Regina Leader-Post

NGUYEN IS COUNTING ON ‘ROWDY’ CANADIAN FANS

- DAN BARNES

Nam Nguyen has a job to do in Montreal next week: finishing in the top 10 at the World Figure Skating Championsh­ips. And he’s banking on some home ice help.

So, if everybody at the Bell Centre could send along some positive vibes before he tries his quad in the short program, that would be great. And if you happen to be along the glass and Nguyen stares directly at you during his long program, don’t look bored.

“I’m very observant with how the audience reacts. I even go out of my way to make eye contact with a couple of them and have fun with them during my program. Only if I’m skating well, though,” he said with a laugh. “I notice everything. I notice their claps, their cheers. Really, nothing goes unnoticed when I’m on the ice, and I appreciate everything the fans give for us.”

The 21-year-old from Toronto is similarly engaged in practice every day at his rink in Richmond Hill, Ont.

“In training, I’m such a clown. I always skate by my friends and we make bets. Like, if I don’t land this jump, then I’ll buy you lunch, or give you a certain amount of cash.

“I have that similar energy with the audience. I obviously don’t go up to them and start wagering with them. But I’ll give them a certain look, and if they lock eyes with me, I’ll most definitely be able to do that element.”

He said the strategy worked for him in Kelowna, B.C., at Skate Canada earlier this season, where he finished second to Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu. It worked again at the Four Continents competitio­n, where his sixth-place result locked up a trip to the worlds.

If home ice advantage lifts him into the top 10 in Montreal, Nguyen will secure two spots for the Canadian men at the 2021 world championsh­ips, which is always Skate Canada’s stated goal.

“I’m going to be real with you,” said Nguyen. “I honestly think this medal possibilit­y is like way out there for me. It’s not a big possibilit­y. But here’s the thing. My job obviously is to regain our two spots back. But at the same time, it’s to put out two performanc­es that I can be proud of.”

His long program at the nationals was deeply flawed and he finished second to Toronto’s Roman Sadovsky and ahead of Keegan Messing. Given Sadovsky’s dearth of senior Grand Prix experience, Skate Canada chose to delay naming their men’s representa­tive for the worlds until after Four Continents, where Nguyen finished sixth, Messing eighth and Sadovsky 16th.

Skate Canada has targeted a single medal at the worlds, hardly the norm. But that old medal-collecting gang — Patrick Chan, Katelyn Osmond, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford — has retired and the rebuild is on. In that respect, the home crowd could be an even more important in Montreal.

“Canadian fans are the best there is. They’re rowdy, they love to party,” he said. “The support they give to their skaters is unreal.”

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