MUST SEE - Drobiazko / Vanagas - THE most underscored ice dancers in world history. ever. | Golden Skate

MUST SEE - Drobiazko / Vanagas - THE most underscored ice dancers in world history. ever.

Frenchie

I'm gonna customize the CRAP out of this title!
Medalist
Joined
May 4, 2013
Drobiazko / Vanagas - THE most underscored ice dancers in world history. ever.

OK, bear with me here. Many on this forum will say "what else is new?" Some - I don't know how many - will say "Drobi who?"
Well, happy new year!
To those who know them: take a few minutes and revisit some beautiful moments. :popcorn:
To those who don't, or only heard about them: even better! Enjoy!!! I'm confident you'll be impressed. :rock:

Recent threads have resurfaced the question to me about just how fair/unfair the scoring was for the Duchesnays since they had their technical flaws despite their artistry and charisma. Or of Krylova/Ovsyannikov winning every competition in their 1999 year despite those decisions sometimes even getting boos from the audience. Many, including myself, felt they got those wins because they were the close Number 2 team the year before and stayed 1 more year despite a sub-par program. (Sorry FSGMT, I know you see it differently, but I think "many, incl. myself" is adequate) Still, however this happened, they ended up winning EC, WC, and an Olympic Silver Medal.
That's something that Margarita Drobiazko and Povilas Vanagas from Lithuania never got.
To me and many fans, they'll be forever associated with unfair, political marking and how judges can really be merciless in wearing someone down over so many years. Oh, and furthermore, for being awesome ice dancers, with great expression, charisma, technical abilities and speed. To those not so good with geography, it also teaches you just how small Lithuania is (on the ISU map!)

2000 Worlds One of the rare times where they got somewhat of a break by the judges, winning their only World Bronze Medal.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtoCrUkXQcw

2001 Skate America: They were 2nd going into this, and many felt they had outskated the winners (Bourne&Kraatz) in this FD, even the winners themselves said so afterwards! Not only did they not beat them, they even dropped one spot. (keep watching til the end, how everyone reacts to the scores - incl. the commentators)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk3QojYlZ8g

2002 SLC Olympics Look at that: The rankings of the top 8, with the individual rankings for CD1, CD2, OD and FD: Notice anything?
1 02.0 1 1 1 1 Marina Anissina / Gwendal Peizerat France
2 04.0 2 2 2 2 Irina Lobacheva / Ilia Averbukh Russia
3 06.0 3 3 3 3 Barbara Fusar-Poli / Maurizio Margaglio Italy
4 08.0 4 4 4 4 Shae-Lynn Bourne / Victor Kraatz Canada
5 10.0 5 5 5 5 Margarita Drobiazko / Povilas Vanagas Lithuania
6 12.0 6 6 6 6 Galit Chait / Sergei Sakhnovski Israel
7 14.0 7 7 7 7 Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviski Bulgaria
8 16.0 8 8 8 8 Kati Winkler / René Lohse Germany

Now, I'm not saying it's not impossible that each of the top 8 couples legitimately gets the exact same placement throughout all 4 different programs. But in the FD, Bourne/Kraatz (4th) both fell. Margaglio (3rd) fell during a required element, the step sequence. Fusar-Poli rightfully was a crying, sobbing mess while sitting in the Kiss and Cry before seeing the marks. These pesky details didn't stop the judges from still coming up with the exact same rankings as every other day, when nobody fell. Yes, these were the Marie-Reine Le Gougne SLC Olympics. Where placements had been agreed upon before the first skater set foot on the ice. Yeah, those were dark times. For D/V, it was business as usual.
Oh, by the way, the Lithuanian Federation filed a protest noting that "D/V finished behind two couples who fell on the ice but did not receive required deductions in the judging". The ISU said "Yeah. Umm. No. Bye!"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaCVtgs02sE
(The commentator prefered this to the Gold Medal winners - Me too!)

Their final performance in eligible competition: 2006WC. They finished 4th.
http://5.hidemyass.com/ip-1/encoded/Oi8vd3d3LnlvdXR1YmUuY29tL3dhdGNoP3Y9bGRURTI5bnJlMlE=

Their 2009 Exhibition to Pirates of the Caribbean - just awesome, with sparks flying and everything! :agree:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHLaOJSu7jI


By the way: I personally love to spend some free time watching great skating on youtube. Seeing what your faves are/were, with direct links (me: lazy) allows me to find out more about how you're ticking - and to discover gems I didn't know!
my suggestions for best Ladies SPs
my suggestions for best Ladies LPs

I hope to get many more suggestions by many of you that I can just follow like a menu at a 5 star gourmet restaurant! :)
 

Tonichelle

Idita-Rock-n-Roll
Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 27, 2003
They definitely got hosed. I'm currently putting my favorite skating competition and shows that I've had on tape for over a decade (I have a lot of tapes... oy) onto DVD... haven't gotten to the D/V years... but, yeah, I remember at the time thinking the judges were off their rocker... the stuff that was winning was... yeah...

