
Originally Posted by
Olympia
Like you, the first person I thought of when I heard "toned arms" was Joannie. I think she has both sine qua non and je ne sais quoi, n'est-ce pas? (One might shorten both and just say that a skater has It.)
I agree that there are some skaters one sees and says, "This is the one!" (Or the two, in the case of pairs and ice dancing.) For me, I think I make the assumption that an excellent skater will have at least good jumps and basics, so for me the element that makes the difference is usually flow that somehow expresses the music. I reason inductively by looking at all the skaters who give me gooseflesh and thinking about what it is they have in common. Browning, Kwan, Yagudin, Asada, Takahashi, Lambiel, Wylie, Sato, Klimova/Ponomarenko, G/G, Davis/White, Virtue/Moir, and so forth make me feel that I'm watching something that is full with meaning, not just something that I can compare in terms of points score with the others. In fact, when I watch it, I don't think of any others. It's in its own world.
Probably a lot of that is due to blade-to-ice skills; my favorite skaters all tend to have that quality. But it's also what happens with the upper body: the arms, the shoulders, the neck, the carriage.
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