The Province

‘It was absolutely crazy’

Osmond becomes the first Canadian woman to win the world championsh­ip in 45 years

- Lori Ewing

It was almost 1 a.m. before Kaetlyn Osmond was back at her hotel room, exhausted from a long and exhilarati­ng Friday.

She took a few minutes to answer a couple of the hundreds of congratula­tory messages she’d received before falling into bed.

Three years after a gruesome broken leg nearly ended her career, the 22-year-old from Marystown, N.L., won gold at the world figure skating championsh­ip on Friday, ending a drought that stretched back 45 years.

A day later, the remarkable accomplish­ment was still sinking in.

“I definitely never expected (my free skate) to lead to gold,” Osmond said. Osmond was in fourth place — and cursing her missed double Axel — after Thursday’s short program. She was the first skater on the ice for the final group of Friday’s free skate, and laid down an almost flawless Black Swan program for 223.23 total points.

She then sat and watched from a small couch with coach Ravi Walia as the final five skaters, including Olympic champion Alina Zagitova, attempted and failed to top her score.

“It was absolutely crazy to be able to see that,” Osmond said.

Osmond won her first Canadian title in 2013 when she was just 17, but in the fall of 2014, she broke her leg in two places and had to start from scratch, relearning not only her jumps and spins but the simple act of stroking on the ice. Her first tentative lap around the rink after her accident took almost half an hour, Osmond clutching Walia’s arm for support.

Friday night, Osmond’s only misstep came when she fell during the medal ceremony. Osmond was leading Japan’s silver and bronze medallists Wakaba Higuchi and Satoko Miyahara in a lap around the ice, when she failed to see the rubber mat to the podium. She tripped over it and fell, rolling in the Canadian flag she’d seconds earlier held aloft. The Japanese medallists rushed to help her up, as Osmond, laughing, gave a mini bow.

Her gold was Canada’s first in women’s singles since Vancouver’s Karen Magnussen won in 1973. Osmond said Magnussen, who turns 66 next month, emailed her congratula­tions both after she won world silver last year in Helsinki and bronze at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

Asked if she’d heard from Magnussen yet in Italy, Osmond laughed and said maybe. She hadn’t had a chance yet to scroll through the hundreds of messages.

Osmond helped Canada to gold in the team event and then won singles bronze at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, and admitted it was a tough slog getting back on the ice at her training base in Edmonton.

“I was definitely emotionall­y and physically drained. That was difficult,” she said. “But then I enjoyed myself a little bit and went to Toronto to work with Jeffrey (Buttle) on a new exhibition program for Stars on Ice, so that took my mind off everything a little bit more, and almost gave me another energy boost.”

The Canadian team, which held a post-competitio­n celebratio­n Saturday evening, leaves Italy with two medals — Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje won bronze in ice dance to cap the competitio­n.

Olympic champions Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir didn’t compete at the worlds and are expected to announce their retirement in the coming weeks, while twotime world pairs champs Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford, and three-time men’s champion Patrick Chan said they were retiring after Pyeongchan­g.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? An elated Kaetlyn Osmond, 22, of Marystown, N.L., celebrates after winning the gold medal Friday at the 2018 World Figure Skating Championsh­ip in Italy.
— GETTY IMAGES An elated Kaetlyn Osmond, 22, of Marystown, N.L., celebrates after winning the gold medal Friday at the 2018 World Figure Skating Championsh­ip in Italy.

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