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International Capsules: US champ Abbott confident big move was right one
Comments 0 | Recommend 0NEW YORK — Jeremy Abbott was a total slob when he lived at home, clothes strewn all over his bedroom back in Colorado.
"It was a disaster," the reigning U.S. figure skating champion said. "But since I've been on my own, I've been making sure to keep my apartment immaculate. It's very clean, and I'm very surprised at myself.
"I didn't think I could do that."
It's exactly the sort of self-discovery and personal responsibility Abbott sought when he left his coach of a decade and moved across the country less than a year before the Olympics. The judges aren't going to award any style points based on the cleanliness of his bedroom, but little signs like this assure him he made the right choice — and that he's on track to compete for a medal at February's Vancouver Games.
The next major test is this week's Grand Prix final in Tokyo, where Abbott is the defending champ.
Abbott won his first U.S. title in January under Tom Zakrajsek, with whom he had trained at the Colorado Springs World Arena in his home state since 1999. A few months later, he decided to switch to former world champ Yuka Sato at the Detroit Skating Club in Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
"I felt really deep down that I needed a change," Abbott said while visiting New York in August. "It was time. Now or never. This is the Olympic year, and I wanted to give myself the best opportunity. And I feel this is my best opportunity."
He felt he needed to be more independent, more in control. On and off the ice.
Abbott was 23 years old and had never lived by himself. His mother, Allison Scott, laughs as she talks about the big move.
"I love my son, but there is a time at which it's good to get out," she said.
"I'll be the first to admit it," she added. "When you have a kid living at home and they're that focused, as a parent sometimes you do too much."
Sure, her son could have gotten his own apartment in Colorado Springs. But he truly needed to be on his own.
"To make a change in a certain environment when everything's so the same — I think it's really hard," said Abbott, who turned 24 in June. "I've tried that before, tried to make the change, and you just fall back into old habits when you don't have something or somewhere or someone to keep you on that other path."
Before the move, Abbott and Zakrajsek agree, he often was looking outside himself for motivation. The coach believes Abbott could have achieved all his goals if he stayed in Colorado. But as Zakrajsek told his wife, "it's like having a child go off to college — they have to go spread their wings and become their own person."
So Abbott made the big decision, changed coaches, told Sato exactly what he thought he wanted and needed. Now when he goes to the rink each day, he thinks, "OK, I'm going to get on this ice and I'm going to work hard for me."
In Colorado, Abbott trained with Brandon Mroz and Ryan Bradley, who both placed in the top four at nationals in January, and Rachael Flatt, who was second on the women's side. He said he sometimes found himself distracted by working with so many other elite skaters.
In Detroit, he trains with reigning U.S. women's champion Alissa Czisny, so "I didn't have to give all of that up," Abbott said. "But it's just toned down."
"The whole vibe is a little more relaxed," he said. "I loved being on the ice with Ryan and Brandon and Rachael. I loved having that competition. But I kind of like being able to just focus on myself and not have to worry about what everyone else is doing every day."
He got a small apartment about five minutes from the rink and furnished it with a bunch of stuff from Ikea. Photos of family and friends and posters from events he's competed at hang from the walls. There's an enormous black and white picture of Amsterdam, which he visited on his first trip out of the U.S.
He's been trying to cook, making dishes like gnocchi from scratch or risotto.
It's also the little signs that assure his mother he made the right decision. Sometimes it's just a Facebook status update describing that day's practice that lets her know her son is happy.
Sato has watched Abbott find a nice equilibrium in his new home as he developed a tight-knit group of friends. She sees a needed consistency from him in practice — a consistency that has at times eluded him in competition.
Abbott finished a disappointing 11th at the world championships in Los Angeles in March before the coaching change. He tumbled from second to fifth after falling three times during his free skate at the NHK Trophy in Nagano, Japan, in early November. But he bounced back three weeks later to win Skate Canada and qualify for the Grand Prix final.
Sato believes Abbott now has the foundation in place to have more days like the one in Cleveland in January when he was crowned America's best.
"You may think those things don't matter, that it has nothing to do with skating and performance," she said. "I think it really does affect it. He takes responsibility for his own actions, and eventually that starts to affect in a very positive way on his skating."
