, when people skate together it’s so close sometimes you have to fight a little bit, I think what really kept us together were our cues and being so connected,” Moir said. “Some days you have to fight for turns, and have the tendency to go a little scratchy, but we were able to keep away from that. . . but you want those gritty performanc­es going into an Olympic Games, and you know that you’ve gone through them.”

Daleman, meanwhile, opened with a triple-triple combinatio­n on her way to a clean program, throwing two celebrator­y hands in the air when she finished.

“(Pneumonia) sounds bad, and it kinda is, because you can’t breathe. But I look at it as extra cardio training,” Daleman said, laughing. “My friends were saying ‘How are you going to deal with this?’ and I was sending them laughing emojis, like ‘Pssh. Extra cardio training.’ If I can do this now not breathing, having half oxygen, imagine what I can do at full strength. This was just a great confidence booster.”

Daleman, a 19-year-old from Newmarket, Ont., won bronze at last year’s world championsh­ips, while Osmond claimed silver.

The 22-year-old Osmond, from Marystown, N.L., had an uncharacte­ristic fall on her opening element - a triple flip but skated the remainder of her program to Edith Piaf’s “Sous le Ciel de Paris” cleanly to score 71.41. It’s the first time Osmond has trailed after the short program all season.

“It is really frustratin­g not doing my first element, but overall I’m so happy I was able to come back after a fall, a very uncharacte­ristic fall for me, and be able to keep my focus and do everything else the best I could,” Osmond said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir skate off the ice after performing their short program during the ice dance competitio­n at the Canadian figure skating championsh­ips in Vancouver, B.C., on Friday.
CP PHOTO Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir skate off the ice after performing their short program during the ice dance competitio­n at the Canadian figure skating championsh­ips in Vancouver, B.C., on Friday.

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