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Visi foršie vīrieši - slidotāji

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albalonga написал(а):

Bet tenisā teiksim tā - visi pirmā piecdesmitnieka spēlētāji pelna labi

Man no tenisistiem varētu teikt favorīts ir Rafaels Nadals... nu kā otrais pasaules numurs viņš pelna no 3-10 miljoniem gadā... Atceros, ka vienu gadu viņam oficālajās atskaiteš bija trīs, bet nākošajā ar reklāmām kopā jau pāri deviņiem.. :)

Tā kā nav peļama naudiņa... :D

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nu jā. Un daudzi tenisisti un vispār sportisti izvelās savu oficiālo rezidenci Monako, lai mazi nodokļi. Nu mans mīļakais tenisists bija Marats Safins, tagad laikam Rodžs, arī Novāks.

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Meitenes, cenšamies pieturēties pie tēmas :) Tenisam ir atsevišķa sadaļa, šeit tomēr sarunas par daiļslidošanu :)

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vopsī - moderatore sabāra.... :blush:

ak, pardon, pardon.... :playful:

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albalonga написал(а):

vopsī - moderatore sabāra.... :blush:

:D Jap jap, piesargās no bargās moderatores :D

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Albalonga tavs avatārs  :love: Dievīgs..Stefijs ar Brī!

Отредактировано Inetux (25.04.2010 21:01)

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Inetux написал(а):

Albalonga tavs avatārs   Dievīgs..Stefijs ar Brī!

hi-hi. paldies. man ar mežonīgi patīk. It kā nekas dižs nav uztaisīts, bet čakarējos paintshopā ilgi, kamēr man patika pareizais krāsu tonis un kamēr uzlikās pareizā sirds un pareizajā leņķī. Sterian rullē.

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Vienkārši 9 minūtes un 40 sekundes var stulbi smaidīt....

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVfAHFEk4BU&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

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Yanniks un Albānīts ir paziņojuši, ka turpinās piedalīties sacensībās, tāpat kā Žubērs un Amodio. Karoč Francijas komandā būs nežēlīga konkurence.

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Ламбьель и Такахаши подготовят две короткие программы
24.06.2010 18:00 | Sports.ru

Призер Олимпийских игр Стефан Ламбьель рассказал о сотрудничестве с Дайсуке Такахаши и объяснил, почему они вместе приготовят две короткие программы.

"Я представил Дайсуке на выбор две копомзиции. Ему понравились обе, в конце концов, он выбрал ту, которая отличалась от всех его предыдущих, более оригинальную. Дайсуке учится очень быстро, и, по большому счету, мы сделали короткую программу за два дня. Поэтому мы решили сделать еще и показательную программу под другую музыку", – отметил Ламбьель.

"Я пока не знаю, какую короткую программу буду использовать на соревнованиях, надеюсь, обе. Может, буду менять на каждое соревнование", – цитирует Такахаши Absolute Skating.
Avots: http://sport.rambler.ru/news/figureskat … 88880.html

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Yagutins piedalīsies ledus šovā Alise Brīnumzemē. Pirmie foto, pēc kuriem kļūst skaidrs, ka viņš būs cepurnieks

http://perm.kp.ru/upimg/5a3e8f353c90697f8fa8aa939d18ebfb3dd46ab0/1834955.jpg

http://perm.kp.ru/upimg/3dbcf1e95a9df2bc3cfa526f880f3a43063654af/330211.jpg

http://s002.radikal.ru/i198/1009/cf/383cebb496d9.jpg

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http://cs445.vkontakte.ru/u2745877/116483341/x_00098d00.jpg

