Mathman said:
I always figured that the back-talk business was just John Nicks running a game on the news media. Sasha was quite a bit younger then. I would be surprised if a fifteen or sixteen year old really gave much input to her coach -- or if the coach paid any attention to it if she did.
I would love to be able to spy on Sasha and Nicks working together now, though. Having gone through two top coaches in two years, Sasha probably does have her own ideas now about where she wants to go.
Mathman
In the VOGUE article that came out a few years ago, Nicks basically said that he was fooling around with the media re how "difficult" Sasha was because, having coached for over 50 years, he was really sick of the whole image of female figure skaters as little girls in pink tu-tus. I'm paraphrasing.
Anyway, it reminds of the scene in "Jerry Maguire" where Maguire (Tom Cruise) is going nuts trying to get his one and only client, Cuba Gooding Jr., to understand that in order to make more money he needs to play football with more passion. At the end of the scene, in which there is no meeting of the minds, Cruise storms out and Gooding says something like, "Jerry! Don't leave! You think we're having an argument and I think we're finally having a conversation!"
Only Nicks and Cohen know what their relationship was about, but I agree with Mathman that it is unlikely that a 16-17-year-old girl was really calling the shots with an experienced coach like Nicks. Maybe Nicks knew well enough that with some skaters, you have to let them go out and fall on their face five times in a row trying the quad they're not ready for before they'll listen to you.
On that note, I think Diver Chick's comments are also spot on. I'm sure Sasha meant yes when she said yes, but you get out there and start doing things, hormones start flying, things change. When Michelle took her senior level test against Frank Carroll's wishes and not only passed, but then won the Olympic Festival IIRC and went on to finish fourth at senior Worlds, we all thought it was great. And it was, IMO. When you're young and hungry, taking risks is part of the excitement of youth. When going against the coach's advice doesn't work out, we shake our finger and say, "Foolish, headstrong girl! Who does she think she is?"
But like Mathman, I'd love to be a fly on the wall when Nicks and Sasha start working together again. Perhaps Sasha would rather kick herself around the block for making her own mistakes than kick herself for making someone else's. At any rate, I can only imagine it will be quite different, though I have no idea how. But I do wish both Sasha and Nicks all the best.
Rgirl