The Post

Champion opens up on anorexia

- FIGURE SKATING

Olympic figure skating champion Yulia Lipnitskay­a has spoken about her battle with anorexia. The 19-year-old Russian’s gold medal in the team event at the 2014 Sochi Games, with a programme themed around the movie Schindler’s List, made her the youngest Olympic skating champion since 1936.

However, she struggled to maintain that success and her mother revealed last month she had retired from the sport following treatment for anorexia. Lipnitskay­a said she wished she had spoken out earlier about her eating disorder.

‘‘Anorexia is a 21st-century illness and it’s fairly common. Unfortunat­ely, not everyone can cope with it,’' Lipnitskay­a said in an interview with the Russian Figure Skating Federation.

‘‘My only regret is that I didn’t do this before because it’s all carried on not just for one year, or two, or three.’'

Lipnitskay­a’s last competitio­n, a Grand Prix event in November, was a far cry from her Olympic triumph. Unable to tackle the big jumps in her free programme, she stopped the skate with tears in her eyes. The judges allowed her to resume after a break, but she finished 12th, in last place.

Officials said Lipnitskay­a was injured. She entered residentia­l treatment for anorexia in Israel two months later.

‘‘After the Cup of Russia I came home and put my skates in a closet and I haven’t seen them since,’' she said. ‘‘I’m no longer drawn to the ice.’' Lipnitskay­a said that when she entered the clinic in January she assumed she would still continue her skating career.

Two things happened to persuade her otherwise. First, sessions with psychologi­sts helped her to realise she wanted to put her health first. Second, her stay in the clinic proved a little more isolated that she had planned.

‘‘After the first week there, on a free day, my phone was stolen and obviously that broke my whole connection to the outside world,’' she said. It’s only now that I understand why it happened to me.

‘‘It was for me to really think about what’s happening in my life. It played a very important role,’' Lipnitskay­a said.

‘‘I had even more time to work on my health, and to think what I’d do after leaving the clinic.’'

With a tendency toward curt, clipped speech and sometimes biting selfcritic­ism, Lipnitskay­a stood out in the relentless­ly upbeat world of figure skating.

In Russia, her young age and a very public hug at the Olympics from President Vladimir Putin made her a household name. She found it hard to cope with fame.

‘‘Ever since childhood I’ve been a very strong introvert,’' Lipnitskay­a said.

‘‘Speaking with an unfamiliar person meant I had to make a real effort.’'

Lipnitskay­a said she has become ‘‘chattier’' but doesn’t think she needs ‘‘to get into every newspaper or onto every TV show when they invite me. I don’t welcome that and I won’t do it’'.

What comes next for Lipnitskay­a isn’t clear. For now, she’s focusing on education and hopes to enter college next year, possibly as a prelude to a career in sports management.

She said she has found happiness regularly riding up to 40 kilometres on horseback in the countrysid­e near Moscow.

Her horse, Dakota, is ‘‘tall, with a model appearance and a lovely personalit­y,’' Lipnitskay­a said.

‘‘It’s just like a dream.’'

"I'm no longer drawn to the ice.''

Yulia Lipnitskay­a

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