The IJS has done wonders for the sport of Ice Dance... makes you wonder how things would've been.
 

MidnightSkater

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 20, 2013
They definitely got hosed. I'm currently putting my favorite skating competition and shows that I've had on tape for over a decade (I have a lot of tapes... oy) onto DVD... haven't gotten to the D/V years... but, yeah, I remember at the time thinking the judges were off their rocker... the stuff that was winning was... yeah...

The IJS has done wonders for the sport of Ice Dance... makes you wonder how things would've been.
Snap !. Been spending three years putting old tapes of skating onto DVD (Only up to 2000 now) but have been watching a lot of Drobiazko/Vanagas. Including their first compulsory in SLC last night.
They were way ahead of Lob/Avr IMO but were behind them come 2001/2002.
Their OD at the 2000 Worlds was the best for me.
They should have won a medal at the 2006 Worlds too.
Plus, when other couples made errors they never saw the benefit.
Their Phantom Of The Opera free dance was the best I have ever saw for that music (D/W) mini-pairs skating of the same music in 2010 never came close.
Remember how special their FS at the 2002 Europeans ?, amazing yet down in 4th.
They were pure class (Still are).
 

RobinA

On the Ice
Joined
Nov 4, 2010
I was a fan and definitely thought they were consistently undermarked. That was my period of constant disagreement with dance judging. D/V undermarked, B/K overmarked.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 25, 2013
They definitely got hosed. I'm currently putting my favorite skating competition and shows that I've had on tape for over a decade (I have a lot of tapes... oy) onto DVD... haven't gotten to the D/V years... but, yeah, I remember at the time thinking the judges were off their rocker... the stuff that was winning was... yeah...

The IJS has done wonders for the sport of Ice Dance... makes you wonder how things would've been.

It would have made a huge difference. D/V had some of the greatest difficulty, so even if the judges held back their PCS, they would have at least gotten higher than teams who did easier programs (with errors or without). I remember one competition where Dubreil/Lauzon were expected to place 3rd or 4th but surprisingly placed higher because they actually were credited for their higher difficulty, and this is when I thought the IJS was onto something.

Drobiazko/Vanagas were one of my favourite ice dance couples and it's insanely wrong that the judges kept holding them down time and time again because they were not one of the big countries.
 

Kitt

Final Flight
Joined
Feb 1, 2007
Country
United-States
It would have made a huge difference. D/V had some of the greatest difficulty, so even if the judges held back their PCS, they would have at least gotten higher than teams who did easier programs (with errors or without). I remember one competition where Dubreil/Lauzon were expected to place 3rd or 4th but surprisingly placed higher because they actually were credited for their higher difficulty, and this is when I thought the IJS was onto something.

Drobiazko/Vanagas were one of my favourite ice dance couples and it's insanely wrong that the judges kept holding them down time and time again because they were not one of the big countries.

Judges must have been jealous of their insane physical beauty! Honestly, they are just lovely.
 

pangtongfan

Match Penalty
Joined
Jun 16, 2010
1997-2003 had to be the worst era of ice dance judging ever. Three of the most overrated and overscored teams ever- Lobacheva & Averbuhk, Fusar Poli & Margarlio, Chait & Shaknovsky. Some of the most underrated- Drobiazko & Vanagas topping that list easily, Punsalen & Swallow though in a big way too especialy in 97 and 98, Lang & Tchernyshev, Roca & Sur (as amateurs, got their due as pros), even a younger Denkova & Stayviski. Gritschuk & Platov were a great team but some of their victories with falls or other significant errors over strong performances by Krylova & Ovsiannikov or Bourne & Kraatz were also questionable and a sign of the dance status quo at the time. On top of all that proven bloc judging that nothing was ever done about.

As for Bourne & Kraatz I am in two minds about them. I think sometimes they were overmarked, other times they were undermarked, and they were denied an Olympic medal by the Nagano bloc judging most likely. The Canadian press overhyped them insanely, but many skating fans underrated them I feel. They were definitely an unusual team though, who brought a whole different approach to dancing that wasnt really comparable to anyone else, so they were a love them or hate them kind of team I think though.
 

CanadianSkaterGuy

Record Breaker
Joined
Jan 25, 2013
I think B/K were one of the teams that were known for more difficult footwork, edges, and going against the grain of heavy histrionics, drama and theatrics. I'm sure they said to themselves in 2003 that they needed to buy into the whole Russian/Euro style of ice dancing otherwise they'd never win Worlds. If they were ice dancers today, I'm sure they (along with D/V) would have been much more appreciated and rewarded for their difficulty and innovation.
 

