Kuwait Times

Millennium man makes history as wind pummels Pyeongchan­g

-

GANGNEUNG: The next time you have a ‘domestic’ with your nearest and dearest spare a thought for love on ice couple Chris and Alexa Knierim. The US figure skaters competing at the Olympics are partners on the ice, and married off it.

They say you should never take your work home with you, but for the two-time former US champions it’s unavoidabl­e. A heated exchange over the cornflakes needs to be quickly forgotten if like Alexa you have to put your total trust in the man you would have happily throttled a short time earlier. He’s the one throwing you up in the air, spinning, and then catching you - all the while having to wear a smile.

“Yeh, you can get that kind of situation, with any relationsh­ip whether you’re married or just work partners,” Chris told AFP. Alexa nods in agreement: “We’re human, so we still run in to that sometimes.”

“I think it’s easy for us in our situation and maybe its different for other people that it’s an asset for us,” Chris adds, “we know what works and what doesn’t, talking, you know how to say something the right way.

“It’s a lot of communicat­ion, we’ve learned throughout the years of being together what works and what doesn’t. “We switch off the minute you get in the ring-yeh for sure.” Rink romance in Pyeongchan­g is by no means confined to the Knierims.

Russians Vladimir Morozov and Evgenia Tarasova, the two-time European champions, are rarely out of step whether are on or off. “We had mutual understand­ing from the very beginning,” Tarasova said.

“I decided to listen to Vladimir in everything, he is older, but I do not remember him ever raising his voice at me.” Her red-haired work and life companion added: “We practicall­y do not have these situations, honestly! Maybe that’s our power.”

‘LIFE OBSTACLES’

With all the athleticis­m, artistry, and emotional intelligen­ce required in their sport, the Knierims say that life off the ice is by far the easy part. “Outside the rink life is easy,” explains Alexa.

“I mean skating’s our job, that’s our income, that’s our livelihood, that’s the stress.

“When we go home it’s play time, it’s easy.” It was not always like that, they say. “Right after we got married we had a lot of life obstacles,” she said, with Nick agreeing: “We really hit the marriage hard.” “Yep sickness, death in the family, we hit it all, those things changed us on the ice,” added Alexa. But love on and off the ice does not conquer all. The Knierim’s fellow Americans, ice dance pair Madison Hubbell and Zach Donohue ended their two-and-a-half year romance but kept the day job and remain a couple on ice.

“To work harder and do all of these things right, we just realised that to date and be with each other 24-7 with our particular personalit­ies was just explosive,” Donohue said. “We had to ask ourselves what was more important, our on-ice partnershi­p or our off-ice relationsh­ip? “And we were both very clearly said the on-ice partnershi­p is No. 1,” added his ex.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP ?? GANGNEUNG: USA’s Alexa Scimeca Knierim and USA’s Chris Knierim compete in the figure skating team event pair skating free skating during the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at the Gangneung Ice Arena in Gangneung yesterday.
— AFP GANGNEUNG: USA’s Alexa Scimeca Knierim and USA’s Chris Knierim compete in the figure skating team event pair skating free skating during the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at the Gangneung Ice Arena in Gangneung yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait