Montreal Gazette

Chan looked to Stojko for help on how to compete

- LORI EWING THE CANADIAN PRESS

MISSISSAUG­A, ONT. — When Patrick Chan’s season was sagging a few weeks ago, he sought advice from a man who might seem to some an unlikely source — Elvis Stojko.

The two skaters, plus fellow world champions Kurt Browning and Jeff Buttle, toured Ontario in December as part of Celebratio­n on Ice.

Chan and Stojko bonded during bus rides and breakfasts — their verbal battle at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics long forgotten.

“Initially when I saw (Stojko), it was a bit like ‘I don’t know how he’s going to react,’ ” Chan said Thursday on the eve of the Canadian Figure Skating Championsh­ips.

“We didn’t even talk about (Vancouver), which is good. Because he could kill me in an instant. He’s like karate master,” Chan added with a laugh. “I’d better be nice, better not mess with him.”

Stojko, a three-time world champion, levelled some verbal shots at Chan three years ago in Vancouver in a scathing Yahoo! Sports column that ran under the headline “The night they killed figure skating.” Stojko was angry at the judges that gave Evan Lysacek gold and Chan fifth, despite the fact neither had attempted a quad jump in their programs. He felt the skaters were taking the sport backward.

“The Internatio­nal Skating Union has taken the risk out of figure skating and it makes me sick,” Stojko wrote.

“There was never an awkward moment with Patrick,” Stojko said from his Mexico home where he lives with his wife, Gladys Orozco. “People know me as someone that will speak how I feel, I’ll be very honest that way, but then they can just come up and talk to me. I don’t walk around with a grudge, I just say things how they are unemotiona­lly: boom boomboom.

“That’s like when I wrote the column: boomboombo­om. Wake up and smell the coffee if you want things to grow.

“That’s the thing Pat understood, too, he saw me and it was like, ‘Hey man how’s it going?’ It was great.”

The 22-year-old Chan added a quad jump to his repertoire the season after Vancouver and has since won back-toback world titles.

But he’s in the midst of an off year, finishing second at Skate Canada — his first major internatio­nal loss in a year and a half — and then third at the Grand Prix Final.

He sought Stojko’s advice on how he prepares to compete, because competing was one of Stojko’s strengths. Chan, who will be aiming for his sixth Canadian title this week at the Hershey Centre, is known for going all-out in the practice sessions at competitio­ns.

“I told (Chan) ‘ Just pace yourself, you want to be hungry by the end of the week, you want your body to be hungry to compete. Not: Oh god, I have to put my skates on again and do this again,’ ” said Stojko. “It’s not just the style of skating, it’s the style of how you prepare, and that’s sort of the next stage for him, to understand that.”

Chan will skate his short program Friday and the free program Saturday.

The Canadian championsh­ip — which is sold out Saturday evening and is close to sold out on Sunday — helps determine the team for the world championsh­ips in March in London, Ont.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Patrick Chan practises ahead of the Canadian Figure Skating Championsh­ips on Thursday in Mississaug­a, Ont.
NATHAN DENETTE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Patrick Chan practises ahead of the Canadian Figure Skating Championsh­ips on Thursday in Mississaug­a, Ont.

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