Patrick Chan | Page 249 | Golden Skate

Patrick Chan

i'd like one by jeff buttle and one by david wilson i think...
Latest Twitter updates on Patrick:

Someone spotted him watching the ladies' event and took a picture:

https://twitter.com/machutus_/status/716456888641175553

Also, @yodante tweeted, "Overheard at #worlds2016: someone shouting "bring ice wine to the United Sstates!" at @Pchiddy" :laugh2:

https://twitter.com/yodante/status/716438959002398720

IFS Magazine said:

"Patrick Chan just told us he will be working on quad Salchows this summer. No decision on who will choreograph new programs."
 
i'd like one by jeff buttle and one by david wilson i think...
It seems that David Wilson is firmly entrenched on Team Chan. I can't see Patrick not having him choreograph at least one of his programs. This Chopin program is so memorable and the two of them seem made for each other. I'm going to throw a name in - Pasquale Camerlengo. He was responsible for Patrick's Blackbird/Dear Prudence exhibition number. I've always admired the work he did with Akiko Suzuki especially "O" her Cirque du Soleil program. That would be an interesting direction.
 
i guess there is en exh to choreo too :) in any case, anyone who has the opportunity to work with him will have quite a lot to work with.... :)
It seems that David Wilson is firmly entrenched on Team Chan. I can't see Patrick not having him choreograph at least one of his programs. This Chopin program is so memorable and the two of them seem made for each other. I'm going to throw a name in - Pasquale Camerlengo. He was responsible for Patrick's Blackbird/Dear Prudence exhibition number. I've always admired the work he did with Akiko Suzuki especially "O" her Cirque du Soleil program. That would be an interesting direction.
 
My ongoing internet connection problem acted up again yesterday and I had no access till just before the Ladies event, causing me to miss the Pairs entirely. Then of course the GS was so slow after the Ladies' that I stayed away. However, my heart has been with y'all and I wondered all day how everybody was doing. All I know about Patrick's difficulty with the ice is from this thread though I read a few posts criticizing his complaint.

There are a few things I observe and feel about Patrick for a while that I have not shared here. Come to think of it, they are about his sensitivities. Patrick has always appeared a happy jock, sport loving, athletic, with a friendly sunny personality, and not quite articulate enough for his celebrity status and necessary PR. He is not a man who expresses himself very well with words, often causing misunderstanding and easy negative spinning.

Yet Patrick Chan on ice is the most articulate, expressive, and sensitive person there is. His taste in music and his performances are sophisticated, refined, and meticulous. Sensitive to every note and nuance of the music, he expresses himself and interprets the music elegantly, artfully, and subtly, inviting viewers to peek into his inner being and find treasures again and again. His sublime performances are especially appreciated by the connaisseurs of skating, music, and arts. All these he does with his unmatched skating skills, the foundation of his technical prowess as well as exquisite artistry.

As a skater Patrick is like the most sensitive and finely tuned musical instrument or a race car. Like most elite athletes, he is highly aware of his body and sensitive to all the precise points it tells him. His body and its extension, the skates, are the tools of his trade and he takes good care of them. However, there are environmental conditions affecting his performances which he does not have full control of. By practicing before a competition, he learns about and adapts himself to these conditions, the most important of which is, of course, the ice he skates on and feels with every little movement. Any unexpected condition at the actual competition can distract or even totally throw him off, such as an overhead camera coming in too close, or the ice in bad or different conditions than what he has practised on. Unfortunately, this situation has occurred more often than he (and we) like this season. It is indeed better to know about inconsistent ice and try to rectify it than to encounter seriously bad ice when it's his turn.

Another observation is about his coaching and training choices. He had the full attention of his first coach Mr. Colson who recognized and appreciated his talents and knew how to nurture them, starting with basics and building a strong foundation for his entire skating career. The crusty old man and the kid developed a special bond that has been so cherished by Patrick till this day. He went to Krall as a jump and Dartfish specialist and she became his main coach with a team of specialized trainers. This worked well for a while but I think Krall's approach was too regimental and rigid for him at the end, with his every minute being micro-managed, literally. His decision to train with Johnson has been criticized and ridiculed and made an easy scapegoat whenever he had a less than ideal performance. They kept the coach-student relationship throughout his 18 month sabbatical from competition and when he returned, the relationship continues and they seem closer than ever, even though his romantic relationship with her daughter has ended. They both talk about how she is totally sensitive to and in tune with all the nuanced conditions about him, physically and mentally. He is her only full time student and she seems devoted to him, caring about every aspect of his training and his life.

As he grew up and matured, Patrick got to know himself better and better. He knows what he wants and needs. He sets his goals and stays on his path to achieve them. I think he realizes that he does well under a devoted and caring coach who knows and understands him well, with whom he can communicate freely and trustingly. So he is steadfastly staying with his unconventional coach and she has guided him to be the artist he wanted to be. She helps to keep him grounded and keep to a holistic patient plan. He is already very disciplined and with her he gets the special attention and guidance he needs.