http://cs445.vkontakte.ru/u2745877/116483341/x_49af1aad.jpg

http://i060.radikal.ru/1009/85/b63973a554e1.jpg

http://s003.radikal.ru/i204/1009/77/efe159fb09aa.jpg

http://s07.radikal.ru/i180/1009/07/426ecea77dcf.jpg

http://i077.radikal.ru/1009/67/e251c1121d2a.jpg

http://spb.kassir.ru/data/2010/09/07/1142253489/122_130_alisa.jpg

Plot: Alisa (Alice) falls asleep at her scool desk a dreams a wonderful dream, in which people  from her real life turn into fairy-tail characters. Her big brother who always wakes Alisa up for school becomes the White Rabbit who's always scared to be late and because of that always hurry. A school janitor that is passed  by and not noticed every day by school kids tirn into the Cheshire Cat who will show Alisa the right way. A strict math teacher becomes the evil Red Queen (Tatyana Totmyanina) in the dream and a  chemestry teacher who makes experiments interesting for kids will turn into the Mad but very romantic Hatter (Alexei Yagudin). Every schoolkid or even a little child is going to be interested to recognize familiar images as fairy-tale characters. In this story everybody's going to see their own wonderful land of dreams.
Also other professional skaters  participate in the show: ice acrobats, jugglers, aerial acrobats, members of extreme skiing championships.

And:
Elena Berezhnaya - White Queen
Maxim Marinin - Knave

Direction: Steven Cousins, Elena Berezhnaya and Vadim Savenkov.

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Viņš tik mīlīgi dīvaini izskatās tai tērpā... :D:D:D

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aha, tiešām, kā no pasakas. Kā es gribētu to bērnu šovu redzēt. ā.

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albalonga написал(а):

Kā es gribētu to bērnu šovu redzēt.

Laimīgie bērni.. :) Bet viņi jau nesapratīs, ka pašu Jagūdinu redzēs... :O :D

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Tomašs Verners dodas uz Kanādu

There’s a new kid in town. Ok – officially not until Saturday and the town is my town of Toronto. I spoke with Richmond Training Center Director and veteran coach Bob Emerson, who confirmed that Tomas Verner of the Czech Republic will become Bob’s newest student.

How did this happen? Bob said: “I understood that he was trying out several facilities around North America this summer and he popped by ours. He asked for some lessons and we worked together and then he moved on to someplace else. About three weeks ago I got a call from him asking if I would be his coach.” He says that at a different time, he probably would not have considered it. As it was, he says: “I think it is an honour to have him ask.”

Bob feels that especially with the short notice ahead of the skating season that this is going to be a challenge for both of them, but he feels they are each up to the challenge. Tomas is slated to compete at the China and Russia Grand Prix events and the first task will be to get him on a training schedule and to see how it goes for the next couple of weeks. Bob is not planning any major changes at this point and is going to allow things to unfold for a bit in the interests of time. In the works is a possible trip to choreographer Pasquale Camerlengo to tweak the programs he created for Tomas. The goal for the season at this point are to help Tomas skate consistent programs and to build up his cardio during on and off-ice training.

With the possibilities of travel how will the school manage? Bob says: “It will be non problem at all. I work with some very good people and when I am not there, the school will be in very good hands.”

What were his first impressions of the 2008 European Champion? “He is an outstanding young man. The other word I would use is intelligent and he is extremely good to deal with.” Bob says that he is impressed by his degree of commitment coming into the season. Bob says: “If I hadn’t felt that connection when we worked together in the summer, I am sure at this stage of my career, I wouldn’t have gotten involved.”

The Grand Prix events are about 5 weeks away. Both men have their work cut out for them and couldn’t be looking more forward to getting started.

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Adrian Schultheiss and Coach Evgeni Lutkov Separate

Swedish skater Adrian Schultheiss and long-time coach Evgeni Lutkov have gone their separate ways, Schultheiss tells me.

You may remember the scene from the short program at Skate America when Adrian walked around in the kiss and cry looking extremely confused without his coach or a team leader. Schultheiss says that it wasn't uncommon in the past for Lutkov to miss at least part of the off-ice warm-up, but he started to worry when Evgeni still hadn't shown up towards the end of the six-minute warm-up on the ice. He does recall in his earlier skating days that his coach would show up late to a practice session and then tell the skater that it was just a test to see if he would continue working without him. Confused about whether his coach was somewhere in the arena or just running late, Adrian made the decision to skate the short program. We later learned that Lutkov had blacked out in his hotel room and was found by security after Schultheiss told competition organizers of his absence directly after he skated. The coach woke up startled by the whole incident, and at the strong advice of Schultheiss, finally called 911 after an hour of insisting that he did not need to be examined. The doctors suggested that he be kept overnight for observation.

Lutkov was released the next day and was able to attend the free skate with Schultheiss, and he very kindly thanked the American doctors and others for their help while sitting in the kiss and cry area.

However, directly following the competition, things started to get shaky. Lutkov grew distant and told his pupil that he needed a rest from "big" figure skating for two weeks, which would be understandable given his health situation. There were no words exchanged between the two on an awkward plane ride back to Sweden, and to make matters worse, Schultheiss was informed by other officials from his skating club that Lutkov had actually gone to Finland to host a skating camp for some of the country's top skaters in the time that he was taking his "break". Schultheiss had two planned competitions coming up in a few weeks (the NRW Trophy in Germany and then his own National Championship), so obviously this was a slap in the face.

Schultheiss says that over the years, like with anyone you are around so much, there were plenty of disagreements and arguments between the two, and even with some of Lutkov's family. He knew that if he was going to continue to be happy with his skating, he needed to make a change. He now works with Maria Bergqvist and Johanna Dalstrand and says he feels very happy about the new set-up, but will unfortunately skip the NRW Trophy due to a groin injury and focus on making Nationals a success. His placements at the 2010 European and World Championships give two spots to Swedish men for this seasons competitions.

http://www.flutzingaround.com/2010/11/a … vgeni.html

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hihihi

http://i576.photobucket.com/albums/ss206/zoppity/gifs/skating/pchiddylol.gif

Patrick Chan’s comeback

He’s perfected the quad, is injury free, and has a new attitude. Next up: world domination

A furious Patrick Chan is hard to imagine. Downcast, maybe. Buffeted enough by a bad performance, or the vagaries of figure skating judging, to temporarily lose that wide grin. But the 20-year-old throwing a foot-stomping tantrum, complete with screams and curses, is a mental image about as difficult to reconcile as a fuzzy bunny with a machine gun. It simply doesn’t compute.

Still, the affable four-time Canadian figure skating champion (once as a junior, and for the past three years running, the senior men’s winner) swears it happened, out of public view, at the Vancouver Games, last Feb. 16. On the biggest stage of his career, in front of a hyped-up home crowd and an expectant nation, Chan had bombed in the short program. He bobbled the landing on his opening triple axel, stumbled during a step sequence—usually his bread-and-butter—and even received a penalty for finishing his routine after the music, a mistake he had never before made in competition. The score of 81.12 was good enough for seventh place, but a death blow to his Olympic medal hopes. So Chan smiled, waved, threw some kisses to the fans and cameras, then slipped behind the curtains and erupted. “My coaches had never seen me so mad,” he says. “I just said to myself, that’s not the way it was supposed to turn out.” Thirteen years of skating, building toward one ultimate dream, only to see it dashed in just under three minutes. You’d drop a couple of f-bombs, too.

Of course, by the time Chan came out to meet the media a few minutes later, the uncharacteristic fit of temper had faded. He was subdued, by his own admission “really lost,” and as is so often the case with Canada’s Olympians, unnecessarily apologetic. Two nights later, he returned to the ice and delivered an impassioned free skate, moving up two spots and finishing the Games in fifth—neither a disaster, nor a victory. Almost a year later, the bitterness is gone, but the disappointment lingers. “It’s like an ‘I didn’t get what I wanted for Christmas’ sort of thing,” Chan explains.

There were lots of reasons why the Toronto skater shouldn’t have been favoured to hit the podium at his first Olympics last winter. He was recovering from a suspected case of H1N1 and a serious tear of his calf muscle, and missed much of the season. Just over a month before the opening ceremonies, he split with his coach of more than two years, American Don Laws. (His choreographer Lori Nichol and spin guru Christy Krall stepped into the breach, and continue to share coaching duties.) He was 19, and facing off against the toughest field he had ever encountered. But that didn’t change his own—or Canadians’—golden expectations.