Emily Sweeney added to USA Luge World Cup team
IGLS, Austria — Emily Sweeney has been promoted to USA Luge's World Cup roster, giving the 16-year-old a real chance at making the Vancouver Olympics.
Sweeney, of Suffield, Conn., will compete this weekend when the World Cup series moves to Altenberg, Germany. She now joins world champion Erin Hamlin, Julia Clukey and Megan Sweeney — her older sister — on the American roster.
Clukey won Monday's race-off to determine the World Cup team makeup for the next two events. Emily Sweeney was second, Megan Sweeney third and fourth was Kate Hansen, whose chance to make the Olympic team now likely will hinge on whether another race-off takes place following the Lillehammer World Cup in mid-December.
USA Luge plans to unveil its team for the Vancouver Games shortly after the Lillehammer race weekend.
Injured speedskater Celski plans to be at Olympics
NEW YORK — Short track speedskater J.R. Celski has no doubts he'll compete at February's Vancouver Olympics now that he's returned to the ice from a deep leg gash.
The 19-year-old crashed during the U.S. championships on Sept. 12, his right skate blade slicing into his left thigh. He skated for the first time since the accident in mid-November.
Celski is training with the U.S. women's team as he regains his conditioning. He'll rejoin the men's team once his speed improves.
Celski won five medals at this year's world championships. He already had enough points to be nominated to the Olympic team when he crashed at nationals.
After surgery, Celski was on crutches for about six weeks. With no major competitions between now and the Olympics, his next race would be in Vancouver.
2012 Figure Skating worlds to be held in Nice
LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The 2012 World Figure Skating Championships will be held in Nice, France.
The International Skating Union has scheduled the annual competition to take place in the Mediterranean resort city from March 26-April 1 that year.
It will be the seventh time France has hosted the world championships. It last staged the competition in 2000, also in Nice.
This year's worlds were in Los Angeles. They will be in Turin, Italy, next year and in Nagano, Japan, in 2011.
The ISU also said Monday that the 2012 European Figure Skating Championships will be held in Sheffield, England.
Olympics
WADA set to launch biological passport program
LONDON — After years of discussion and development, the World Anti-Doping Agency is ready to begin a global program to monitor athletes' blood profiles for evidence of cheating.
Meeting in Stockholm this week to mark its 10th anniversary, WADA is expected to ratify the biological passport system that has been under consideration since 2002.
The project involves collecting and storing athletes' blood samples and monitoring them over time for any variations that could indicate doping — without an actual positive test.
WADA has completed the protocols for a program it hopes can be adopted by federations and countries around the world. The passport system will be up for approval Wednesday by WADA's foundation board.
GlaxoSmithKline to provide Olympic lab equipment
LONDON — British drug maker GlaxoSmithKline PLC will provide anti-doping laboratory equipment to the 2012 Olympics after signing on as the London Games' latest sponsor.
The world's No. 2 drug maker will provide the equipment for King's College London to operate an independent WADA-accredited lab that will run all day every day during the games.
The college's Drug Control Center conducted more than 8,000 tests across 70 sports last year as part of UK Sport's anti-doping policy.
London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe said Monday the setup will result in "world-class facilities available for an independently run anti-doping operation."
GSK is London's 12th "Tier Three" sponsor — a status which costs companies about $15.1 million.
Running
Heart abnormalities blamed in 2 runners' deaths
DETROIT — Authorities say two men who collapsed during a half-marathon in Detroit this fall died because of heart problems.
The Wayne County medical examiner's office on Monday listed cardiac dysrhythmia as the cause of death for both 36-year-old Daniel Langdon and 26-year-old Jonathan Fenlon. That means they had an irregular or abnormal heart rate.
Langdon, of Laingsburg, Mich., and Fenlon, of Waterford, Mich., were two of three runners who died while participating in the Oct. 18 Detroit Free Press/Flagstar Bank Marathon.
Fenlon died after crossing the finish line. Langdon collapsed near the finish line of the 13.1-mile race, as did 65-year-old Rick Brown of Marietta, Ohio. An earlier autopsy found that Brown suffered from heart disease.
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