====== The Story of Kim Yuna : 2005-2006 Season ======
===== Introduction =====
Fall 2005 marked the start of the Olympic season, but Yu-Na would again be competing as a junior. Skaters she had just competed against at Junior Worlds, such as Kimmie Meissner and Emily Hughes, would be skating on the Senior Grand Prix and were eligible to compete at the Olympics.
But not Yu-Na. The best figure skater in Korea was simply not old enough, missing the deadline by two months. People would joke that Yu-Na’s mother should have given birth two months earlier.
If Yu-Na wanted to compete in the Olympics the following year, Yu-Na showed no hint of such a desire, nor any resentment of the age rule that locked her out. In an [[multimedia_interviews#sbs_interview|interview in March 2005]] with Korea’s SBS television network, she was already looking towards the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, where her hope was to get Korea’s first Olympic medal in figure skating. When the reporter asked her if they could trust in her to do that, she laughed, ducked her head, and simply said, “I don’t know.”
Why didn’t Yu-Na voice hopes for the Olympic gold? Perhaps because no Korean skater had ever been a contender in figure skating at all before, especially at the Olympics, where the Olympic gold was considered the greatest prize in figure skating. Maybe she was not yet fully aware of her own potential and talent, and she did not yet dare to say such a grand dream out loud.
Yet also, consider that at the age of seven, Yu-Na watched the 1998 Nagano Olympics. She watched the programs of the Olympic ladies gold and silver medalists over and over again, so much so that she almost memorized them. But it was the figure skater who won silver, not gold, who became Yu-Na’s skating idol: Michelle Kwan, five-time world champion and two-time Olympic medalist, known for her artistry and legendary performances.
It was apparent even then that as Yu-Na worked harder to become a better and better skater, her biggest wish was to be a skater who would be remembered and loved, just as she herself remembered and loved Michelle’s skating.
It would be a while yet before Yu-Na would dare to say out loud that she dreamed of the Olympic gold medal, as all figure skaters do from the time that they are first inspired to step onto the ice. For the time being, she was not looking towards competing at the Olympics yet. 2010 was very far away.
===== Programs =====
In order to progress as a skater, Yu-Na made changes in the off-season. As a novice and now as a junior, she generally kept every short program for two years and every long program for two years. This year, she would have a new short program.
Yu-Na’s coach for the 2004-2005 season was Kim Se-Yeol. He recommended to her that she watch the film musical Moulin Rouge, the 2001 Oscar-nominated film starring Ewan McGregor and Nicole Kidman. The song she liked most, “El Tango de Roxanne,” would become the music for her new short program, combined with music from Despertar by Ástor Piazzolla. The Moulin Rouge version of the song was based off of the classic “Roxanne” by the Police. Now Yu-Na would be giving the Moulin Rouge version her own stamp—on ice.
Tom Dickson, an American choreographer and coach, choreographed Yu-Na’s short program. His wife, Catarina Lindgren, had choreographed three of Yu-Na’s previous programs.
Using tango music was surely a challenge for a fifteen-year-old, but Yu-Na was up for it. It was equally important for a skater to develop their artistry as well as their technical skills. Every athlete must be competitive if they are going to participate in a sport, and Yu-Na had her own fierce competitive spirit that drove her. She later remarked, “When I was little, I was the kind of skater who did great every time my coach and I bet on my performance.” Once Yu-Na had goals in front of her, she went out and achieved it.
One of Yu-Na’s goals was to show her personality and work on her facial expressions. In particular, she worked on looking fierce to express the fiery nature of the tango music. The expressions, perhaps somewhat surprisingly, came out naturally as she practiced, under the guidance of her coach, Kim Se-Yeol, who provided a more relaxing atmosphere to train than her previous coach. Previously, the emphasis had been on technique and the technical aspects of skating. While that focus provided Yu-Na with a solid foundation, under Kim Se-Yeol, Yu-Na would take a big step forward in the artistic side and using her whole body, including the face, to develop the expressions which had been absent before.
This season in the short program, the triple lutz was the jump required out of footwork for juniors. Outside of the triple axel, the lutz was the most difficult of the five standard triple jumps to master, requiring one to take off an outside edge. Many skaters tended to “flutz” or obviously switch to an inside edge.
While Yu-Na might pop the lutz, fall on the lutz, or double the lutz…she would never, ever take off an inside edge. Perhaps she had heard of the flutz controversies that had followed skaters such as Tara Lipinski and Sarah Hughes during their career. (Sarah Hughes, had, in fact attempted to hide her flutz from the judges by placing the jump in the corner away from where they sat.) Or perhaps Yu-Na simply prided herself on having a true lutz. Whatever the reason, as unlucky as she had been the previous season with the triple loop being the required jump in the short program, she was luckier this season with the triple lutz being the required jump. It was one of her best jumps.