After a summer of soul searching, and several months of hard work, Chan returned to the ice this fall with an impressive victory at Skate Canada. In late November in Moscow, he came second at the ISU Grand Prix Cup of Russia. Last month in Beijing, he topped the podium at the Grand Prix Final—a tournament of champions—for his first major win in almost two years. On Jan. 22, he will begin the defence of his Canadian championship. But the season’s goal is to peak for the World Championship in Tokyo the last week of March.

Patrick Chan is healthy. He’s got a new attitude. And he’s finally mastered the quadruple jump that is the calling card of figure skating’s most exciting champions. Maybe he should get angry more often.

The first quad came in July, during a summer tune-up competition in Philadelphia, but it doesn’t count. “It was a bit more luck than skill,” says Chan. What seemed like a fluke, however, turned out to be a harbinger.

In the spring, the skater’s movement adviser, Kathy Johnson, a Juilliard dance graduate, had suggested he look to the great Mikhail Baryshnikov for jumping inspiration. Chan found a video of the Russian performing a classic solo from Don Quixote on YouTube. He was impressed with his fluidity, perfect balance, and above all, the strength that allows a premier ballet dancer to soar and spin, even without the glide and speed that aids a figure skater’s takeoff.

During an August practice in Colorado Springs, Co.—Chan’s base since the coaching change last year—with Johnson and Krall, there was a simple suggestion that he stop using his arms so much. The right-hand punch as he was entering the jump seemed a little early and too strong. Holding it back, as it turned out, forced him to use his legs more, and jump higher. “It went up perfect, and I could really feel the lightness of the jump and I just landed it,” says Chan. Years of frustration were banished in a single session as everything suddenly clicked. Soon he was ripping off quads more reliably than his triple axel (a jump that still sometimes bedevils the skater). At the Skate Canada competition in October, he missed the quadruple in his short program, but nailed it in his free skate. That’s the one that counts in his memory. Afterwards, he even joked with reporters about getting a plaque made. It was, he is certain, the start of something big.

Chan had won major competitions before without the jump, relying on his accomplished footwork, spins and high presentation scores. At the Olympics, American Evan Lysacek even won a gold with only triples, and flawless routines that played to the sport’s newish judging system, defeating Russian quad machine Evgeni Plushenko. But there remains a strong belief—among many fans, athletes and coaches—that four complete rotations in the air is what sets the men apart from the boys. (“More feathers, head-flinging and so-called step sequences done at walking speed—that’s what the system wants,” Elvis Stojko, Canada’s three-time World Champion, and a charter member of the quad-squad, fumed in Vancouver. “I’m going to watch hockey, where athletes are allowed to push the envelope. A real sport.”)

Chan, whose fifth-place Olympic finish was also a target of the Stojko broadside—given that he didn’t even attempt a quad—maintains he wasn’t phased by the criticism, but admits being part of the elite club changes one’s perspective. “The quad is so nerve-racking, so high-risk, but there’s a big payoff,” he says. “I can really see both sides of the argument now.”

For a young man who has been figure skating since his mom Karen enrolled him in lessons at Toronto’s Granite Club at age six, looking for a way to keep her eager but skinny boy off the hockey rink, the jumping breakthrough was probably just a matter of time. The bigger leap may end up being the mental one that promises to allow him to nail it consistently under pressure in front of the judges. At the Grand Prix event in Moscow in November, Chan won silver, but lost gold. Sitting in first place after the short, where he delivered a flawless quad toe, the Toronto skater buckled during his long program, falling to the ice on his opening quad, on a triple axel, and yet again on his usually reliable triple Lutz. Even after the Zamboni impression, he ended up only 3.1 points behind Tomas Verner of the Czech Republic. The long flight back home was spent kicking himself in the butt. “It really bothered me,” he says. “The week before Russia, I did four clean long programs in a row in practice. I just couldn’t grasp why I wasn’t doing it in competition.”

