Truro News

Chan wins record 10th Canadian title

-

Patrick Chan has accomplish­ed what no other Canadian skater has, absolutely dominating his event in this country for a decade.

The 27-year-old from Toronto captured a record 10th national senior figure skating title on Saturday, in his final appearance at the event. And while he wasn’t able to execute No. 10 with the flawless precision of previous years, he took a moment to appreciate what he’s accomplish­ed.

“Ten is, after seeing it on the screen, being past Montgomery Wilson (who won nine titles between 1929 and ‘39), it’s pretty wild,” Chan said.

“And then you see Kurt (Browning) and Brian (Orser) and Elvis (Stojko) on that list, and to see that I’ve accomplish­ed what they’ve accomplish­ed, and a bit more, it’s amazing because I’ve looked up to them as idols.”

Gabrielle Daleman battled through pneumonia to win the women’s singles title on her 20th birthday, while Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir captured their eighth Canadian ice dance title, and Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford won a Canadian-record seventh pairs title.

Competing in only his second major event this season, Chan scored 181.26 for his free skate, touching a hand down on his first quadruple toe loop, landing his second one, then downgradin­g two planned triple Axels — still enough to capture the title with 272.24 total points.

“It’s obviously not the dream skate you expect for Number 10,” Chan said. “Of course I would have loved to have landed and nailed every single jump, but I did what I had to do. I had a lot of my own demons to battle coming here, so I think I was able to accomplish a big goal and a big step forward, so I feel good.”

Chan’s demons included a dreadful performanc­e at Skate Canada Internatio­nal, where he finished off the podium for the first time in eight years, and fled Patrick Chan of Toronto performs his free program during the senior men’s competitio­n at the Canadian Figure Skating Championsh­ips in Vancouver on Saturday.

to the West Coast to consider his next move. He scrapped the rest of the Grand Prix season, choosing to stay in B.C. and work with a new set of coaches in his final push to Pyeongchan­g.

“It’s not the best skate of my life, having won the 10th,” he reiterated. “But there’s been a lot of great ones that I can count.”

He hopes for one more great one before the book closes on his career at the Olympic Games.

Keegan Messing, an Alaskan who recently chose to compete for Canada, was second with 259.25 points, virtually securing his Olympic spot. He edged Nam Nguyen of Toronto by barely a point (258.16).

“It means everything,” Messing said, on an Olympic berth. “It means every day of hard work, every day I didn’t want to skate and I pushed through and I took every hard fall and got up and kept pushing my body to what I felt was the extreme, it means that I did it, it would mean that I made something.”

Skating to “Rhapsody in Blue,” Daleman scored a Canadian record 229.78 points, landing seven

triple jumps despite battling the pneumonia she’d been diagnosed with just two days earlier. Kaetlyn Osmond of Marystown, N.L., fell twice to finish with 218.73. Larkyn Austman of Coquitlam, B.C., won bronze with 169.62.

“I said (Friday) that was the way to end 19 ... this is the way to start 20,” Daleman said through a huge grin. “It is the absolute best birthday present I could ever ask for.”

Osmond and Daleman roared to an historic silver and bronze medal performanc­e, respective­ly, at last year’s world championsh­ips in Finland, setting up a fierce rivalry on the virtual eve of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, where they’re both within striking distance of the medal podium.

“This (national title) means so much more to me,” said Daleman, who won the gold in 2015. “You’re competing against No. 2 in the world, she’s a very tough competitor, she pushes me, when I’m home training I make sure I picture in my mind what would she be doing, and I try to push harder, I do that with (Russian world champion Evgenia) Medvedeva too.”

 ?? Cp photo ??
Cp photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada