Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Зимние Олимпийские игры 2010 в Ванкувере || Winter Olympic games 2010 in Vancouver

Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Scarlett » 10 Feb 2010, 21:52

Scarlett wrote:Я буду стараться сделать все, что в моих силах. Я не хочу говорить, как, например, говорил в 2002 году, что я еду, что выиграю обязательно, что разорву [всех].
Scarlett wrote: :co_ol:
Е. П: Вы знаете, моя мама говорит: "Выиграл соревнование – забудь и готовься к следующим". На чемпионате Европы я выиграл, об этом надо попытаться забыть и готовиться к совершенно иным соревнованиям. Олимпийские игры – это самые главные соревнования четырехлетия для всех спортсменов. Если ты становишься олимпийским чемпионом – это самый главный титул. Если ты становишься двукратным олимпийским чемпионом – это вообще здорово.
Scarlett wrote: :co_ol:
Е. П: Может быть, и смогу откататься еще и в 31 год. Это безумно сложно, но попытаться можно. Смотря, какие будут предложения, какие будут условия. Все зависит от тренера, от хореографа, от всей моей команды. Я же не один готовлюсь. Есть целый коллектив.
:plush40:
такое серьезное и обдуманное интервью Жени
Вера wrote:- А.М.: Замечательный проект, однако должен быть разумный баланс в освещении телевидением по-настоящему спортивных состязаний и шоу. А то получается, что у нас сейчас самый известный одиночник-фигурист - Миша Галустян. :plush42: Правильно отметил Путин: шоу много - медалей мало.
. :co_ol:
Вера wrote:- А.М.: Задача не в том, чтобы удивлять фирменным каскадом или «бубликом» Плющенко. На Олимпиаду мы отправляемся с чувством огромной ответственности перед собой, нашими родными, федерацией, городом, страной. Постараемся достойно выполнить свой долг.

Давление на Женю и в самом деле огромнейшее.
Вера wrote:- А.М.: Еще в старину говорили: «Нечего хвалиться, на рать идучи». Хочу ошибиться, но в Канаде фантастических результатов по целому ряду объективных причин ожидать, очевидно, нельзя.

Удачи вам, золотые наши :plush47:
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Женя:" Очень хочется добра от людей, просто нереально хочется..."
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Scarlett » 10 Feb 2010, 21:59

Вера wrote:Еще большое интервью Мишина

Это видать тоже, только полнее. Как там он по Тарасовой утонченно прошелся :-) И про дорожки упомянул, точно что то исправили :plush45:
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Вера » 10 Feb 2010, 21:59

За право быть знаменосцем олимпийской сборной борются Евгений Плющенко и Алексей Морозов — Репортаж
Видео
http://www.5-tv.ru/news/26385/

Алексей Мишин, заслуженный тренер России: «Этот спортсмен должен отличаться тремя качествами. Во-первых, он должен быть выдающимся атлетом. Во-вторых, он должен быть крупным, мощным, олицетворяющим лозунг олимпизма «быстрее, выше, сильнее». И это должен быть атлет, которого любят не только в команде, которого любит вся страна».

Вообще-то наших олимпийцев любит вся страна – каждого в отдельности и всех разом. Но выбирать самого любимого все равно придется. Сделают это, правда, не болельщики, а совет капитанов команд. Главное условие, чтобы у знаменосца старт на олимпиаде был как можно позже праздничного открытия. Кстати, и у Плющенко, и у Морозова времени после торжества будет предостаточно.

Евгений Плющенко, трехкратный олимпийский чемпион: «Для меня это не самое главное. Для меня главное – доказать своей победой, своим катанием. А бороться и воевать за то, кто будет знаменосцем, – не знаю».
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Scarlett » 10 Feb 2010, 22:20

Ой я не могу над нашей прессой :-) Мишин дает интервью и они его делят между собой, кто какой кусок напечатает. А мы ходи и собирай в кучу :sh_ок:
Алексей Мишин: перед Олимпиадой сделали так, чтобы у Плющенко был "дубово" третий уровень дорожек

Завтра, 11 февраля, главная надежда сборной России по фигурному катанию на Играх в Ванкувере, олимпийский чемпион-2006 Евгений Плющенко вылетает из Санкт-Петербурга в Канаду. Его личный тренер, легендарный Алексей Мишин прокомментировал Агентству спортивной информации "Весь спорт" подготовку своего фигуриста после чемпионата Европы в Таллине - правда, чаще всего при ответах используя конструкцию "ничего не скажу".

