Victor Petrenko, a Good Man | Page 2 | Golden Skate

Victor Petrenko, a Good Man

Phil Cohen

Rinkside
Joined
May 20, 2009
And another long-forgotten good deed that Victor did, is that he was the legal guardian for Ukrainian orphan skater Oksana Baiul when she was underage and travelling outside Russia for competitions.
 

Kati

On the Ice
Joined
Oct 19, 2003
IIRC Viktor asked his coach Galina Zmievskaya offer her home for Oksana and he also partly paid her living and skating expences.
 

Tigger

Final Flight
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Crikey! What a jump combination...Yet another time when the Olympic gold medal truly went to a deserving person. Of course I was rooting for Kurt that year, being such a huge fan. But Browning's back problems hampered his performance. If this is the guy who won instead, I certainly have no complaints.

Well, I have one, but it's in the bittersweet side of things...

One of the many stories out of the update Kurt did of his book to add in the 91-92 Season is what happened on the Podium at 92 Worlds. Remember the Soviet Union had broken up not too long before the Albertville Olympics, and the Athletes had to compete under the Olympic Flag and any Gold Medal Ceremonies, the Olympic Hymn was played. At Worlds, it was the ISU flag and Hymn/Anthem played. In Oakland, Kurt asked Viktor about that and he replied along the lines of it wasn't his flag or Anthem.

Viktor finally wins the World Title after all those epic battles w/Kurt over the years, not to mention the Olympic Title the month before, but after all those years of work and finally having his dream come true... In a way, it doesn't because of what was going on in the World and his Country at the time.

And that's my *only* complaint when it comes to Viktor's career.

Oh...That's wrong. I have one more. I wish I could have had the privledge of getting to see him perform live. I never did get that chance. :(
 

Sk8Boi

Match Penalty
Joined
Feb 17, 2010
Petrenko seems like a wonderful exemplar of the classical Russian style. Doesn't it garner respect for Smievskaya as a coach?

But Viktor and Galina are not Russian at all, and maybe we should consider their style UKRANIAN.
 

Sk8Boi

Match Penalty
Joined
Feb 17, 2010
With all the talk about Yags and Plushy we should not forget Victor came before them. And along with G&G he helped take the "e" out of "evil" for many N. American fans ;)

But the skaters you mention are all RUSSIAN, and Viktor is UKRANIAN. The nationalities should not be used interchangably, and it is not clear how Russian skating was ever influenced by Ukranian skating legends like Petrenko or Smievskaya or Baiul.
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
I wish I could have had the privilege of getting to see him perform live.

I was lucky enough to see him quite a few times in COI. He was the ultimate master of the crowd. When Victor took the ice everyone in the audience just settled back waiting to be entertained, knowing that they were is good hands.

Plus, Mrs. MM thought he was the hottest guy in skating (still does). :)
 

Tigger

Final Flight
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
But the skaters you mention are all RUSSIAN, and Viktor is UKRANIAN. The nationalities should not be used interchangably, and it is not clear how Russian skating was ever influenced by Ukranian skating legends like Petrenko or Smievskaya or Baiul.

Actually if you really want to get nitpicky, and it appears that you do, then you aren't right either.

At the time, Viktor, Galina and everyone else in their camp weren't Russian, they weren't Ukranian, they were all citizens of The Soviet Union. Due to that, they ended up being called Russian, which they weren't either, but the current country of Ukraine didn't exist either. Yes, the region existed, but due to it being under the umbrella of The Soviet Union, that was about it.

Viktor grew up training under the Soviet/Russian system, listening to the Soviet Anthem and watching that red flag w/the hammer and sickle in the corner go up to the celing whenever he won a skating competition his entire life. Until Feburary and March of 1992 when the Soviet Union fell apart and what I was talking about in my previous post took place at that year's Winter Olympics and World Championships for any of the Soviet Athletes/Skaters.

Does that clear things up? BTW, please don't shout at us when you're trying to prove a point. The bold, italics and underline buttons aren't that hard to find and use after all.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Thanks, Tigger! That's what I had in mind.

To add to what Tigger said, I knew that Petrenko was Ukranian, but the style of meticulous, ballet-infused skating, often to classical music (didn't Petrenko use music from the ballet Don Quixote, the same piece John Curry used in 1976?) is considered Russian--or as Tigger correctly categorizes it, Soviet/Russian. The tradition of Russian ballet predates the Soviet Union, stemming from the mighty dynasties of the Bolshoi and the Kirov Ballets, which were, are, and will always be world cultural treasures. The U.S.S.R. proudly claimed this tradition and enriched it even during the terrible years of World War II, as they did with Russian orchestral music and opera. Skaters all over the Soviet Union definitely drew from this rich ballet heritage in movement, positioning, choreography, and artistic interpretation. (One need only think of the "Swan Lake" short program of the equally Ukranian Oksana Baiul, which was literally like ballet on skates.) If you look at Petrenko and then look at Alexei Urmanov, you see a lot of the same traits, and I believe Urmanov is Russian.

I'm not bringing all this up to make an argument, but just because the tradition is so marvelous that it deserves the esteem of skating fans everywhere. All four disciplines owe Russian skating, underlaid by Russian ballet, a lot, and Petrenko was certainly a wonderful exponent of the tradition.

An interesting fact that underlines the supremacy of Soviet culture over anything regional in the U.S.S.R. is that (as I learned while researching Petrenko when this thread piqued my interest) Petrenko didn't learn to speak Ukranian as a youngster. He spoke only Russian. By now he might know Ukranian, since he's been serving as president of the Ukranian skating federation.
 
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