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The Hungarian federation asked people to watch the coming test skates online, if possible, but spectators will be allowed to attend the event as well. They will sit on the first floor, separated from any skaters, coaches or media staff, and they will need to wear masks and keep 1.5 m distance. 

There won't be many people, mostly family members I think. 

 

Will other small feds also have test skates? I haven't really found anything so far.

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1 hour ago, yuzuangel said:

:cry:

There’s more here - and it’s a pretty harrowing read. 
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/olympics/the-short-life-and-heartbreaking-death-of-australian-winter-olympian-katia-alexandrovskaya/news-story/96d21562c248112873dd80f9eb3dc8e8
I copied the article and will place it under a spoiler

Spoiler

The short life and heartbreaking death of Australian Winter Olympian Katia Alexandrovskaya

Jessica Halloran and Julian Linden, The Daily Telegraph

August 22, 2020 3:43am

 

Katia Alexandrovskaya barely ­uttered a word to Harley Windsor on the day they met at an ice-rink in Moscow. She didn’t speak English and he didn’t speak Russian, but that wasn’t the reason. Her head was still aching from having drunk herself into a blackout with vodka the day before, a day she would later confide to a friend was the worst of her life. The vodka was meant to be a gift for her figure-skating coach, but, as Alexandrovskaya would explain years later, grief-stricken, she drank most of it to mark the first anniversary of her father’s death .

 

She was 15, and at the start of what should have been an adventure: she was about to move, without her mother, to Australia to become an Olympic athlete, the partner of the first Indigenous Australian winter Olympian. She was fast-tracked for citizenship under a program designed to help Australia recruit sportspeople to boost the nation’s medal hopes.

Last month, Alexandrovskaya was found dead on a Moscow pavement outside the apartment building where she lived with her mother on the sixth floor. She was 20. The note she left inside the flat read simply: “I love.”

Family, friends and colleagues interviewed for this joint investigation by The Australian and The Saturday and Sunday Telegraphs say her death has exposed serious weaknesses of accountability, funding and welfare in sport, ­including the management of concussion in the harshest and most decorative of pursuits: figure ­skating.

EVERYONE COULD HAVE DONE MORE

HER short life raises questions over the practice of trading athletes — often in their early teens — between countries; a system World Athletics boss Sebastian Coe says is “human trafficking”. Her death has sparked international blame over who had responsibility for her welfare, and that of other young athletes who move countries under “transfer of allegiance” ­protocols.

Friends also reveal concerns about Alexandrovskaya’s life, ­including a suggestion she was sometimes bruised by criticism from her sharp-tongued former coach, Russian-born Sydneysider Andrei Pachin. A friend says Alexandrovskaya told her she sometimes avoided Pachin when his old-school, hard style of coaching became too much.

Skating insiders describe ­Pachin and his wife Galina as ­classic Russian coaches: tough and blunt, but passionate about helping skaters succeed.

 

After a sudden funding cut from the Olympic Winter Institute last year, Alexandrovskaya barely had a cent to feed herself, was sleeping on couches, unable to afford rent in Sydney, and developing a serious drinking problem. More than a month after she perished, there has still not been an official investigation into her death.

Alexandrovskaya’s skating mentor, Belinda Noonan, a former Australian figure-skating cham­pion who describes herself as the young woman’s “Australian mum”, says: “We must do better for our young people. We have to care about the people more than we care about the result.”

Australian skating champion Greg Merriman, another mentor and friend who raised $12,500 for Alexandrovskaya’s funeral, says: “Everybody could have done more. It starts at the top.”

He says team officials “should have given more of a shit about the person than what they were trying to get out of her”.

“It’s the culture of silence in sport,” he says. “People sit silently, because if you do something you might stop that person from achieving something.”

IN early 2017 Alexandrovskaya suffered the first of what appeared to be a seizure. It was a Monday afternoon at the Macquarie Centre mall in northern Sydney. A stranger who saw her faint called an ambulance but Alexandrovskaya brushed away the paramedics, saying she was OK.