"За прошедшие две недели после Таллина мы, прежде всего, подчищали те огрехи, которые на чемпионате Европы были заметны всем, - сказал Алексей Мишин. - Кроме этого, мы также подчищали те элементы, которые показались спортивной общественности спорными. Я имею в виду некоторые дорожки шагов третьего уровня. Собственное, и старые дорожки этому уровню соответствовали. Мы и подумали: хорошо, если этот третий уровень кажется вам не совсем "третьим", мы сделаем так, чтобы это был дубово третий уровень. Теперь никто при всем желании не сможет к ним придраться". :plush40: :co_ol:

"В целом же, мы просто готовили тело и душу Жени к выступлению, - добавил Алексей Мишин. - Именно так: тело и душу. Детализировать не буду. Никаких серьезных проблем со здоровьем, о которых бы стоило говорить, нет. Два четверных в произвольной программе? А вот это я тем более не собираюсь комментировать, даже не просите! И, думаю, что буду прав. Это наши тактические задумки, о них говорить сейчас, согласитесь, нелогично. Мы с Женей прилетаем в Ванкувер 11 февраля, а короткая программа пройдет 16-го. Жизнь покажет, мало дней на адаптацию к Северной Америке или нет. Очевидно, что и в Ванкувере тренировки будут очень напряженными. Больше ничего не скажу".
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Женя:" Очень хочется добра от людей, просто нереально хочется..."
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Antolla » 11 Feb 2010, 00:09

Вера wrote:За право быть знаменосцем олимпийской сборной борются Евгений Плющенко и Алексей Морозов — Репортаж
Видео
http://www.5-tv.ru/news/26385/

Евгений Плющенко, трехкратный олимпийский чемпион
[/quote] :du_ma_et:
Конечно неплохо было бы :mi_ga_et: , но хоть бы потрудились уточнить :plush43:
"Когда на свете появляется истинный гений, то узнать его можно хотя бы потому, что все тупоголовые соединяются в борьбе против него".
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby Antolla » 11 Feb 2010, 00:14

Scarlett wrote:Алексей Мишин: перед Олимпиадой сделали так, чтобы у Плющенко был "дубово" третий уровень дорожек


Удачи!!! Дай вам Бог!!! :plush47: :plush47: :plush47: :plush47: :plush47: :plush47:
"Когда на свете появляется истинный гений, то узнать его можно хотя бы потому, что все тупоголовые соединяются в борьбе против него".
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby masha » 11 Feb 2010, 00:49

Scarlett wrote: Алексей Мишин: "В целом же, мы просто готовили тело и душу Жени к выступлению, - добавил Алексей Мишин. - Именно так: тело и душу.

А вот это очень правильно! Какие же ВЫ молодцы! Пусть у ВАС всё получится!
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby cekoni » 11 Feb 2010, 07:47

www.denverpost.com/sports/ci_14361779
By John Henderson, The Denver Post 02/09/2010

Henderson: Check out these must-see Olympic sights

I'm leaving for Vancouver this morning, and it feels odd going to the Winter Olympics to escape the snow.

While the IOC and VANOC and Shaun White fret over weather more suitable for ducks than snowboarders, I can't wait to see what the largest, warmest Winter Olympics city has to offer.

And packed with my passport, U.S. Figure Skating media book and halfpipe translation guide, I have my Vancouver Olympics bucket list:

• Lie, cheat and steal to get into Friday's opening ceremony. For the first time, it will be indoors. For the first time, I won't later have to thaw my feet in the Olympic torch.....

• Go to the Russia House. The Casa d'Italia has nice wine, USA House has nice contacts, but the Russia House has nice everything. In Turin, it was the party capital of the Olympics. Russia's headquarters is proof that the old bear has cheered up.

Have a shot of vodka with Evgeni Plushenko. I had dinner with the defending figure skating gold medalist in Russia last year. There are few greater guys I've met in sports and few who enjoy a good time more...

:-)

--------------------------------------------

www.globalpost.com/dispatch/sports/...shenko?page=0,0
By Mark Starr - GlobalPost, February 9, 2010

Russian figure skater makes comeback for country
Evgeni Plushenko rises from retirement to maintain Russia's reputation at the top of men's skating.


