Kuwait Times

Coaching change rekindles Chan’s skating passion in time for Games

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GANGNEUNG: Patrick Chan said yesterday that a drastic coaching change weeks ahead of the Pyeongchan­g Winter Games had helped him rekindle his appreciati­on for figure skating to make the most of his third and last Olympics.

Speaking to reporters after his second practice in South Korea, the 27-year-old said his bold decision to return to his native Canada and hire a new coach with only a few months left in his competitiv­e career had already yielded benefits.

“I think it has already helped me,” said Chan, who has said he would retire after Pyeongchan­g. “It’s a big change mid-season. I think it’s not a very normal way of doing things. But I just had to trust my gut and I needed a change.” The turning point for Chan came at the Skate Canada grand prix event in October last year, where he finished a disappoint­ing fourth.

“At Skate Canada, at that time I was really uncomforta­ble and unhappy,” he said. “I was just unhappy about skating. Period. I did not like it.” After withdrawin­g from the grand prix event in Japan in November-a move he said was needed to “get organised mentally”-Chan parted ways with Marina Zoueva, with whom he trained in the United States, moved to Vancouver and hired Canadian coach Ravi Walia.

Chan said he wanted to be mentally happy for the end of his career, and moving back home has contribute­d to that. “Not many people have done a change - moving places, changing coaches and then having to train and not have as much time as you would like,” Chan said. “I only really had two months of training by that time.”

The new training regime has been helped along by teaming up with different trainers and physiologi­sts to get Chan ready for competitio­n. “It has ended up being enough time to be trained to be really comfortabl­e and confident,” he said.

IT’S A JOB

A three-time world champion and seasoned Olympian, Chan knows the Olympic drill. “It feels a little more normal,” he said. “I don’t feel as like, ‘Oh my God, this is the Olympics’. It’s just like another... it’s a job almost. I’m just coming in, doing my plan and I’m focused on my practices every single day.”

Chan, who finished fifth at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, clinched silver behind Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu in Sochi in 2014, where he had been favoured to win. Despite taking an additional silver in Sochi for the team competitio­n, Chan sat out the next season before a comeback in 2015-16. Chan is known for his artistry in an era of ever-increasing quadruple jumps, a trend he has regarded with caution amid concerns about skater safety.

In the 2017 world championsh­ips in Helsinki, Chan landed three quadruple jumps in his free programme for the first time, but still only finished fourth, with each of the podium finishers, Japanese duo Yuzuru Hanyu and Shoma Uno, and China’s Jin Boyang, landing four.

Chan is set to represent Canada in the team event once again, something he said would be “another great moment at the Olympics.” “We have a great chance, we have a great team,” he said. “All I can think about is how I can contribute my best. I feel confident because of what I can offer because I’m confident in myself.”—

 ??  ?? Patrick Chan
Patrick Chan

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