Galina was not with Alexandrovskaya at the time. She says she was concerned but accepted Alexandrovskaya’s reassurances. Also in early 2017, she crashed to the ice during training and was concussed, not for the first time, but Alexandrovskaya resisted any fuss. That, say friends and family, was the pattern: a fall, literal or figurative, a reassurance ­Alexandrovskaya was OK, and no official action taken.

Alexandrovskaya’s second ­apparent seizure, in 2017, occurred at a shopping centre in Sydney’s northwestern suburb of Castle Hill, after a long day of training.

“My head is spinning,” Alexandrovskaya said softly to Galina. She blacked out and fell into Galina’s arms.

“She had another seizure. That time I said, look we have to go to hospital,” Galina said. The doctors suspected it was dehydration and low potassium. Galina worried it was more than that. Alexandrovskaya had been found sleepwalking in their home. Something wasn’t right.

It was Galina who called Alexandrovskaya’s mother in Russia and said her daughter needed a “good check up”. “There is something wrong with her, what if she collapses on the ice?”

 

THE BEST AND WORST DAYS OF HER LIFE

ICE had been Alexandrovskaya’s playground since she was three years old. A natural athlete, her mother encouraged her into the sport. Friends say she didn’t ­always love skating but appeared to thrive as a pre-teen and young adolescent, even under the hard-driving Russian training methods.

She was a member of one of the best pairs skating squads in Russia in December 2015, when she was asked to audition before Galina and Andrei and their young star Harley Windsor, in Moscow on a scouting trip. “Katia says (the day before), that was the worst day of my life. Not only did she drink this stuff — like kids go and do — but she didn’t honour her coach,” Noonan says.

“But she also said: ‘And the next day, I met Harley and it was the best day of my life’.” The pair bonded immediately. “It was like a lucky ticket,” Galina says.

Merriman says Alexandrovskaya was too young and too vulnerable for the move. “She was not only a baby,” he says. “She was a broken baby.”

 

LABOURING UNDER THE WEIGHT OF EXPECTATION

Alexandrovskaya moved in January 2016, just after her 16th birthday, and lived with the ­Pachins in Sydney. Galina says she and her husband warmly welcomed the quiet teen into their home. It was a spacious house, with a pool. There were BBQs and parties with their Russian friends and “skating mums”.

“She became like a part of our family,” Galina says. “We tried to make her comfortable, we tried to take her everywhere we go.

“She was not easy-going person, she was very stubborn sometimes, but she was quite respectful, sometimes bubbly, she would go and swim in the pool and help me cook something, trying to be part of what we were doing.

“With us, she was OK. She was quite friendly, sometimes she would miss her home, but you know, you would never, ever see it in Katia, she would never whinge, never say, I miss my mum. She would never say that. She tried to adjust to the condition and life where she was.”

Within a year it was clear she had an uneasy professional relationship with Andrei, who Merriman says had a typically Russian style of speaking to skaters.

“The weight of expectation on the athletes was ridiculous really,” Merriman says.

Galina says she and Andrei were brought up in the firm, frank, method of coaching. “Katia from day one was brought up in the Russian style, the Russian system and because both of us, Andrei and myself, are from the Russian system, coached by Russian coaches.”

After winning the world junior title in Taipei in March 2017, Windsor and Alexandrovskaya had to take everything up a notch, training harder and doing more complex routines.

“We were learning new throws, and taking a lot of falls, she started to get a really bad haematoma on the side of her hip and she tore part of her hip,” Windsor says. “We were trying new lifts at the beginning of the season and she fell from one of the top of the lifts. It wasn’t a very serious concussion. I did catch her on the way down.” A doctor ordered a few days of rest.

It wasn’t long after that Alexandrovskaya started taking tumbles away from the rink. Galina says she spoke to a doctor at the Australian Institute of Sport but Alexandrovskaya’s only interest was the Olympics. “I spoke to a sports doctor at the AIS, we tried to work it out what is wrong with her.”