Image

BOSTON — During the second half of the 20th century, figure skating had an unambiguous power divide. America revered the men’s and ladies’ events and produced a string of Olympic kings and queens, while the Soviet Union — honoring the collective over the individual — put a primacy on pairs and ice dancing and had a stranglehold on those gold medals.

But as the Soviet Union and its sports empire crumpled, some extraordinary skating talent began to eschew partnership ties and drift into those less politically correct singles events. The Soviet Union had not won a single gold medal in Olympic ladies' or men’s until, in the 1990s, Viktor Petrenko, Alexei Urmanov and Ilia Kulik all won Olympic men’s golds in succession.

Those triumphs launched what was the golden era in figure skating for Russian men. Two skaters who trained together in St. Petersburg as teens, Alexei Yagudin and Evgeni Plushenko, would emerge as surpassing talents to dominate the sport for almost a decade. Between them they won seven consecutive world titles and two Olympic crowns.

Yagudin and Plushenko were not comrades in skates, nor friendly rivals off the ice. The tension played out in contrasting styles. On the ice, they were the proverbial fire and ice. Yagudin, older by a couple years, was the Russian man of action, given to macho posturing. His performances were passionate, replete with big gestures, broad emotions and powerful strides and jumps. Yagudin’s aesthetics leaned to the populist; he skated to themes from movies — “Lawrence of Arabia,” “Gladiator” and “The Man In the Iron Mask” — that cast him in grand, heroic roles.

Plushenko, pale-complected with a helmet of long, thin, wheat-colored hair, didn’t look like he’d ever stepped outside the rink let alone battled the forces of evil. He was arty — balletic and, at times whimsical — and often appeared emotionally distant. He had a taste for the abstruse, almost as if he were French. Still, his lines were unparalleled, at least outside the Bolshoi, and his physical power always came as a surprise. His biggest jumps, including quads, appeared effortless; not a single hair slid out of place as he floated above the ice.

After Yagudin, at 18, won the first of his three successive world championships, he left Russia to train in the United States. And though Yagudin still trained with a Russian coach, there was some contention about whose skating was more authentically Russian and who truly reflected their nation’s soul.

In 2001, the year before the Salt Lake City Olympics, 18-year-old Plushenko wrested the world title away from Yagudin, who appeared to be in less than tip-top condition. As a result, Plushenko arrived in Salt Lake City as the favorite. The judges, at least those from the old Eastern bloc nations, seemed to prefer his refined, classical stylings to Yagudin’s manly struttings.

Competing as the Olympic favorite is not necessarily an enviable position in figure skating. No reigning men’s world champion has won the Olympic gold since Scott Hamilton back in 1984. In the first moments of his short program, Plushenko botched his ambitious quad-triple combination and, at night’s end, found himself in an unfamiliar place — fourth.

Fourth place was not necessarily fatal — a week later Sarah Hughes would rise from there in a stunning upset to win the ladies gold — but it required a decidedly sub-par effort by the leader. And Yagudin was not cooperating. He pulled off the rare feat of delivering his greatest performance ever on the biggest stage. In one spellbinding step sequence, he strode the length of the ice — thin Prince Andrew’s made charge at Austerlitz in “War and Peace” — to lift the audience to its feet. His scores were the highest ever awarded in a men’s or ladies' competition for an Olympic free skate.

Plushenko skated well, but had to settle for silver. With his legacy secure, Yagudin retired, leaving Plushenko with no real competition. Still, he schooled himself on that 2002 Olympic loss and made artistic changes that reflected the lessons. His performances became more accessible — Plushenko seemed less aloof on the ice — and the themes of his skating routines no longer felt like an academic test. At the 2006 Olympics in Turin, Italy, he performed his free skate to music from “The Godfather,” leaving little to interpretation. (Hungarian composer Edvin Marton adapted the score especially for Plushenko’s performance.)

The artistic touches were lovely, but just frosting on the cake. With a new scoring system in place that rewarded technical virtuosity, no skater could compete with his array of jumps, spins and steps and Plushenko breezed to the gold medal.

With all those big leaps having taken a toll on his body, particularly his knees, Plushenko announced his retirement and skated off into the Russian sunset. But only a year later, he watched uneasily as the Russian team was completely shut out of the medals at the world championships. Concerned, he said, that a glorious skating tradition was being squandered, Plushenko set his sights on a 2010 Olympics comeback, aiming to become the first man since Dick Button in 1952 to successfully defend his Olympic figure-skating title.

For two more years, though, Plushenko only performed in exhibitions and it wasn’t until this season that he returned to the rigors of competition. At the European championships last month in Estonia, the 27-year-old looked like the long sabbatical had served him well. The Russian star set a men’s scoring record in the short program and, with an opening quad-triple combination in his free skate, assured the gold medal.

The flawless quadruple jump sent a clear message to his competition. In the post-Plushenko era, there has been no dominant male skater; there have been four different world champions in the past four years. With little room for error, top skaters began dialing back on risky jumps in hopes that a clean program would trump a flawed, ambitious one. The last two titlists, including America’s Evan Lysacek in 2009, won gold medals without attempting a quad — something Plushenko views as a regrettable and “incomprehensible” regression in the sport.

It seemed a clever psychological gambit to boost the pressure on the other hopefuls. Still, it is less likely to be the ambitions of his rivals than his own ability to summon that quad once again that will ultimately determine his Olympic fate. With a sixth European title now behind him, Plushenko envisions Vancouver shaping up rather well. As he assured fans in a Russian TV interview posted on his website, “Everything is going according to plan.”

-----------------------------------------------------

http://www.nbcolympics.com/news-feature ... e=rss&cid=
Feb 10, 11:45a ET | Updated: Feb 10, 11:52a ET

Plushenko faces biggest challenge in Vancouver

VANCOUVER (AFP) -- Comeback king Yevgeny Plushenko faces his biggest challenge as he bids to prove he still has what it takes against younger rivals on the ice in Vancouver next week.

The reigning men's figure skating champion, 27, has been lured out of retirement by the dream of a second Olympic title.

But the challengers will be lining up with at least seven men capable of taking the title in the Pacific Coliseum.

"Everyone is so strong, they are almost the same," admitted Plushenko, after claiming his sixth European title in Tallinn last month.

Four years ago Plushenko blew away the opposition to claim his first Olympic gold after silver in 2002.

The three-time world champion then retired because of knee problems.

But the lure of a second gold proved too much and he sealed his return in Tallinn after his leading rivals Stephane Lambiel and Brian Joubert both failed to give solid performances.

The Russian finished a massive 16.85 points ahead of former two-time world champion Lambiel with Joubert third.

But the skater from St Petersburg believes he can keep the title in Russian hands for the fifth consecutive Games, as his country look to lay the groundwork for the Sochi Games in four years time.

"I feel much better today, that is the difference," said Plushenko of the difference between four years ago.

"My wife insisted I come back. It's such a great feeling that maybe I was missing that."

But it remains to be seen how he can perform against the best including world champion Evan Lysacek and fellow American Jeremy Abbott, the reigning U.S. champion.

Lambiel, also returning from injury, wants to be the first Swiss Olympic figure skating champion, and turn his silver from Turin into gold.

Japan's Daisuke Takahashi and Nobunari Oda, Canada's Patrick Chan, Czech Tomas Verner and former world champion Joubert are also capable of a shot at the top of the podium.

Joubert warned that he was ready to "eat his rivals" after his disappointing third in the Europeans.

"I need to take knocks to put myself under pressure and react," said Joubert. "I've found my fighting spirit again."

Both Oda and Takahashi would love nothing more than to become the first Japanese man to claim an Olympic figure skating medal.

Oda has shown his form with two Grand Prix wins in Paris and China but finished second at the nationals behind Takahashi who returned after knee surgery which forced the 2007 world silver medalist to miss the 2008-2009 season.

World runner-up Chan, 19, returning following a calf injury, will also be competing in his first Olympics with the dream of a gold for the hosts, but without a quadruple jump his chances are reduced.

"The last two world championships were won without doing a quad. That is just not possible," said Plushenko. "I will be trying to do two quads."

The men's competition gets underway on February 16 with the short program, followed two days later by the free skating final.
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby cekoni » 11 Feb 2010, 07:49

www.nytimes.com/2010/02/11/sports/olympics/11plushenko.html
By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY, Published: February 10, 2010

Plushenko, the Quad King , Is Back for More

TALLINN, Estonia — Yet another gold medal was in his possession, and with a sly smile, Yevgeny Plushenko extended his right arm and let his hand tremble.

The hand represented his rivals at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

“I’m going to take any result, but I think I did something already for figure skating, to come back and skate not bad and win,” he said after winning the European figure skating championship last month. “I know the other athletes, they understand right now they need something, and they start to shake right now, to shake a little bit.”

After retiring from elite competition in 2006, Plushenko restricted his skating to television programs, his exhibition tour and the 2008 Eurovision song contest, which he helped his friend Dima Bilan win for Russia.

Plushenko said that during those three years, he did not once attempt a quadruple jump, the element that had made him his sport’s dominant figure. But when Plushenko took to the ice here at the European championships, it was as if he had never been away as he opened with a clean quadruple toe loop-triple toe combination in the short program and in the free program.

The quad was back in earnest, and so was Plushenko, just in time to try to defend the Olympic title he won in Turin, Italy, in 2006.

“I respected him before, but I respect him even more now,” said Robin Wagner, the American coach who helped Sarah Hughes win the women’s Olympic title in 2002. “I don’t think people realize how difficult it is to come back at that level. It was already hard enough before the rule changes.”

For singles skaters, there are ample reminders, both distant and recent, of the challenge: from the men’s stars Brian Boitano, Kurt Browning and Viktor Petrenko, who all failed to win an Olympic medal in 1994, to Sasha Cohen, who failed to qualify for the United States Olympic team this year.

Even after multiple knee operations, Plushenko, 27, believes he is still in his physical prime, although he did not feel that way when he resumed serious training in June with his longtime coach, Aleksei Mishin, in St. Petersburg, Russia.

For the first three months, Plushenko said, it was unbelievable.

“It was too hard,” he said. “Wake up in the morning at 7, going to first practice, then off ice, then gym, then two hours’ break and then again practice on the ice and then again off ice, because I needed to lose 10 kilos.” (Ten kilograms is about 22 pounds.)

“My muscles felt like stones all the time, because everything was in pain,” he said. “When I wake up in the morning, I needed 30 minutes to be able to walk.”

He is trim and fit now, but there have been setbacks. He said he had twice had to have fluid drained from a cyst near his right Achilles’ tendon. He said he also had had painkilling injections in his left knee and planned to have minor meniscus surgery after the season. After practicing and landing some unprecedented jumps in training last year — including a quadruple toe-quadruple toe combination — he has scaled back his jumping in training.

“I had problems, so now I do maximum three quadruples in practice,” he said. “Land or not land, no more.”

But he says he is energized and content, and his wife of six months, Yana Rudkovskaya, agrees. “I understood that he really missed the life of a competitor,” Rudkovskaya said through an interpreter. “When he started competing again, there was a fire in his life. He is much happier.”

Plushenko’s first marriage, to Maria Ermak, ended in divorce after less than three years in 2008. He and Ermak have a 3-year-old son together. Plushenko met Rudkovskaya, a 35-year-old fashion entrepreneur and mother of two sons, through the music business. Rudkovskaya runs a chain of beauty salons in Russia, but she is also the producer for Bilan, one of the most popular singers in Russia.

Rudkovskaya, who was in Tallinn to watch Plushenko, was one of the forces behind his comeback.

“My wife brought me back to this sport,” Plushenko said. “She told me, ‘Yevgeny, before we were married, I know you have all titles and were Olympic champion and a silver medalist in the Olympics, but you know, now you can be two times Olympic champion.’

“And I was like: ‘Yana! Come on! It’s not possible, because I didn’t skate for three and a half years, and I had a lot of surgeries, and I’m 27 years old.’ ”

Plushenko made it clear that his comeback was not just for his new bride.

After watching Jeffrey Buttle and Evan Lysacek win the last two world championships without completing a quad, Plushenko was aware there was an opportunity, as well as a financial opportunity.

But his comeback was also about returning to what he does best after several years of driving fast cars and testing alternate professions, which included becoming a member of St. Petersburg’s parliament.

“I’m in the government, still in the government actually, but it’s something that’s not mine, you know?” he said. “I need some more adrenaline, need this great atmosphere like we have in competition. You come to the ice and you are alone, and everybody is watching you, and you need to perform. It’s hard, but it’s great.”

And to hear Plushenko tell it, anything beats politics.

“Dirty, dirty thing,” he said. “Show business is dirty, but politics is unbelievable. You can talk like this with the people, and they are going to turn and say behind your back: ‘Bam. Bam. Bam.’ Not good things. I saw this, and, of course, I hated it. We have in figure skating this situation, too, but in politics, it’s — wow.”

That last word also applied to his poised performance in Tallinn.

“I think in some areas of skating, he’s even better than in Turin,” said Mishin, Plushenko’s coach. “In Turin, he was more a boy. Now he’s more a man.”