I hope Patrick stays true to himself, skates for himself, and keeps expressing himself through his skating.
 
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Just curious but does patrick have a tattoo by any chance? I thought i saw XX something on his left shoulder in the kiss and cry at worlds for his FS
 
As a skater Patrick is like the most sensitive and finely tuned musical instrument or a race car. Like most elite athletes, he is highly aware of his body and sensitive to all the precise points it tells him. His body and its extension, the skates, are the tools of his trade and he takes good care of them. However, there are environmental conditions affecting his performances which he does not have full control of. By practicing before a competition, he learns about and adapts himself to these conditions, the most important of which is, of course, the ice he skates on and feels with every little movement. Any unexpected condition at the actual competition can distract or even totally throw him off, such as an overhead camera coming in too close, or the ice in bad or different conditions than what he has practised on. Unfortunately, this situation has occurred more often than he (and we) like this season. It is indeed better to know about inconsistent ice and try to rectify it than to encounter seriously bad ice when it's his turn.

Thank you for sharing your thoughts, VB. I just wanted to comment on the "unexpected conditions" part. Despite his sunny jock image, Patrick is a thinking skater (sometimes he thinks too much). I think it would be wise for him to take stock of what he learned during this year and be more like an astronaut. Astronauts will often try to think about every possible disaster scenario they may encounter on a mission, and solutions to those scenarios, because their lives depend on it. Patrick would do well to make a list of every unexpected condition and scenario that he may encounter during a performance, and have solutions readily available to counteract them. This way a) these situations are no longer unexpected and b) he will know right away what to do and not get distracted by it. His life may not be at stake, but his performance, his livelihood and even his health are. He could stand to be even more proactive in making conditions better for himself and his fellow skaters.

I heard that Johnny Weir scolded Patrick for complaining about the ice... Obviously he's never skated in adverse conditions before... :rolleye:

But on a cheery note, many Japanese fans said that the boards should have gotten out of the way when Patrick did his 3T! :biggrin:
 
I heard that Johnny Weir scolded Patrick for complaining about the ice... Obviously he's never skated in adverse conditions before... :rolleye:
I believe that Johnny Weir was wrong and a bit disrespectful. The way he has scolded Patrick makes seem that Patrick always finds an excuse when things don' t work how he would have liked, but he has NEVER done it until Yesterday(when he was right, by the way).
Sorry if i don't know how to quote part of a comment but only the entire one
 
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I am very angry. :ddevil: I do not like exhibitions and I have made an effort to see my favorites skaters (patrick, Duhamel / Radford, etc) but the tv have done a terrible job (sorry do not know how to say this in English).:sad46:
Focused only the top half of the skaters, none of their footworks, just short planes ... it is shameful. :disagree:
 
sigh... I am planning to watch it tonight.... from CBC.... i hope it's better ... as much as I like Patrick's face, i prefer to watch him below the waste ... (mostly for his footwork, not just his assets)
let's hope there will be videos with better caption....

and don't worry about your english...
I am very angry. :ddevil: I do not like exhibitions and I have made an effort to see my favorites skaters (patrick, Duhamel / Radford, etc) but the tv have done a terrible job (sorry do not know how to say this in English).:sad46:
Focused only the top half of the skaters, none of their footworks, just short planes ... it is shameful. :disagree:
 
I believe that Johnny Weir was wrong and a bit disrespectful. The way he has scolded Patrick makes seem that Patrick always finds an excuse when things don' t work how he would have liked, but he has NEVER done it until Yesterday(when he was right, by the way).
Sorry if i don't know how to quote part of a comment but only the entire one

Patrick said the ice wasn't great but he also said something like "I didn't skate well" I don't have the exact quote but he did say that he didn't perform well and he is not making excuses, he is saying why ice conditions matter to him.

Johnny weir is just johnny weir...
 
I believe that Johnny Weir was wrong and a bit disrespectful. The way he has scolded Patrick makes seem that Patrick always finds an excuse when things don' t work how he would have liked, but he has NEVER done it until Yesterday(when he was right, by the way).
Sorry if i don't know how to quote part of a comment but only the entire one

No problem, Ultraworld - you can quote anything by putting them in these quote brackets (minus the spaces): [ quote ] your text here [ /quote]. Thanks for your comments.

It was wonderful to read all the Twitter compliments on Patrick's gala EX performance. Now I think if he encounters bad ice again, he should just do a more simplified version of his program that is at least still clean and beautiful, even if it's not more technically difficult. As @QuadAxel3Toe said, if Patrick had just skated his winning Skate Canada performance (with only one quad and one 3A), he would have been on the podium. Adam Rippon didn't skate a quad this time, yet he placed 4th in the FS, higher than Patrick. So on rough ice, downgrade and go clean.

At least this year, with the exception of Javi, the top men didn't produce their best free skates. If Patrick had gotten 203.99 for his FS like at 4CC, he would have won silver. On to 2017!
 
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