2018-19 Russian Ladies' figure skating | Page 746 | Golden Skate

2018-19 Russian Ladies' figure skating

Scott512

Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 27, 2014
*Face palm*

This is sad. At her level, she deserves help from a nutritionist. Even non-athletes get it; it's really surprising to see top athletes do without.

It's not sad it's good that she's healthy and not well under weight like many are..
 

flanker

Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 10, 2018
Country
Czech-Republic
Can people that only come here to bash anyone that likes "that lady coach that doesn't teach their kids anything"s skaters open their own thread?
"Discussion about Eteri Tutberize and her teaching methods"

(btw whoever claims Trusova and Kostornaia's SS got worse, I'm 100% sure you don't follow or like russian ladies)

Fun fact: I actually wanted to complain about Team Panova getting underscored (especially compared to Team Tut) because she still seems to have no reputation with the judges. But I'm sure this gives more reason to complain about Eteri Tutberize and Daniil's choreo...

I will avoid drama around Eteri and just skip to the agreement that Panova seems to me beeing overlooked among other coaches. However, it could change now with Alena Kanysheva and Kseniia Sinitsyna. it is always better when there are more teams producing high quality skaters.
 

Metis

Shepherdess of the Teal Deer
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 14, 2018
well if you put it this way, it sounds pretty reasonable, and i'd even agree to some extent. i just find that a lot of the times when SS and posture is brought up in relation to certain skaters, the purpose isn't to have an actual discussion but to question the validity of their achievements.
Ah, I see. I have no interest in beginning more drama. All of my favourite skaters are imperfect — and noticing that doesn’t lessen my love for them or my hope that they stay in the sport so they continue to grow. I’m not a huge fan on the lack of attention to edgework in Eteri’s group, but I don’t think there’s any dispute that she’s the single most methodical coach out there in terms of finding every point available under the rules. The fact of the matter is that skating skills are, ultimately, worth only ten points of the total skating score, assuming a skater earned enough 10s in that component. A quad with +2-3 GOE is worth more than ten points. I think most of Eteri’s students have solid, but not exceptional, basic skating skills, that skating skills are not a main focus of training (they seem to be treated as a means to an end in terms of being able to perform complex transitions), and that there’s a real risk of regression in that area as the body changes.

Of course, no two skaters are going to be equally talented in the same aspects. Trusova has a natural “bounce” that makes her jumps so explosive. Kostornaia is able to sink into the ice and give the sense that she’s simply walking down the street while gliding. Et cetera. And developing skating skills takes time and dedicated effort. There’s only so many hours in the day. That being said... I don’t generally feel optimistic about Eteri students with weaker basics ever achieving true mastery of the blade, as it just doesn’t seem to be a priority. It doesn’t mean they’re bad, just not outstanding. And I value speed, glide, correct posture, etc., highly, which not everyone does.

with regards to alina's posture, that actually is one of the things i hope will get better over time. it wasn't distracting for me but i definitely noticed it at the start of the season, i think her tutu's last season did a good job of covering it up. personally i feel like her posture and speed has gotten better over this season especially when i watch her practices but idk if it actually has or if i'm just imagining it. either way i'm sure it's something they're aware of and working on. i don't think any coach has the intention of teaching their students bad skating skills/posture
I don’t think she’s teaching bad technique, I agree. I think it’s more a lack of attention, or at least relative attention, as my understanding is that Eteri is quite focused on having her skaters deliver clean run-throughs (and that the skaters are scored as if in competition), raising the technical bar, etc. Which only leaves so much time. And if you’re breaking down someone’s skating to the basics and reworking that technique, that’s going to have an effect on jump consistency. Eteri is gifted at ensuring that no opportunity to score points is wasted and maximizing every single opportunity, which is a valid coaching strategy. I don’t think it always leads to the best skating skills.

As for Zagitova: she seemed quite fast in the Rostelecom practise, I think it was? She also just needs time to adjust to her new height. (The year my centre of gravity dropped, I tripped over nothing multiple times.) She has great twizzles and an innate ability to make even small gestures into high-impact moments — for example, the way she moves her hand to toss-off a jump to the audience upon landing. She also has the most beautiful Rippons I’ve ever seen in ladies. And you’re right about her costumes last season — the tutus definitely drew attention from her relatively stiff knees, since the point at which the body line was broken by the costume was much higher on the leg, which naturally draws attention away from the knee.

To be fair, Sasha has already grown a lot over the course of this season alone (to the extent that she has gone through multiple costumes), and she seems to be improving in all aspects, at least in my eyes. I wouldn’t be surprised if she proved an exception to the general pattern and kept her jumps.

Alena K (both of them) and Nastya T are my favorite juniors, too.
We should start a fanclub for those three. 2As ‘n an N? :laugh2:

Fair point about Sasha. I don’t think she has bad skating skills, to be clear — part of why I like her short programme so much is the relatively uncluttered choreo (not that it lacks choreo, but that she has more chances to hold a position). Sasha is just generally likable. She has that “YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE” performer/diva quality, but in a good way.

As far as jumps go... I refuse to make predictions. Ice is slippery. Injury, unfortunately, can occur at any time. I just want everyone to stay healthy and to be happy with how they skate. But I’m sappy like that. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
 

Alexz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 29, 2016
Country
United-States
It's very true Alex they all get better under Eteri and they get worse when they leave her. Undeniable.

I also want to point out people here are not usually claiming that it is all Eteri and solemnly her achievement. It is the whole figure-skating developmental program in Russia. And they have few of those actually, within different schools, clubs and coaches clans. Besides Eteri always (Ted Barton's interview for instance) points out that Sergei and Daniil are giving the same amount of input and doing the same amount of job as her. So all achievements of Eteri are achievements of her team and the whole Russian figure skating program. They especially have remarkable success in Ladies now. Russian program was falling behind a bit in the 2000's, but they did some soul-searching and came back strong starting 2012-2013. If people are picking on little things and flaws of Russian skaters, fine, but failing to notice the overall success of their developmental program and not thinking to pick up some methods and approaches developed by RusFed and their developmental programs, that's just silly. Fortunately, Japanese coaches are more eager to learn and to improve, otherwise we would have undisputed Russian ladies domination. And that would be a bot too boring. :)
 

Alexz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 29, 2016
Country
United-States
.. and just skip to the agreement that Panova seems to me beeing overlooked among other coaches. However, it could change now with Alena Kanysheva and Kseniia Sinitsyna. it is always better when there are more teams producing high quality skaters.

oh, trust me, Panova's program is not overlooked. We see her success and breakthrough quite clear. :)
 

Globetrotter

Medalist
Joined
Jan 17, 2014
Perhaps. But I dont really see anyone in the world right now who are on par with Russian ladies. Only the Japanese girls are kinda catching up to them recently.

I think the poster was referring specifically to SS, not the overall content. The Russians are good but other than Alyona Kostornaia, most of them really only have mediocre SS. They don’t have the sort of smooth glide, edges and turns and posture like Alyona or the Japanese girls. It’s not today that the approach is wrong but SS is obviously an area they can afford to work on.
 

Globetrotter

Medalist
Joined
Jan 17, 2014
Alyona is SAMBO-70. Hello? Alyona was raised under Tchaikovskaya's figure-skating developmental program in Sambo-70 school. Under Eteri and Daniil Alyona only got better. Polished. Her jumps become more consistent. SHe start getting better and edgy programs since the move last year. Eteri is an elite group of Sambo-70. They pick most talented ones from their system (and sometimes from provinces, like Lipnitskaya and Trusova) and start polishing them. Lipnitskaya got better under Eteri. Trusova is getting there. Bottom line is the vast majority Eteri's skaters are Eteri's students from the very young ages or Sambo-70 products anyways. We discussed that many times here already.

Like I said currently in the world there is no better figure-skating program than Sambo-70 (courtesy of the great Tchaikovskaya). Few other Moscow and St Petersburg groups are being close seconds. Japanese coaches and their young skaters are rapidly closing the gap though. Our North American coaches are not even in the conversation. Facts.

As you said, Alyona got her basic posture and SS under Tchaikovskaya’s group, specifically under Elena Zhgun who was an ice dancer. That’s why she got the strong basics which Eteri was able to build on so well. The original poster meant that someone else in Sambo 70 trained Alyona in her basics. It wasn’t Eteri, although Eteri did package and customize her to a greater version.
 

tokoyami

On the Ice
Joined
Nov 9, 2018
has anyone in this thread recently said that Russian skaters have terrible skating skills? Did I completely miss that? let's not make a mountain out of a molehill in this situation. Let's remember the differences between constructive criticism and bashing :)
 

Globetrotter

Medalist
Joined
Jan 17, 2014
It's very true Alex they all get better under Eteri and they get worse when they leave her. Undeniable.