Chan has never been much of a believer in the head games that are now such a huge part of Olympic sport. The only words of advice and motivation he has sought throughout his career have come from his father Lewis, a Toronto lawyer, usually delivered during a quiet pre-competition walk. When Krall suggested it might be time to call in some outside help, Chan had just one name on his wish list—Brian Boitano. The U.S. skater never successfully landed a quad in competition, but he did win when it counted most, besting Canada’s Brian Orser for the gold at both the 1988 Olympics and the World Championship. The two ended up talking the day before Chan left for the Grand Prix Final in China—a single phone conversation that quickly put everything in perspective.

“As a young athlete I did so well that I didn’t even have to think about anything. Just go out and have fun,” says Chan. But as he got older, and the competition got better, the Canadian champion sometimes found himself grasping for what used to come naturally, searching for his elusive “groove.” Boitano offered a new definition of focus, advising Chan to concentrate on “being conscious through the whole program.” Think about the footwork, breathing, the jump sequence, it doesn’t really matter—the key is to always stay in the moment, choosing hyper-consciousness over unconsciousness. For Chan, that nugget—and some other advice he prefers to keep to himself—provided the same type of epiphany as the counsel to put less arm into his quad. “I had to find another way to force my technique, force my mind to do it properly, even through the times where I didn’t feel well,” he says. The plan is for him and Boitano to keep chatting on a regular basis in the buildup to the Worlds. “I still don’t believe in a shrink,” says Chan. “They haven’t been in our situation, on the ice standing in front of thousands of people. They don’t understand.”

For many fans, last season’s winter sports ended with Vancouver’s closing ceremony. The athletes, however, toiled on for months, even if few noticed. In Turin, at the World Championships that March, Chan won silver behind Daisuke Takahashi, the Olympic bronze medallist. (Lysacek and Plushenko both gave the event a pass.) The skate wasn’t great, but it was good enough, and it provided Chan with US$27,000 in prize money, some of which he spent on a flashy new Brodie mountain bike.

In his oh-so-short off-season, he travelled to Singapore with his mom, visiting relatives, and then on to Thailand. The three-week trip was the longest break from skating he had taken since he still had his baby teeth. He thought briefly about quitting the sport. Chan misses school, and having a normal life. He’s preparing to take his SATs, and would eventually like to study business at a U.S. university like Stanford or the University of Pennsylvania. Back in Colorado, he played some golf—another passion. And he biked a lot.

In early September, a few days before the opening of Skate Canada’s national training camp in Mississauga, Ont., he went off a trail and landed on some rocks. The pain was so bad that he initially though he might have broken his back, but it was just severely bruised. He took two days off, then returned to the ice and promptly nailed a quad.

Motivation was never in short supply for Chan, but now it seems to flow from somewhere deeper. “I think he’s a bit more focused,” his father Lewis says in a lawyer’s measured way. “His general approach is more disciplined. It’s probably a combo of more maturity and drive.”

The skater says a training program that has been tweaked since his calf injury to provide him with more rest and recovery time is paying dividends. He feels stronger, invigorated. This June, he and his mother are organizing a camp in Calgary with his coaches and support team, to share their recent breakthroughs in technique and off-ice workouts.

Looking back, the Olympic year already seems like a dream. The media buildup, McDonald’s commercials, people cheering him in the streets, now all pleasant memories. What’s not so fondly recalled is how he let it get the better of him. How the hype began to colour his own thoughts, and the medal glory became more of a fixation than the difficult process of getting there.

Surely that’s why he bats away questions about Sochi in 2014. He’ll only be 23, but that’s three World championships away. Ask him what he learned from Vancouver and there’s a pause. “How to overcome disappointment,” he says finally. Patrick Chan is committed to looking forward. The view from the top of the podium is always better.

http://i576.photobucket.com/albums/ss206/zoppity/gifs/skating/spfalls.gif

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Pēc šīs intervijas fani paredz šādu podiumu Pasaules čempī//

http://i52.tinypic.com/dw48js.jpg

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