I’ve started a thread over here for a more general discussion of the competition.
And, BTW, I’m in the “Michelle Kwan is a class act” camp.
I’ve started a thread over here for a more general discussion of the competition.
And, BTW, I’m in the “Michelle Kwan is a class act” camp.
Sorry – can you say “hall of mirrors”? Try this one: linky.
No, she didn’t “earn” anything, see earlier posts, she did not compete in most of the relevant qualifying competitions this year, and only finished fourth in the one she finished. Whatever she accomplished in the past does not count. But apparently it did.
Apples and oranges. Kerrigan was a top contender and was head and shoulders above Kwan at the time. Considering the extraordinary circumstances, this was what a medical bye was intended for. Regardless, should not be relevant to this year’s team.
Hughes was MADE an alternate, she actually skated her way onto the team. Kwan did not.
Tired. Did Kwan out skate Kerrigan back then? No. Kerrigan would have gotten the slot np, had it not been for the attack. Kwan was not up to her level at the time. Again, apples and oranges.
Don’t involve Hughes in this, she did the best she could and succeeded, only to have her spot stolen by Kwan’s bullying.
Bullshit. Only one skater skates her way onto the Olympic team. That was stated in the article you linked to: “At last month’s U.S. championships, only winner Sasha Cohen was guaranteed one of the three U.S. spots in Olympic women’s singles.”
Kwan realized she wan’t ready and pulled out. She did the right thing. Good on her.
Ultimately, Michelle Kwan did exactly the right thing, which is a lot more than I can say for some superstar athletes. I’ll concede, knowing what I know now, that there’s a good chance she would’ve stunk up the joint if she competed, but I don’t criticize what don’t happen.
Even if she “bullied” her way onto the team, no one was under any obligation to give in to it. And remember, nearly everything about this sport is subjective. If a panel says they thought she looked good, well, short of her doing a faceplant on the ice, I really don’t see an arguable point here.
Kwan retires with a tiny disappointment but avoids a repeat of Tonya Harding’s catastrophic nightmare collapse, a huge net positive. Hughes gets her rightful spot. No twisted arms, no irritating drama, no last-second shuffles. For crying out loud, everything that could go right here did! Why can’t we be happy? 