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Sale suggests more scandals to give figure skating a lift
JUDGING controversies and a baffling scoring system have left figure skating struggling to pull in the fans, and Olympic champion Jamie Sale believes there is one good way to regain its popularity - more scandals.
"We need some fights!" That scandal (involving) Nancy (Kerrigan) and Tonya (Harding) made skating popular. We need some fist fighting," Sale said, laughing.
"It's silly. I'm just kidding. But every sport has got its problems. TV (figures) and live (attendance) is down. I don't know what it's going to take to make it really, really popular again."
Officials are likely to roll their eyes at Sale's suggestion but any die-hard figure skating fan will know that the 2002 Olympic pairs gold medallist is not too wide of the mark. Whereas once a mesmerizing performance could turn competitors such as Britain's Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean into household names, over the past two decades the only skaters to have left a lasting legacy are those who have hit the headlines for wrong reasons.
Spotlight
Sale and her now husband David Pelletier were thrust into the spotlight at the 2002 Games when a judging controversy erupted and they were belatedly awarded duplicate gold medals in the pairs competition after a French official admitted she had been ordered to mark them down.
"As much as it wasn't a pleasant thing to go through, it turned out better for us as we became household names, in the US especially. People still talk about it today and that wouldn't have happened if we won the gold outright," said Sale, who will be in Vancouver as a commentator. That incident led to a major scoring overhaul, with the old 6.0 system replaced by an accumulative scoring system that has bewildered fans and pundits alike.
All this has hit figure skating hard.
"There was so much pressure to make changes that they felt that they needed to do something," said Sale.
"Just like they gave us the gold medal to shut people up, and with people going 'this has gotta change, this sport is so bad, it's been like this for so long, I don't want to watch it anymore'. So they thought, if we make the (scoring) system a little different, it seems more fair.
"People always felt (before) it was biased but now the (revamped) scoring system, I don't understand it. It all seems contrived. It seems (the judges) can hide now. It totally hurt our sport."
"We need some fights!" That scandal (involving) Nancy (Kerrigan) and Tonya (Harding) made skating popular. We need some fist fighting," Sale said, laughing.
"It's silly. I'm just kidding. But every sport has got its problems. TV (figures) and live (attendance) is down. I don't know what it's going to take to make it really, really popular again."
Officials are likely to roll their eyes at Sale's suggestion but any die-hard figure skating fan will know that the 2002 Olympic pairs gold medallist is not too wide of the mark. Whereas once a mesmerizing performance could turn competitors such as Britain's Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean into household names, over the past two decades the only skaters to have left a lasting legacy are those who have hit the headlines for wrong reasons.
Spotlight
Sale and her now husband David Pelletier were thrust into the spotlight at the 2002 Games when a judging controversy erupted and they were belatedly awarded duplicate gold medals in the pairs competition after a French official admitted she had been ordered to mark them down.
"As much as it wasn't a pleasant thing to go through, it turned out better for us as we became household names, in the US especially. People still talk about it today and that wouldn't have happened if we won the gold outright," said Sale, who will be in Vancouver as a commentator. That incident led to a major scoring overhaul, with the old 6.0 system replaced by an accumulative scoring system that has bewildered fans and pundits alike.
All this has hit figure skating hard.
"There was so much pressure to make changes that they felt that they needed to do something," said Sale.
"Just like they gave us the gold medal to shut people up, and with people going 'this has gotta change, this sport is so bad, it's been like this for so long, I don't want to watch it anymore'. So they thought, if we make the (scoring) system a little different, it seems more fair.
"People always felt (before) it was biased but now the (revamped) scoring system, I don't understand it. It all seems contrived. It seems (the judges) can hide now. It totally hurt our sport."
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