Toronto Star

The twizzle leads to ice dance fizzle

Rhythm dance mishap drops Canadians Gilles, Poirier into sixth place heading into free skate

- ROSIE DIMANNO TWITTER: @RDIMANNO

BEIJING One point up, two places down.

That’s not what Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier were hoping for in the rhythm section of the ice dance competitio­n at the Olympics.

A week earlier, in the team event — which might still find a medal winding its way to the Canadian squad, depending how the legal wrangling from a Russian positive drug test shakes out — the reigning world bronze duo racked up a score of 82.72 in the first phase of the competitio­n, what used to be known as the original dance.

They claimed to be pleased, although it’s hard to tell with this particular tandem who spent so many years skating in the long shadow cast by Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, merely gold-silver-gold in ice dance at the last three Winter Games.

But it was certainly useful to have a competitiv­e skate under their belts, get their energetic program before the judges, sift through the entrails of their detailed scoring, what needed work, what had been rewarded.

On Saturday night, back in their matching tangerine onesies, the Canadian national champions weren’t quite so smiley about their performanc­e, which drew a score of 83.52 yet knocked them down into sixth. And it’s a long way up to the podium from sixth, for what had been considered Canada’s best shot at figure skating laurels.

“We had a small bobble on the twizzle,” Poirier said.

Ice dance is technicall­y complex, much of which isn’t understood by a casual fan base that sees no jumps and no throws and no spectacula­r lifts. But twizzles … everybody gets twizzles, the most bedazzling trick in the ice dance repertoire. The slightest deficiency in execution, or too much space between the skaters, or lack of synchronic­ity, and the judges will make you pay for it.

Gilles admitted that misfit twizzle would be on her mind when she got back to the athletes village, lying in bed.

“I’ll replay it for sure. But you know, it’s a new day on Monday (when the free dance is held) and I’m excited to kind of have a fresh slate.”

This slate was performed to an Elton John medley, with Gilles reverting to the long pants version of her costume that she had worn at the Canadian championsh­ips in Ottawa last month. Seriously, these details matter, at least in the minds of the skaters.

“It just felt like what the program needed today. It just felt like coming home and having something I’m used to and I enjoy performing in.”

Gilles and Poirier, both 30, like to have a bit of fun with their programs and their presentati­on. This offering, however, didn’t quite match the standard of what the other top teams were showing off, though both tried to find the silk (or bejeweled) lining.

“Despite the (bobble), we did have an improvemen­t in the score compared to the team event,” Poirier pointed out.

Um, just over one point.

“We felt after the team event that the program was a little bit contained in energy,” Poirier said. “We really wanted to do it with more abandon today. And I think we did accomplish that. But it definitely wasn’t a perfect performanc­e for us.”

To no one’s surprise, the leaders coming out of the rhythm dance segment are four-time world champions Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France, who were silver behind Virtue and Moir in Pyeongchan­g, though they actually won the free skate portion and set a world record. It was a very close thing for the medal-studded Canadians.

Some observers still maintain the French would have taken gold, scored just a teensy bit higher, if not for the distractio­n of Papadakis’s breast popping out of her costume in a wardrobe malfunctio­n midperform­ance. She wore a high necked outfit on Saturday evening.

Since this was the first we’ve seen of figure skaters since the team event — more specifical­ly, since it was learned that 15-year-old Russian sensation Kamila Valieva had tested positive for a banned substance, a drug most commonly prescribed for angina in older people, the matter to be heard at an expedited hearing Monday at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport — dancers were buttonhole­d about the controvers­y in the mixed zone. They wouldn’t bite.

“It’s not something that we’re really thinking about right now,” Gilles said. “We know that this stuff takes a really long time. I think at the end of the day, we have to focus on our individual event, enjoy our sport, enjoy what we’re going to do, and can’t really look at that stuff.”

Still, if the gold Russia copped last Monday is taken away — actually, the medals have never been distribute­d, the formal ceremony cancelled while the issue hangs fire — the U.S. would move into first, Japan into second and Canada into third.

“I don’t think we’ve thought about that too much,” Poirier. “It’s one of those things that’s really out of our hands … We don’t know when there will be news or if there will be news. So it’s kind of futile to give mental energy to it right now.”

Canada has three ice dance couples competing in Beijing. Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Nikolaj Soerensen are in eighth place, with a score of 78.54; Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha are 13th, with a score of 72.59.

 ?? ANNE-CHRISTINE P O U J O U L AT AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Canada’s Paul Poirier and Piper Gilles drew a score of 83.52 in the rhythm dance event on Saturday.
ANNE-CHRISTINE P O U J O U L AT AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Canada’s Paul Poirier and Piper Gilles drew a score of 83.52 in the rhythm dance event on Saturday.
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