USA TODAY US Edition

DOUBLING UP BRONZE

Ice dancers Maia and Alex Shibutani are first Americans to earn two medals in Korea

- Martin Rogers

GANGNEUNG, South Korea – Maia and Alex Shibutani overcame more than just a field packed with world-class opponents to become the USA’s first double medal-winners of these Winter Olympics on Tuesday.

The ice dance pairing secured a bronze medal with an electrifyi­ng performanc­e despite what their coach, Marina Zoueva, described as the inherent disadvanta­ge of being brother and sister.

The Shib Sibs were in fourth place Tuesday heading into the free dance but capitalize­d on a patchy display from fellow Americans Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue to capture another third place to add to the team event bronze they won last week.

“Yes,” Zoueva said when asked if the Shibutanis had a tougher time impressing the judges than their rivals. “Because traditiona­l ice dance is of course a romantic thing. A big part of the performanc­e is romantic. We actually broke the wall and opened a window for anyone to be on the podium and have success in ice dance. Even if you are brother and sister.”

Obviously, the Shibutanis can’t really do the romantic thing, but their programs are filled with technical elements and slick choreograp­hy that is mesmer- izing to watch. There is none of the romance that is infused into the acts of the likes of gold medal winners Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada, but plenty of athletic drama makes up for it.

“They perform passion, but not passion to be like love passion,” Zoueva added. “(It is) passion between them is how they want to reach their goal. To be in the Olympics, to get an Olympic medal, and you can see it. You can see it in choreograp­hy it is not necessary to have love passion. Any passion is passion.”

Virtue and Moir became the most decorated figure skaters in history when they won the gold. It was their fifth overall medal and third gold. Canada won the team event last week, and the Virtue and Moir won gold in ice dancing in Vancouver in 2010. They took two silvers in Sochi.

Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizerone of France set an all-time scoring record only to have it beaten a few minutes later by the Canadians. They settled for silver.

Four years ago in Sochi, the Shibutanis finished ninth but came back with a burning hunger to force themselves into the discipline’s elite circles.

“No one expected this of us, but we have always dreamed this was possible and knew we had it in us,” Alex Shibutani said.

Added Maia, “We believed in each other.”

 ??  ??
 ?? TOP PHOTO BY ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS; PHOTO AT LEFT BY ANDREW NELLES/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Ice dancers Maia and Alex Shibutani were the top Americans in Tuesday’s competitio­n.
TOP PHOTO BY ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS; PHOTO AT LEFT BY ANDREW NELLES/ USA TODAY SPORTS Ice dancers Maia and Alex Shibutani were the top Americans in Tuesday’s competitio­n.
 ?? ANDREW NELLES/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? American figure skating ice dancers Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani won the bronze medal with a strong free dance.
ANDREW NELLES/USA TODAY SPORTS American figure skating ice dancers Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani won the bronze medal with a strong free dance.

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