I think the context needs to be presented. Eteri is a genius at maximizing scores and customization of programmes to her skaters. With her tough work ethics, her students have to shape up or ship out. So those that made it of course got better. But her methods have specific focus on content and scores and basic techniques are not as much emphasized. Skaters like Zhenya who left her were already starting to lose their technique as they grew as they never had them solidly in the first place. In Zhenya’s case, she was deteriorating and struck out elsewhere in an attempt to remain competitive. So to say that she got worse after leaving Eteri is not quite true as she was already showing signs of losing competitiveness.

That said, with skaters like Alyona who started with solid technique and the most critical blade work and basic SS (IMO), I believe these skaters will have better longevity. I am sure Eteri is also learning and refining her coaching which is why every subsequent crop of skaters are getting more and more solid as she figures out what needs to be propped.
 

Metis

Shepherdess of the Teal Deer
Record Breaker
Joined
Feb 14, 2018
Nah, original poster specifically said Sambo-70 program can't develop basic skating skills. I proved that wrong. Basic skating skills is not only posture on specific elements, btw. If that the only thing to pick on, oh well. [emoji4] And humbly disagree calling their SS mediocre. A lot of smooth and fluid SS comes from the weight, therefore younger girls who usually has weaker leg muscles are yet to develop soother skating style.

In which case I apologise for the error, as Kostornaia clearly owes her superior skating skills to her first coach, not Eteri. You can either read my other posts clarifying my remarks or admit to just inventing what I said for your own purposes, but kindly pick. Personally? Stop putting words in my mouth.

You’re welcome to disprove the regression in skating skills shown by Zagitova and Medvedeva. We can start with the loop turn in their free skates and the way they whip around the upper body to force their way through the turns of their step sequences.
 

bobbob

Medalist
Joined
Feb 7, 2014
Skating skills and who your current coach is are not linked very closely. Perhaps it is slightly more linked to the coach you first learned your basics under, but even that isn't perfectly correlated. Any teacher will have good students and bad students and students with different strengths. If you notice, most coaches have students with varying levels of skating skills.
 

Alexz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 29, 2016
Country
United-States
As you said, Alyona got her basic posture and SS under Tchaikovskaya’s group, specifically under Elena Zhgun who was an ice dancer. That’s why she got the strong basics which Eteri was able to build on so well. The original poster meant that someone else in Sambo 70 trained Alyona in her basics. It wasn’t Eteri, although Eteri did package and customize her to a greater version.
Elena Zhgun clearly a great coach. She does not (and had not) have many students..which is surprising. She currently has 12 students, boys and girls ranging from 6 to 14 years old. Zhgun holds a doctoral degree in sport science. From what I have read about her and her academic publications she is very smart and preach scientific approach in coaching. No surprise Tchaikovskaya invited Zhgun to her school. However I feel Zhgun doesn't really have much of the hands-on experience raising elite skaters, but she surely knows how to give strong basics on which other coaches can further build on.

One way or another it is still a Sambo-70 school and it is Tchaikovskaya program. Original poster specifically said they (Eteri and in Sambo) don't know how to teach good SS. Scroll up and read.

Besides, let's compare Alyona's SS 2-3 years ago and now.;) Daniil himself mentioned 1 year ago about Alyona's good SS and promised it will only get better. Well we definitely see Alyona having better SS and better packaging this year. But clearly because Alyona already had a strong base. Besides, if you noticed Eteri said many time they all share all workload and duties equally. Also let's not overlook Alyona's natural talent. Other Zhgun's skaters don't really show exceptional SS, they are solid, but not great. I guess it really was a combination of factors: Tchaikovskaya program, Zhgun's coaching, Daniil choreography, and lot of attention from Eteri, Dudakov and Rozanov. Everything came together and we got Alyona Kostornaya. A perfect storm. :D
 

Alexz

Medalist
Joined
Mar 29, 2016
Country
United-States
I think the context needs to be presented. Eteri is a genius at maximizing scores and customization of programmes to her skaters. [/b[With her tough work ethics, her students have to shape up or ship out. So those that made it of course got better.


OK, this raises the question: isnt it what all good professionals should do? Her team knows how to customize programmes to make their skaters look good and to get them maximum points. Raises another question: what stopping other coaches doing exactly that with their students? Is not it what sport is all about? To become better version of yourself and to squeeze as many points as possible?


But her methods have specific focus on content and scores and basic techniques are not as much emphasized. Skaters like Zhenya who left her were already starting to lose their technique as they grew as they never had them solidly in the first place. In Zhenya’s case, she was deteriorating and struck out elsewhere in an attempt to remain competitive. So to say that she got worse after leaving Eteri is not quite true as she was already showing signs of losing competitiveness.