Galina was still concerned. “I speak to the doctor again and they said, did they check her head? Maybe something is wrong there?” she says.

“When I was talking to the specialist and doctors, they were telling me that looks like symptoms of epilepsy.”

In October 2017, they qualified for the Olympics. Alexandrovskaya’s Australian citizenship was rushed through and in February 2018 they were on the Olympic ice at Pyeongchang, South Korea.

“It was like breathing,” Windsor says. “We both knew what we had to do. There was not a doubt in our mind. We were on autopilot.”

They finished 18th and set their sights on 2022 before things started to unravel. They split from the Pachins and Alexandrovskaya never spoke with them again.

Noonan says Alexandrovskaya confided in her she was afraid of Andrei’s harsh words.

Alexandrovskaya and Windsor briefly relocated to Canada before returning for the national championships in December 2018 at the Macquarie Ice Rink. It was then that Noonan noticed she had missed a series of calls.

JOB AND FRIENDS BUT THE DRINKING GOT WORSE

Alexandrovskaya could barely afford rent so was sleeping on lounges. She worked at the Canterbury Ice Rink, helping with children’s parties and in the canteen. “She loved that job,” Noonan says. “She was so happy and was making so many friends for the first time.”

Noonan says whenever Alexandrovskaya went to the city for training she would take the girl to a supermarket and buy her food.

“It’s all very well and good to have funding that would cover competitions and coaches but you have to be able to afford to eat.”

At Canterbury Ice Rink, the owners let them practice for free with loaned boots and blades.

“In a minority sport, you are doing it on your own,” Merriman says. “When we heard … that her father had died, the mum wasn’t in a great financial position, Harley wasn’t in a great financial position … is that situation ever actually going to work? For their early coaching team, it was a focus on achievement. It was a million miles an hour trying to get there.”

Alexandrovskaya’s drinking ­became heavier. It is understood there were times when she was so inebriated, Windsor had to help her on to planes.

Merriman agreed to help them with their skating program, as a mentor, but he was worried about their wellbeing.

“It sort of scares me to say it, I had a tip-off from someone outside the ice rink, that she was potentially drinking a lot,” Merriman says. “We came to discover she was showing up to training not in a great state.

“Trying to monitor that and then making sure she gets X, Y, Z done on the ice. There were days I would just report back (to their Russian coach Andrei Khekalo) they were getting the stuff done, but not getting her to do it because she wasn’t in the right space.

 

 

“There had been stories for a couple of years about her outside habits. Most people hadn’t taken it seriously. Belinda stepped right in.”

 

 

Noonan says she took Alexandrovskaya to a clinical psychologist who specialised in alcohol dependency — but then came ­another blow.

“Their funding was yanked in May 2019,” Noonan says. “That changed the ball game. Harley’s sister Sharon (Windsor) was doing everything she could, I was doing everything I could, every time we could save money, get money … it’s just heartbreaking.”

Windsor says: “If we wanted to see a physio, we couldn’t. If we need a sauna to recover in, we didn’t have the funding to do it. We were surviving day to day.”

No one foresaw what happened next.

Going down hill

Late last year, when the pair were training in Moscow, Alexandrovskaya called Windsor to say she couldn’t go to the rink because she was unwell.

According to Windsor, ­Khekalo and Pachin, Alexandrovskaya was admitted to a Moscow hospital in January. She spent two weeks under observation and was diagnosed with epilepsy. The doctors told her she couldn’t skate again because it was too dangerous.

“I don’t want to stop skating,” she protested. “It’s not that bad.”

Khekalo thought she could continue, saying in an interview for this investigation: “I have repeatedly tried to convince them (that by stopping skating) that they made the wrong decision, but without results.”

