Virtue, Moir return in ice dance at Helsinki worlds
Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir returned from a two-year hiatus following their silver medal at the Sochi Olympics to post the two highest ice dance scores of all time, the Canadian power couple making it clear they’re still among the best in the world. They’ll be chased at the World Figure Skating Championships by the most dominant nation. The US is sending a contingent to Helsinki this week led by reigning silver medalists Maia and Alex Shibutani that has every reason to believe it can knock Virtue and Moir from the top step of the podium. Madison Chock and Evan Bates are the reigning bronze medalists, while Madison Hubbell and Zach Donohue are coming off silver medals at Skate America and Trophee de France.
“We’ve competed against a lot of these teams for many years, so in some ways it hasn’t changed,” Virtue said. “But what has changed is the depth in the field and the technical aspect.
“Skaters are executing extremely clean turns and technical callers are recognizing those,” she said. “The specific elements are much more pertinent. You can’t miss. But there’s also a little more freedom creatively, which is nice. We watched the world championships last year from the stands and we were awed at the level of ice dance in the world right now.” Their worlds in Finland begin with the short dance Friday and conclude with the free dance Saturday, and are an important benchmark heading into next year’s Winter Olympics.
Along with the Canadians and Americans, all eyes at Hartwall Arena will be on the pairing of Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron. The French team has captured the past two gold medals, and will be trying for the first three-peat in ice dance in two decades.
But in those previous victories, Papadakis and Cizeron didn’t have Virtue and Moir in the field.
WORLD RECORD
The 2010 Olympic gold medalists won gold at Skate Canada and the NHK Trophy last fall, then won their first Grand Prix Finals in December. In doing so, Virtue and Moir broke their own world record with 197.22 points, two points clear of what Americans Meryl Davis and Charlie White posted when they won gold at the 2014 Sochi Games.
Virtue and Moir credit much of their success to moving their training base to Montreal, and parting with longtime coach Marina Zoueva for Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon - who just happen to coach Papadakis and Cizeron, creating an intensely competitive camp. “We’re very lucky we train at a rink that has seven teams going to the world championships, and kind of using that motivation to keep us moving,” Moir said. “To be perfectly frank, this is probably the most prepared we’ve been for a world championships in our whole career.” They aren’t the only ones brimming with confidence. The Shibutani siblings followed their US title by taking silver at Four Continents behind Virtue and Moir, with the other two American teams nipping at their heels.—AP