- Joined
- Oct 27, 2004
I agree, but they'd have to skate out of their skin.
Yep. I agree with you
I agree, but they'd have to skate out of their skin.
If anyone other than K/N end up winning, I will eat my hat! And also my scarf and gloves.
I would say too that K/N look like the front runnersIf anyone other than K/N end up winning, I will eat my hat! And also my scarf and gloves.
I sure hope your hat, scarf, and gloves taste good.
^ I'd say Dube/Davidson and Kawaguchi/Smirnov will probably be ahead of them, maybe Murkhortova/Trankov...
If we accept the German and 2 Chinese teams as locks there is also Dube/Davidson, Duhamel/Buntin, Kawaguchi/Smirnov, Murkhortova/Trankov Given the aforementioned, what place do you see them in now?
I'm still going for a great showing in Worlds, their First.
The eyes of two Asian nations are focused squarely on Los Angeles this week, and not just because of the much-hyped showdown between reigning world champion Mao Asada of Japan and two-time world bronze medalist Yu-Na Kim of the Republic of Korea.
The thought of winning the 2009 World Figure Skating Championships at the Staples Center, the same arena where he attends Lakers games, leaves Evan Lysacek almost speechless.
"It would just mean a lot," the two-time U.S. champion said after his morning practice today. "It would be, well, just a really emotional thing."
Oh, my. Bless his frankness
Last season, Brian Joubert shrugged off Jeffrey Buttle, saying there were only a few skaters capable of winning the world title and the quad-less Buttle wasn't among them.
The Frenchman made a lot of noise off the ice, but the soft-spoken Canadian took home gold, defeating Joubert by nearly 14 points after his rival took a tumble in the short program.
Buttle is retired from competition, but his successor, two-time Canadian champion Patrick Chan, has taken up the cause.