Windsor was not so sure after listening to the doctors so told ­Alexandrovskaya it was over and returned to Australia. He says he had planned to go back to Moscow but was prevented when COVID-19 struck. “Of course she was upset, it’s not something you give up easily,” Windsor says. “I was stuck in Australia. Things started getting a bit worse with Katia.”

The last time the pair spoke was around May, “a month or so before everything happened”.

“Everyone was struggling being in quarantine, it was a big struggle for everyone to go from being normal and then stuck at home doing nothing — especially athletes,” Windsor says. “We had been conditioned to doing so much for so many years and then the whole world has to stop?”

Noonan and Windsor’s sisters sent flowers to try to lift her spirits, which she placed near her world junior championships gold medal.

“Every four or five weeks I would send her a (WhatsApp) message with a ‘Hi, how are you doing?’” Noonan says.

“She would always write back with a ‘good, how are you’, every time … I really should have picked up the phone and not done short texts.”

On July 17, Alexandrovskaya was found dead.

“At the absolute bottom of my soul, do I think she purposely went out that window? No I don’t and I still don’t,” Noonan says.

“Do I think there could have been an episode? I think that could have been because she was diagnosed with epilepsy in January. I have those Russian medical ­reports.”

Windsor found out about Alexandrovskaya’s death through a text message, sent by her uncle, Fedor Boichenko. “It’s not real, it must be a mistake,” he said to himself. He tried calling Katia’s phone: “There was no answer.

“Then it started to hit me, I was like ‘holy shit, I don’t even know what to think right now’. I was trying to call people to find out more information but no one knew any more information.

“She was willing to do anything, she was 15 when she decided to go to another country and skate for another country, determined, hardworking, a lot of people loved her.”

Windsor, now training in France, is still searching for a pairs partner.

A SPORT IN MOURNING

Peter Lynch, president of Ice Skating Australia, says Alexandrovskaya’s death has devastated the sport. “They were literally the stars of figure skating in Australia and it’s a terrible, terrible loss the whole sport has suffered.”

Merriman’s assessment of her legacy is blunt. “A lot of people are like; ‘Katia achieved a lot in her time’. I am like, ‘Yeah, but she also threw herself out a window’.

“You know what would have been better than a junior gold medal and going to an Olympics? Living past 20 and being happy.”

 

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2 hours ago, memae said:

 

I saw it on my Insta this morning. My little Australian heart is so proud.

I imagine! This is a bit of a surprise from Brendan, IMO. I've seen him skate live 3 or 4 times, and while he definitely gets the job done, I never got the impression that he had ambitions of doing big, unusual jump combos like this. Maybe he's taking advantage of the pandemic time off from competitions to work on it and get some new skills under his belt before the Olympic year. 

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21 hours ago, rockstaryuzu said:

I wonder if Brezina is done, or coming back for another year. Was there a retirement announcement? 

I think he is probably coming back, because I read somewhere that because of covid the federation allowed him to skip our test skate. If he chose to retire, I don't think they would be talking about skipping but who knows. 

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Valentina announced her retirement

Quote

I have not competed for two years, since Ondrej decided to end the competition, but I confess that I have always hoped to be able to start doing it again. Just before the recent lockdown, I tried to convince a foreign partner to start a new adventure. It didn't go as I hoped, but I came really close to restarting my Olympic dream. Covid-19 then definitively dismissed any residual hope.

This is how I officially close my skating career patt

To say goodbye to my (our) supporters one last time I would have liked to organize something focused, sparkling, electrifying, but ... it can't be done.
Therefore I consider the performance with Ondrej at the Grand Prix Final last December, truly perfect, as our true farewell.

In January of this year, moreover, I also had the opportunity to perform alone in Piazza Gae Aulenti, in Milan, at my home, in front of my closest friends and my family: that can instead be considered the closing of the I also circle my career in singles, which culminated with the Sochi Olympics, which was the longest route of my adventure on ice that lasted a total of 26 years.
Twenty-six years! Do you think about it? One life! 🤭😳

https://www.facebook.com/108864845816490/posts/3204702192899391/

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