However, I will be honest and say that I don’t find her (or many of the other skaters who have been around for a while – Irina, Victoria, etc.,) as exciting as they were 4, 5 years ago. And I am ready for a changing of the guard. Though I am disappointed that Sasha did not win the gold, I was happy to see others (Arakawa, Miko etc.,) starting to shine despite the veterans being around. It’s refreshing and for me, it makes figure skating exciting to watch again.
But isn't it more exciting to watch the new charge of stars compete against the usually invincible veterans? Hear me out...
I was ITCHING to post on this, so I couldn't even finish the last two pages

I think that as many top-notch elite skaters should stay in the game to raise the stakes for competition and make competitions exciting, like this year's worlds. I remember Michael Jordan retiring in the early 90s, when I was rooting for Charles Barkley to win his first ring with the Suns, and I remember thinking, that evil Michael Jordan, beating up on my favorite players...but even if my beloved Sir Charles had pulled out a championship before retiring and AFTER MJ retired, it wouldn't have meant as much to me (or, I imagine, to him) if he wasn't taking it from the best, most dominant player in the history of the game...just like I think Shizuka's title was extra special because she had to push herself THAT much more to win it from the long-standing gold standard in her sport, a close-to-clean Michelle (except for the QR and the 2Z)---it was all so exciting because the level of skating, little misses from the top guns and all, was SOOO high, and we as skating fans can only stand to enjoy and be enthralled by seeing someone with the longevity, passion, and consistency of a Michelle Kwan, then the brilliance and sheer talent of a Sasha Cohen (who made two small errors in three skates in the biggest comp of the year, happens to the best of them--let's forget her falls in cheesefests and championships past), then the technical and artistic prowess of an inspired and brave Shizuka Arakawa...I say, DON'T retire, to those ladies who have been competing and can still be supremely competitive--for MY sake as spectator, not to mention if it still makes them so happy

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Like her skating or not, Michelle's consistency and dominance alone make her a history maker, a walking, talking, spiraling legacy, and I think that when she ends up third in a competition but still with much more than a fighting chance (her usual clean skates are still among the 3-5 best in the world), it makes for incredible drama. Whoever wins or loses, I think it is imperative that the pool of top skaters include living legends, up-and-comers, natural talents, and all sorts of great performers, to make it worth watching at all...why else follow skating year round, to watch the same exact programs, with a thinned-out field with only one really dominant skater and an all but foregone conclusion as the outcome? Sasha had great success in the GP series, and even though CoP gives all players a fighting chance, short of a disastrous program probably produced by illness, at that point she was the only one likely to win any of those competitions because the total field was split among 3-4 competitions, Cohen winning most all of hers, Liashenko in first in those she chose to compete in, et al.
Also, quality of competition issues aside, not only is it folly to suggest that Michelle, who says she loves to compete and does it better than anyone in the business right now, retire, in light of her olympic bronze medal, but she was, up until a week ago, the reigning WORLD CHAMPION and she's still on the podium this year! If you said she ended up 14th in the overall competition, I'd understand, but...
I want to see high drama of the good kind in as many major skating competitions, and that requires Michelle, AND a healthy Irina, AND many others staying eligible!!!
Sarah