Penticton Herald

Moir rediscover­s his love of skate dancing

- By LORI EWING

MISSISSAUG­A — Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir came out of retirement to compete at the 2018 Olympics with a “stone cold” focus.

“T and I… we wanted to win, and nothing else,” Moir said.

Their ferocious gold-medal pursuit led to a fierce push and pull with Montreal coaches Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon, whose focus was on the process and not the outcome.

“They helped us understand that (gold) actually wasn’t the goal. Our goal was to be the best we could possibly be… but the double-edged sword of it is it allows you to be your best as well, when you have your priorities and you’re connected with the joy of skating and why you started skating,” Moir said Wednesday at Skate Canada’s national team training camp.

“And the higher you get, the higher the pressure is. And you forget that so easily.”

Virtue and Moir retired after winning gold at the 2018 Games as the most decorated ice dancers in history. Moir hadn’t considered coaching, but he was so sold on the philosophy instilled by Dubreuil and Lauzon at the Ice Academy of Montreal, he became the head of their satellite program in London, Ont.

“My time in Montreal changed… well, it changed my life. I know Tess feels the same way,” Moir said. “I fell back in love with the sport again.”

Of the 23 dance teams at the Beijing Olympics, Dubreuil and Lauzon, who captured back-to-back world silver medals before retiring in 2007, coached 10 of them at the academy, including gold medallists Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France.

Dubreuil, Lauzon and former French skater Romain Haguenauer co-founded the academy in 2014. They had one team in the Sochi Olympics that year. They had four teams four years later in Pyeongchan­g, including Virtue and Moir. In Beijing, country allegiance­s seemed to melt away between the 10 Montreal-based teams. Instead there were plenty

of hugs and high-fives.

Haley Sales and Nikolas Wamsteeker, who are at this week’s national team camp, are one of Moir’s dance teams.

The two, who’ve twice been fourth at the Canadian championsh­ips, described Moir as a positive, high-energy coach who spends most of his time on the ice rather than behind the boards. They’ve noticed a shift in their skating since moving to London a year ago.

“The really unique thing about having a coach so fresh off the circuit was interestin­g, and more in tune with the modern kind of ice dance,” said Sales. “I would say we’ve learned a lot more of the artistic side of skating, which we felt like we really needed.”

They’re one of nine dance couples based in London. There are another 17 in the Montreal program.

While there’s been criticism about coaching skaters who compete for countries other than Canada, Moir said the program works for the Canadians as well

“We see the strength in the numbers… we believe that it makes our Canadian kids better, stronger,” Moir said. “There are some people that it doesn’t work for, which is fine. But usually it is life changing, and in this day and age, we need sport done in the right way more than ever. That’s the whole commitment we made to each other. And hopefully, we can continue to uphold it.”

 ?? ?? Contribute­d
Tessa Virtue, left, and Scott Moir in a file photo from the 2018 Olympics.
Contribute­d Tessa Virtue, left, and Scott Moir in a file photo from the 2018 Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada