No one.
Honestly it's not just the quads. It's the mindset. I really admire the mental toughness of the Russian ladies.
Sure their weapons help but they're not flakey. They go out and do what they're trained to do.
I actually would just be happy to see more well performed, maximised triples programs from the other ladies without mistakes and meltdowns. Mai was beautiful at Skate Canada even without quads. When I think about it, it's actually rare to get a clean triples program like Mai's. Someone is usually always missing a spin, falling on a jump, popping a jump etc
I totally agree with everyone saying no one. Russians have triple axels and quads and, for the most part, rotate their triples better than anyone else. Not to mention, they're better prepared mentally. I don't know what it'll take for the rest of the field to get more competitive. I hope this is only a phase, but I think it really depends on how much coaching knowledge is shared.
Good posts these.
Both mentioning the mental aspects of this. This is way more important than the jumps.
Russian ladies are under the pressure cooker 24/7/365 like very few athletes anywhere.
They live under the “what have you done for me lately” mantra. Being good today doesn’t mean your spot is secured for eternity.
They can’t afford too many bad skates because they get cut and someone else takes their place. It’s not a charity, they are there to win and win soundly. There are a ton of skaters ready to replace the non performers.
The goal is to breed winners. They treat it as a sport, where the goal is to defeat everyone you encounter.
They skate hurt, they skate when they aren’t 100%, they skate come hell or high water. Nobody outworks them either because the lazy ones get replaced without a second thought.
They are trained to be bulldogs and baby faced assassins.
That‘s why I fell in love with this crop and it’s no secret that I am a big fan of theirs.
They want to win badly, And they will sacrifice almost anything to do so. Anna not quitting and risking her life, and the lives of everyone around her, to win National gold might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it’s mine. That’s the winner mentality and it’s not just Anna that has it.
Once they get out of Russia and face competitors that skate “to try my best” or “to have some friendly competition“ or face competitors ”happy to be there” or competitors smiling and laughing after a bad skate, the Russians chew them up and spit them out.
They come fast, they come furious and they have the mental and tech advantage to turn your lights out.