You speaking like you exactly know her methods. :) Zhenya start losing it after not following doctor's advices and not wearing that orthopedic boot, and doing sponsors events and commercial shoots in Japan instead of giving her foot a rest despite all demands by coaches and doctors. Unfortunately she went South after Japan. Her silver at Olympics is her grit and super hardwork by coaches and herself. But being so reckless about health less than half a year before the main competition of her career was highly unprofessional and immature of Zhenya. As for Alina, well, she is growing. 7-10cm of extra height in a year is no joke. This affects her. So we wait and see. Also Brian Orser promised us Zhenya to have better SS. So we wait and see. I would love that.


That said, with skaters like Alyona who started with solid technique and the most critical blade work and basic SS (IMO), I believe these skaters will have better longevity. I am sure Eteri is also learning and refining her coaching which is why every subsequent crop of skaters are getting more and more solid as she figures out what needs to be propped.

Well, Eteri and everyone in her team are relatively very young coaches. Extremely young. They are adaptable and demonstrate ability to learn. Yulia was better than Polina. Zhenya is better than Yulia (and I love Lipnitskaya to pieces). Zhenya and Alina have comparable SS, but Alina is a better jumper. Current crop (3A squad) is turning seniors next year, but in terms of SS Alyona is already superior than Zhenya and Alina. Sasha and Anna is solid, and I'm sure they will be even better, better than Zhenya and Alina. And future generation that turn junior next season - Daria, Kamila and another awesome unknown skater in the wings - already at their age of 12 showing off their solid SS and artistry.

Frankly, I want to see any other non-Eteri 12-year-olds with comparable skating. There are some, but they are happen to live Russia too. Why we don't really see anyone produced by our North American coaches lately? Lovely Osmand only comes to mind. I see a lot of young girls training here in UTC Westfiled and SD ice arena. None of them can skate now like Russian or Japanese ladies do. Why can't they? Consistency in jumping - I get it, a lot of runthroughs and a lot of competing in different cities needed (like Russians are doing from the very young ages). That's USFS job. But I can't see any young skater at my local ice rinks even remotely comparable to up&coming crop in Moscow in term of SS. There always should be a potential to improve, to find new methods and to grow, but I feel like our North American coaches really did not get some sort of new memo or a book with new coaching methods or smth. Dunno. I don't get it.
 

Sam-Skwantch

“I solemnly swear I’m up to no good”
Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 29, 2013
Country
United-States
There is only so much a coach can do regarding carriage and posture. A lot of it is natural genetics and physical conditioning. I think people really make too much out of it and it shouldn’t play too much of a factor in the scoring TBH. People should be allowed to and accepted for skating what ever best suits their physical being. I’m cool with it ;)
 

Baron Vladimir

Record Breaker
Joined
Dec 18, 2014
There is only so much a coach can do regarding carriage and posture. A lot of it is natural genetics and physical conditioning. I think people really make too much out of it and it shouldn’t play too much of a factor in the scoring TBH. People should be allowed to and accepted for skating what ever best suits their physical being. I’m cool with it ;)

Thankfully, ISU and the judges are thinking the same as you :biggrin:
 

lanceupper1114

On the Ice
Joined
Jun 3, 2018
There is only so much a coach can do regarding carriage and posture. A lot of it is natural genetics and physical conditioning. I think people really make too much out of it and it shouldn’t play too much of a factor in the scoring TBH. People should be allowed to and accepted for skating what ever best suits their physical being. I’m cool with it ;)

The entire sport is about natural genetics and physical conditioning, though, not just carriage and posture. Maintaining good posture and body-positions require long-term physical and mental discipline as in other technical aspects in skating.
 

rachno2

Record Breaker
Joined
Aug 6, 2018
So reasonable arguments about posture and its relation to skating skills are actually petty critiques about a skater’s physical appearance/genes. Okay.
 

taylor1

On the Ice
Joined
Jul 28, 2018
It sounds like Liza is ready to compete; I am happy to hear. She may be the most consistent Russian right now to challenge the Japanese trio of power. Though I do admit right now Alina has the higher scoring potenial. Easier said than done can Liza do a Rika - 3 triple axels in a competition? Is she able to do a combo in the free? Weird the top two ladies from world's won't be there and the bronze medallist isn't the favorite to win gold.

who are the top 2 ladies you are referring to?
 
Top