Plushenko underscored his jumping prowess in the skate-and-giggle exhibition program here by completing two triple axels, a jump that the silver medalist, Stéphane Lambiel of Switzerland, could not do in the regular competition.

Some analysts consider Plushenko a solid favorite for a gold medal in a deep men’s field that includes Lysacek, the reigning world champion; Daisuke Takahashi of Japan; and Patrick Chan of Canada. Plushenko has not done two quads in a program yet, but he insists that is part of his plan for Vancouver.

“I thought that Plushenko was strong, really strong, right here,” said the former French skating star Philippe Candeloro, pointing to his head.

But there is an alternative view to his gold medal prospects, one that says Plushenko’s artistic limitations could trip him up along with his relative weaknesses in some of the skills that are observed and scored more thoroughly in the contemporary scoring system.

Lambiel, despite a free program with two major errors, received higher scores for program components than Plushenko, who still seems hardwired to get manic when the time comes to get artistic, gesticulating as if less were definitely not more.

“There are better skaters than him, and they can have choreography that is better than him,” said the young Czech skater Michal Brezina, who finished fourth in Tallinn.

“But when he’s on the ice and he does every jump like this,” Brezina said, snapping his fingers metronomically, “then what can you say? Nobody can beat him, because if he’s doing two quads, one with the combination with the triple and then two triple axels, he has more points than anybody.”
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Re: Женя накануне Олимпиады|| Plushy before Olympics

Postby cekoni » 11 Feb 2010, 09:18

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 03263.html
Wednesday, February 10, 2010

SPOTLIGHT ON men's long program

Russia's Plushenko looks to continue dominance in Olympic men's figure skating


After winning the Olympic title in 2006, Russian figure skating great Evgeni Plushenko retired to pursue other opportunities, but he grew increasingly concerned about Russia's fading place in the world of figure skating. After years of hinting that he might return, he rejoined his longtime coach Alexei Mishin last March and returned to competition last fall.

He has been nothing but dominant since. Plushenko, 27, won his first Grand Prix event in Germany :lol: then ran away with the Russian championships. He set a world record with his short program score at the European championships last month before easily securing that gold.

Now, he wants to do what no man has done since Dick Button in 1948 and 1952: win back-to-back Olympic gold medals. Plushenko has fit perfectly in what had been a long but diminishing tradition of strong Russian skaters, combining Kirov-like artistry with incredible athleticism. While U.S. men continue to struggle to produce quadruple jumps at big events, quads have long been in Plushenko's arsenal.

This U.S. team is surely the strongest in decades, with reigning world champion Evan Lysacek, 2008 world bronze medal winner Johnny Weir and 2009 International Skating Union Grand Prix champion Jeremy Abbott. None, however, has displayed the consistent excellence of Plushenko, who for years fought for the upper hand in his own nation with retired Russian star Alexei Yagudin. Plushenko has won three world titles and four Grand Prix finals.

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http://www.morethanthegames.co.uk/other ... r-olympics
Wednesday 10th February 2010 By Holly Hamilton, Sportsbeat

The top 25 international stars of the Winter Olympics

Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver WHILE Rudman and co are sure to do Blighty proud in the next few weeks, it's the competitors from colder climes likely to be stacking up the medals at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver....

Read on for a comprehensive guide on who's going to be topping the podiums in Canada

1. Evgeni Plushenko - Men's Figure Skating - Russia plush48

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PERFECT PLUSHENKO: Russia's Evgeni Plushenko made his return to figure skating in 2009 and has continued where he left off (Getty Images)

Defending champion Evgeni Plushenko has recaptured his past form just in time for Vancouver following his return to action at the end of 2009 after nearly four years away from the rink.

The 27-year-old had not competed internationally since capturing gold at the Turin Games in 2006 but made a winning comeback at the Rostelecom Cup in October.

The Russian, who also won silver on his Olympic debut at the Salt Lake City Games in 2002, executed a near-perfect short programme and followed it up with more of the same in the free programme finishing streaks ahead of the field with 240.65 points.

Plushenko also has three world titles, six European crowns - including his sixth in Tallinn last month - and four Grand Prix Final titles to his name.

And at the tender age of 16, Plushenko was the youngest male skater to ever receive a perfect score of 6.0.

It's safe to say his rivals will not have been happy to see him glide so easily back to his winning ways. :hi_hi_hi:
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