I love Plush, Irina and many Russian skaters. i would love to visit and partake of the culture, museums, the ballet, the skating events. Russians I know in my area are very proud, nice people. They are generally very nice and one I know converted to Christianity (ashamed he was wrongly of his Jewish background he said,) and brought up in the atheist tradition. He love USA and does not want to go back. He was a nice man who became even nicer and happier when he found a church that made him happy. The Russian performer athlete does not like to lose. In ballet and skating, gymnastics, these Russian superstars are adored at home and egos get large. You could make a case for poor sportsmanship for Irina, Plush or Khorhina, and call them people with huge egos. Maybe you'd be right. But that extreme confidence generates great courage. There are cultural differences and the Russian skaters get slammed the most, and this is a rehash of Vancouver. I like Plushy and Irina enormously. I am turned off to the same extent by Khorhina, Pasha Grishuk, and to some extent, the person Baiul grew up to be.
It absolutely makes a difference off ice behavior, with fans and even with judges. Tonya Harding (before the hit-everyone recall the disdain for her as a person) Kerrigan who helps many people and has shown great love for a very ill brother, was slammed for years for a couple honest comments after losing the gold medal (unfairly) after heroic comeback. She does not even get listed in most people's top tens and she was a big US Champion.
So to say we don't judge people re gossip, and their real off camera personalities is being totally false. In skating we see Alissa get held up. People love her. One of my favorites, MK, can do no wrong in some people's eyes. But it's easy to be gracious when you skate great most of the time.
I much prefer athletes who speak their mind than the constant pollyannas like Peggy for example. I learned nothing from her in all those years. Thank goodness for Dick Button. He may be far from the nicest man but he was usually honest about what he was seeing.
I remember see Surya Bonaly act the same and I remember her backflip to the judges. I thought it was great. Without these characters, skating would be dull. I won't likely read Lucindah's new book, but it would be more honest if she did describe people exactly as they behaved. Her pro career appears over, so nothing to lose there. I like knowing the truth. I can think of a top skater who always won (mostly) and when she didn't one time, she was testy. She is a big sweetheart of skating so I would not want to rile her fans. The podiums are for the skating. Often the best human beings in life are the losers, because they value being kind over getting what they want.

As in all fields of human endeavour, it seems unfair that Plush can be Plush when mad, but female skaters must keep smiling and be ever so gracious. Can you imagine if Yuna Kim threw a fit when she came in second at worlds? There'd be pages of talk! Double standards everywhere.