Tonichelle

Idita-Rock-n-Roll
Record Breaker
Joined
Jun 27, 2003
I hated the Morosov years (final years) of B/K's career... it was NOT THEM and it showed... their World Championship programs were just awful.
 

SimplyLex

On the Ice
Joined
Oct 22, 2013
D/V are still my favourite dance team of all time. Loved them back then, love them forever. They had such beautiful connection and chemistry, it was so real between them. They had that wonderful ability to take a story and make it theirs.
They also had some of the most innovative programs of their time, I actually believe they were a bit ahead of their time in that matter and thus I am sure they would have done amazing under CoP. Their comeback for 2006, even though they were STILL undermarked, was one of the most magical comebacks ever.

At the same time, the history of their career still breaks my heart whenever I think of all the times they should've won medals, but didn't.

Makes me wonder what would've been if the two had represented Russia instead of Lithuania? Definitely would've been harder for them to compete at Olympics in 1992, 1994 and 1998, but on the other hand, could've given them a few more medals in years 1999-2002 and in 2006.
 

pangtongfan

Match Penalty
Joined
Jun 16, 2010
If D&V were Russian they would have been Russian #3 over Lobacheva & Averbuhk from 1995-1998 without question, so would have made the 98 Olympics. 2000-2002 would have been a mine of medals for them taking over as Russian #1 with the forced early retirement of K&O, and possibly/probably some golds, but never once lower than a bronze at any Europeans, Grand Prix final, Worlds, or Olympics the 2000-2003 (they probably would have stayed for the 2003 Worlds and retired thereafter just as B&K and L&A did), as opposed to how it actually was where they would be never higher than a bronze no matter what, and rarely that. I doubt they would have even attempted a 2006 comeback, but as it is their performances at the Olympics including a fall in the OD would not have garnered any medal competing for Russia, but probably a medal at the post Olympic Worlds where they just missed.
 

Skater Boy

Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Hmm I always thought they were kind of overmarked but that is just me. I never thought they had the edges or difficult footwork and they kind of got lost as another Eastern Euro good team.. If my memory is correct didn't they get a bronze eventually
 

Mia_

Rinkside
Joined
May 15, 2010
I was a fan and definitely thought they were consistently undermarked. That was my period of constant disagreement with dance judging. D/V undermarked, B/K overmarked.

Please. D/V weren't skating at the same level as the top 5 teams from 1996-1999 in technical ability. They were like the F-P/M that era except he was the one dragging her around the ice. B/K didn't even make the World podium in 2001 (4th) or Olympic podium in 2002 (4th).
Drobiazko managed to keep up and improve later in their careers but too little, too late. As for their controversial 4th place finish at 2002 Worlds, I agree they were robbed of bronze and the Israeli team were gifted.
If there was any team who got dumped (at least near the end of their later careers) it would be Moniotte/Lavanchy, once A/P became France #1.

B/K's gold medal at 2003 Worlds could've gone either way, one could say L/A deserved that title. And D/V didn't even compete that year! I'm sure if they had, they would've been 4th again, this time behind the interesting up and coming Denkova/Staviski.

Denkova/Staviski was a lot more interesting than Drobiazko/Vanagas, their Baroque OD and programs from 2003 far exceeded anything D/V ever did in their later careers. Denkova/Staviski also had the technique too (although she improved to his level as the years went on).
 

Frenchie

I'm gonna customize the CRAP out of this title!
Medalist
Joined
May 4, 2013
their performances at the (2006) Olympics including a fall in the OD would not have garnered any medal competing for Russia
... but they'd have been Russians falling. So a fall wouldn't have affected the outcome, now would it? ;)
How exciting it is to imagine a scenario where people would have said "Drobiazko/Vanagas were held up by the judges"! :laugh:
That picture just made my day :biggrin:

Please. D/V weren't skating at the same level as the top 5 teams from 1996-1999 in technical ability.
Of course you're free to have that opinion. The marks they got would suggest the ISU judges of that time had the same opinion - or did they really in the bottom of their heart? But you'll have to concede that it's the opposite from the opinion of the vast majority of Figure Skating commentators, skaters and insiders of that time. (have a look at the videos I linked - or any other for that matter, there's a general consensus of saying "omg, this makes no sense! those marks are too low!"
I don't think you'll find many FS insiders or fans saying Drobiazko/Vanagas were ever being marked correctly, or even held up by the judges!

