Irish Daily Mirror

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- BY RICHARD BARBER News@irishmirro­r.ie

Torvill and Dean s up their skates fo

We will have a sense of pride of what we have done CHRIS DEAN ON HANGING UP THEIR ICE SKATES

FORTY years after they wowed the world with their Bolero routine, ice skating legends Torvill and Dean are calling it a day.

It was on Valentine’s Day, 1984, that Jayne Torvill and Christophe­r Dean skated to Olympic gold in Sarajevo in one of the most magical sporting moments ever with a breathtaki­ng routine set to Ravel’s Bolero.

Yesterday they were back in the Bosnian capital to announce their retirement from skating – though not from their judging roles on Dancing On Ice – and a big farewell tour.

At the old Zetra Olympic Hall, where they triumphed with maximum scores for artistic impression from all of the judges, Chris, 65, said: “I remember the moment all the sixes came and I knew we’d done it. We weren’t the last pair to dance, but I couldn’t see how anyone could overtake us now.”

In a sports hall where the ice rink once was, on the very spot where they began their ethereal routine, 66-year-old Jayne said: “It was here that our life changed forever.

“We’d trained and practised so hard that, even on a bad day, we knew we were pretty good. You can never be 100% sure it will go as planned, though. Ice is so unforgivin­g, anything can happen. Your blade can hit a rough bit of ice or there may be a stray sequin on the ground and then everything can turn topsy-turvy. It was the most intense four minutes of our lives and the most important. It changed everything.”

So, for four decades, while the rest of the world has celebrated Valentine’s Day, Jayne and Chris have always got in touch to wish each other “Happy Bolero Day”.

They are back in Sarajevo at the invitation of the city’s mayor to mark the anniversar­y of an event watched by more than 24 million on TV, using the visit to announce a last hurrah.

The Torvill & Dean: Our Last Dance tour will kick off in April 2025 and includes a date in Northern Ireland.

Reflecting on the decision to draw things to a close, Chris said: “I think there comes a time when you know. We’re not spring chickens any more, but we’re still able to do it to a certain degree we feel good about it, but that will go.

“This is the right time for us to be able to do that and go and skate and do some of the old routines, be very nostalgic, but then do some new fun, upbeat [dances] with friends of ours from the skating world and from Dancing On Ice. We’ll have a sense of pride as well, I think, of what we’ve done.

“I think we’ll get reflective and look at it not in a sad way but in a happy way.” They savoured every moment of their time back at the scene of their greatest triumph. The sadness is that the original ice rink was bombed in the Bosni been built and it was group of primary sc their ice-skating pace

Jayne said: “It was l back almost 60 years t

Looking back to th one of their favourite tice session.

Chris said: “It w morning and we wer tising on the rink. We When we finished, applause from way u known to us, the clea to watch.”

Jayne said: “That w

ian war. A new one has s there that they put a choolchild­ren through es. lovely. It takes you right to when we started out.” heir Olympic triumph, e memories is of a pracwas

six o’clock in the re the only people pracdanced our full routine. there was a ripple of up in the gods. Unbeaners had downed tools

was a special moment which gave a hint of what was to come. When we came to do it in front of the judges, dancing it the best we’d ever done, there was a roar as the arena erupted and we knew we’d done it.”

Asked how they were shaping up ahead of their final tour, both dived for a table to touch wood. Chris said: “Not that we’re superstiti­ous!”

He has a gym at the bottom of his garden and, most days, will go through an hour-anda-half programme of cardio and weights. Jayne works out with a personal trainer three times a week.

They will begin rehearsing in earnest when next year’s Dancing On Ice has ended. Jayne said: “We’re certainly not retiring from that.” Jayne has two children, Kieran, 21, and Jessica, 17, and Chris has two sons, Jack, 25, and Sam, 23, but none of them have followed in their parents’ footsteps on to the ice.

But Chris said: “I said to Sam that Jayne and I were coming to Sarajevo to celebrate the 40th anniversar­y of our win and he suddenly said, ‘I’m proud of you, Dad’. I don’t mind admitting it brought a lump to my throat.”

There’s a good chance their audiences will choke up too during the tour. They promise to entertain with “plenty of new stuff ”.

But what about the Bolero? Chris says: “How could we not? We’d be lynched if we left it out.”

 ?? ?? TRIUMPHANT Performing the routine at Sarajevo and, right, after winning Olympic Gold
PERFECTION
All the Olympic judges scored the
TRIUMPHANT Performing the routine at Sarajevo and, right, after winning Olympic Gold PERFECTION All the Olympic judges scored the
 ?? ?? em top marks
MUSCLE MEMORY Pair recreate move, below, Zetra Olympic Hall arena was ice rink
em top marks MUSCLE MEMORY Pair recreate move, below, Zetra Olympic Hall arena was ice rink

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