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Yoshie OndaJapan's Onda Loves to JumpJuly 25, 2003
Onda began skating when she was five. "I went to skate from my school with a lot of other kids," she said. "I didn't start lessons until I was eight, when my mother took me. She was looking for something for me to do. She took me to piano school but I could never sit down in front of it. So I had two choices, skating or gymnastics and I liked skating more." She landed her first triple toe loop when she was 13 and quickly mastered all the other triple jumps, landing her first triple axel two years ago in practice. Her first triple axel in competition came at the Grand Prix in Germany in 2001. Onda said she had tried a quad, "but it didn't look very good," she said. "I like to jump," she said. "I like the toe loop and the axel best." Last season, she included the triple axel in her long program. Her coach is Machiko Yamada, who also coached Japan's Midori Ito when she landed her triple axel. Onda practices for at least three hours every day on ice, except for Saturday and Sunday, when she only practices for two hours. Off ice, she said she only takes ballet class and goes to the gym once or twice a week. She started ballet when she was eleven. "At first I hated it, but it's OK now," she said. "It helps me move better." Onda's programs are choreographed by Mihoko Higuchi and David Wilson. Last season, she used Love in Slow Motion for her short and Concerto for Cello and Orchestra and Serenade for the long. For her exhibition program, she used Seaside Rendezvous by Queen. "I like to skate to something cheerful," she said. "Off ice, Onda listens to Western pop music and likes Michael Jackson, the Backstreet Boys, and Eminem among others.
She likes to travel and especially enjoyed her travels to Germany and France. "I liked Gelsenkirchen because it was small and nice and I liked all the historic buildings in France," she said. "I'd like to go to Australia and India and see the Pyramids in Egypt, something different than what I've already seen." Onda plans to continue competing until the Olympics in 2006. "I don't have a special goal for my whole career," Onda stated. "I try to take it year by year and see how I progress, then start thinking about the next year. Once I wanted to be a professional skater, but once I started doing shows with show lighting, I'm not so sure. I'm in my third year at the university now, just general studies. I don't have any favorite subjects but I'm thinking of studying to be a physio trainer." |