If there was any team who got dumped (at least near the end of their later careers) it would be Moniotte/Lavanchy, once A/P became France #1.
Oh, I have very fond memories of Moniotte/Lavanchy at the 1998 Olympics, their last event before retiring. That beautiful FD was to Riverdance, and I remember thinking "this music is perfect for Figure Skating! Everybody should use it!" And within a few years, almost everybody did! :laugh:
They were classy for how they took being dropped from 4th at the 97WC to 11th at these 98 OG.
But she wrote a memoir later on titled "LES PATINS DE LA COLÈRE" (the blades of anger) where she'd be a little more open about what went on, and how it went on... Must be pretty intense for an athlete knowing their places are being traded like live stock between judges for another pair's benefit... :bang:
 

Mia_

Rinkside
Joined
May 15, 2010
Hmm I always thought they were kind of overmarked but that is just me. I never thought they had the edges or difficult footwork and they kind of got lost as another Eastern Euro good team.. If my memory is correct didn't they get a bronze eventually

I'm with you. People talk about the low level of content in B/K's programs, like their OD/FD from Nagano which I agree with, but people often overlook it in D/V's dances. D/V did so much two foot skating like the videos above, and if she ever did anything on one foot he would be their to drag her free leg in circles or pull her while she is on an edge. He's no Averbukh or Platov, but I still think they would have gotten better results if he had a different partner.

Frenchie, I did watch D/V's FD again and am surprised how Susie Wynne, the commentator being baffled at their low marks because apparently they had so much content in their FD. Yes, two foot skating is so difficult:laugh:
As much as I feel blah over B/K's MJ dance, no way did D/V's have more intricate or difficult footwork. Even Susie Wynne mentioned the intricacy of B/K's MJ FD at the same event.
 

MidnightSkater

On the Ice
Joined
Dec 20, 2013
At least D/V danced while some of the current teams such as Davis/White tend to go for mini-pairs lifts to make up for their lack of actual dance quality. D/V also showed genuine passion & emotion while Meryl just has the same facial moves no matter what.
And this is coming from a Davis/White fan !.
 

Frenchie

I'm gonna customize the CRAP out of this title!
Medalist
Joined
May 4, 2013
Meryl just has the same facial moves no matter what.
And this is coming from a Davis/White fan !.

I'm in awe of D/W's technical abilities... But I do have to admit that I did have a little "who does this remind me of?" moment when I saw this scene... ;)
(Don't take me seriously! I sure don't!)
 

Blades of Passion

Skating is Art, if you let it be
Record Breaker
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Country
France
D/V were phemonemal.

Should have been 3rd at 99 Worlds, 2nd at 2000 Words, 1st at 2001 Worlds (and Europeans! That tango program was awesome! So sad they dropped it as a result of horrendous judging), 3rd at 2002 Olympics, 1st (in the LP at least) at 2002 Worlds, 1st at 2006 Worlds. Deserved 5th at 2006 Olympics as well despite the big mistake in OD; the Ukranians were crap that season and should have finished 6th, I'm sorry.
 

SimplyLex

On the Ice
Joined
Oct 22, 2013
^ Don't forget the 2006 Europeans, where they should've been first too. DelSchoes should've been second. N/K had a terrible FD at that competition.
 

sisinka

Final Flight
Joined
Nov 25, 2006
I'd be curious about your take on Drobiazko/Vanagas!

What comes into my mind thinking of Drobiazko & Vanagas…
Povilas was strong both technically and in presentation, Rita was ”femme fatale” with worse technique than Povilas (but she improved throught years), but she was a very passionate and dashing woman. They were a dance couple who danced beautifully (their qualities to express what was the music about was on high level).

Althought I liked their 2000 FD more I would put them at the podium at 2002 Olympics, 2002 Worlds and 2006 Worlds. Yes, beside the name of the couple there is a word “undermarked” in my head.

Their dances were full of passion, drama, big emotions, speed, interesting choreo.
What I also liked very much pointing to Povilas that he was a great dancer (even better than Rita) but he always promoted and prioritized his lady over himself. Once somebody told me that the best dancer is the one who is great but at the same moment allows and helps his ice lady to shine. Skaters like Vanagas, Shabalin, today partly Scott and Nikita are doing this. But of course it needs lady who has qualities to shine. Althought Rita was weaker in technique than Povilas she impressed people with her passion and drama and she forced the audience to forgot about her edges and to live a passionate dance with her.

About facial expression of Rita – I always felt that she lived with music and story, she didn’t play it like so many recent and today’s ice ladies, she was totally in her program.
I don’t like that so many skaters are starting with facial expression and dancing comes as something inferior to face. If skater’s facial expression is more impressive and interesting to you than dance and movements – there is something wrong.

As a couple Rita and Povilas were great and always brought a big impression. To negatives - beside Rita’s technique, their dances were in quite similar style looking at 2000-2002 – very passionate and powerfull, in 2006 it was a romance but sometimes I could see that Rita is in trouble to keep an image of tender and innocent Christine (sometimes her movements were more passionate that music was). But still Phantom was very good program, good enough to get medal at Worlds.

Somebody mentioned two footed skating, yes, it was there. But except 2006 they spend their career under old judging system. If you look at 2000 Worlds you will see that all couples had two footed skating more than today. As well as many skaters had many running steps in programs.
 
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