This will be a bit lengthy as I want to clarify the context and provide necessary links (you usually ask for references, in my experience).
At 2008 Worlds, Jeffrey Buttle was 25 years old, an accomplished veteran, and he stated his case beautifully when the matter came up. For the record, I have issues with Joubert's comments but don't view them as harshly as some people - certainly I can't see any way of interpreting them as "bitter allegations". In an interview a couple of weeks post-Gotheburg he was mostly concerned with analyzing his own performance and discussing the scoring system. It's an IN interview, so I can't link to it - sorry. Look at their April 2008 archive if you're interested, and please ignore the awful headline; that it definitely not Joubert's fault. Anyway, there was certainly no need for Patrick to "defend" Jeff at 2009 Worlds, a full year later, with the matter having been left behind by those involved.
The comments that Joubert made in 2009 that set off Patrick Chan were that he prefers people to try quads but the system does not reward them enough - his standard line for years - and that he considered Evan Lysacek the most dangerous contender. The part about Evan's quad is Hersh's interpretation; hard to tell what exactly Joubert said. For these rather mellow comments, he was labelled a sore loser, a hypocrite, had his programs ridiculed - and Chan did some of it
after the LP. All that goes quite beyond "not very diplomatic"; it was nasty, spiteful, and uncalled for. Joubert, it is worth noting, pretty much stayed quiet. Here are the three parts of the saga, as brought to you at the time by Phil Hersh:
Joubert, pre-Worlds;
Chan responds;
Joubert is perplexed but diplomatic. I am especially fond of the quote by Carroll at the end of part 1, very LOLsy considering who he was coaching. At the time, some people at GS felt Skate Canada was being a bit Iago-like; there was no consensus. Now I wonder if the same can be said about Hersh's role... but I digress. I actually had no issue with Chan having an opinion I disagreed with, but his manner of expressing it did him no credit at all. I'm aware that Chan and Joubert appear to be on friendlier terms, and I did write that I believe his experiences in the past couple of years have made Chan more mature.
BTW, Chan was wrong about Joubert needing three quads to win in LA; he'd have been fine had he not tried to change his LP on the go and stayed upright on his final 2A. In which case I bet Plushenko would have won a second OGM. But it is what it is, ice is slippery etc.
Both 2008 Worlds and 2009 Worlds are well behind us, and the former is a bit of a dead horse, IMO. I'd have left the whole thing out of this thread if you hadn't brought up the latter as a situation in which Chan showed real sportsmanship, because it wasn't one of his finer moments. Patrick Chan has many worthy qualities, and there's no need to invent things to make him look even better. He was out of line in 2009. He learned from it. But it was not a shining example of sportsmanlike conduct.
I have to say, as a more general point, that if allowances are made for Chan's age, I'd like to see similar courtesy extended to athletes who might find it difficult to express themselves in English, or whose cultural background may entail an understanding of what is appropriate conduct for an athlete that doesn't necessarily fall in line with the NA concept of good sportsmanship. This is an international, multicultural sport, and it is worth keeping in mind that there isn't one approach to it that is correct.
And on that happy note, I would like to end the threadjacking. Though now that this is a general Chan thread, it's bound to derail all the time, in the tradition of skater-specific threads
I wrote that Chan
did not begrudge his competitor's wins.
In 2009, it might not be very diplomatic of him, but what he did was defending Jeff Buttle, whom Joubert definitely begrudged for his 2008 Worlds win. Yes, Joubert hadn't done anything to Chan but Chan never alleged that he did. He never inserted himself in the arguement or asserted his own chances against Joubert's. It was about Joubert's bitter allegations of Buttle's unworthiness as a World Champion, clearly feeling he should have been the rightful defending Champion at 2009 Worlds. Chan was deemed disrespectful to speak up against someone of Joubert's status and large fandom, but he was proven correct in saying Joubert needed to bring 3 quads to win. As it was, Chan beat Joubert like Buttle had done, without a quad. Then, he did not begrudge Lysacek's win or taunt Joubert with his own higher placement. So, all the media inflated pre-competition war of words wasn't about Chan himself and his competitions. It was Chan speaking his mind about Buttle's rightful win. He didn't hold anything personally against Joubert and the two evidently went on having a good relationship as seen on various video clips from subsequent shows and competitions. In the
interview with Browning after 2010 Worlds, Chan talked about how happy he was for Joubert to have come back after the great Olympic disappointment. He said it was so good to see Joubert happy again. Any personal acrimony was blown up by fans.
The actual pre Worlds "controversy" was very good publicity for the Championships and figure skating, so was the manufactured quad controversy during the Olympics. Chan might have been cast in a negative role in these scenarios but it was good for figure skating's public profile, without the ugliness of an earlier era. OTOH, they were not nearly as effective as the episode with real villains and a beautiful ice princess. Oh, well.
I think many perceived Chan as arrogant or "bratty" because of his age and status, but his age was mostly under considerd and his status under valued. (He was the Canadian Champ and then Worlds Medalist.) These days, honesty is not a virute and truth speaking is a risky endeavor. If one considers Chan's actual words over the last few years, he has been proven right in almost all cases. Maybe he should improve his deliveries and articulation, but selfishly I hope not too much, as that would deprive me of rare and valuable opportunities to glimpse into a young super achiever's mind.
At the risk of incurring more wrath and criticism, here are two Canadian interviews now availabe on Youtube, with "motivation" being mentioned in both:
CBC's PJ Kwong at the HPC
On CTV News