Yu-Na also began attempting an Ina Bauer with a layback into a double axel, timed perfectly to the tango music as it neared its dramatic climax. She had previously used this move as a transition, but not as an entry into a jump. If she was able to do it correctly, she would gain extra points than for a double axel and an Ina Bauer done separately.
Her other goal was to upgrade the jumps in her long program. While she was keeping the same music and choreography from the previous year, set to “Papa, Can You Hear Me?”, she was drastically changing the jumping layout. She was starting by upgrading her triple/triple combination. The triple toe loop/triple toe loop combination was considered the easiest of the triple/triple combinations, and it was worth the least amount of points. She would now attempt the triple flip/triple toe loop combination in her long program, as well as a double axel/triple toe combination—which would be placed in the second half of her program, thereby earning a bonus, as the scoring system offered a point incentive to encourage skaters not to frontload their jumps in the first half of the program. She would also do an Ina Bauer as an entrance into this combination. Seven triples were planned total.
It was quite an extraordinary jump layout. This program layout would be competitive even at the senior level, before even factoring in Yu-Na’s artistic abilities. The question was, would she be able to complete them? It was one thing to do difficult combinations in practice, but another thing entirely to do them in the heat of competition. Tom Dickson also reworked the original choreography of this program during the summer of 2005, while Kim Se-Yol continued to work on the choreography with Yu-Na throughout the season.
Her exhibition music was also from Moulin Rouge, set to Nicole Kidman’s version of the song “One Day I’ll Fly Away” and choreographed by herself and her coach, Kim Se-Yeol.
Yu-Na was starting only her second season internationally, still as a junior, still Korea’s one and only hope for the future of figure skating, bearing all the expectation of bringing home medals alone. It had already been many years of hard work already, and there were surely many more years of hard work to come. Perhaps Yu-Na’s selection of this music gave a glimpse into a wish: that one day, after these years of hard work and the stress and pressure of competition, she would be able to “leave all this to yesterday,” as Kidman sang in the film…and skate away.
But first, the challenge of her second junior season awaited.
===== Pre-season =====
Yu-Na debuted her new short program on August 18 at a domestic qualifier for the JGP in Dong-Cheon. From the opening notes, it was evident that Yu-Na had already developed a strong connection with this music. As the intensity increased, so did her dramatic poses, as she moved her arms, body, and tilted her head effortlessly to the beats. And she performed the Ina Bauer into the double axel without a hitch.
When performing her long program, still wearing the lavender costume from the previous season, it was clear that Yu-Na was very comfortable with the music, and upgrading the jump combinations hadn’t slowed her down a bit. She successfully landed both her triple flip/triple toe combination and the double axel/triple toe combination out of the Ina Bauer. Despite a few bobbles elsewhere, it was overall a clean performance and a good sign for the coming season. Afterwards, Yu-Na and her coach, Kim Se-Yeol, kept working on the choreography of Roxanne in preparation for its ISU debut two weeks later.
** Qualifier SP **
** Qualifier LP **
===== 2005 Junior Grand Prix =====
==== JGP Skate Slovakia ====
Yu-Na’s first competition on the Junior Grand Prix took her to Bratislava, Slovakia, the first week of September. She performed her tango short program with great success, receiving positive marks on every element and maximizing the levels of her spins, spiral sequence, and footwork. Her score for the season was more than 7 points higher than her personal best short program score from the previous season.
While the scoring system was always evolving and the value of certain elements would change from year to year, making it sometimes difficult to compare performances and total scores across seasons, it was still an encouraging start. Since her PCS had gone up, it seemed to be a sign that the choreography, interpretation, and expression in her new short program was working. Perhaps her dramatic new costume with long purple gloves helped give her a more mature look as well, quite a contrast with the delicate look she had presented in her previous short program.
During the long program, Yu-Na successfully debuted her triple flip/triple toe loop combination, getting positive +1 GOE for it. This was rather unusual, since judges tended to be fairly stingy in giving positive GOE for triple/triple combinations, which not only were not attempted too often, were typically not done too well. She cleanly landed a 3-jump combination and double axel/triple toe loop combination, as well as the triple loop and triple salchow. Her only errors included a step out when landing her final triple lutz, and skating a little too closely to the boards during her spiral sequence. Yu-Na excelled in speed and ice coverage, and seemed to attempt to use every bit of ice available during her performances. Sometimes she seemed to forget there were boards surrounding the ice.
Yu-Na was rewarded with a score almost as high as her personal best, her performance at the 2005 Junior Worlds, and easily won her first gold of the season and her second ever JGP win. And this was just the beginning.
[[http://www.isuresults.com/results/jgpsvk2005/|2005 JGP Slovakia Results]]
** 2005 JGP Slovakia SP **
** 2005 JGP Slovakia LP **
==== JGP Sofia Cup ====
Yu-Na traveled to Bulgaria the last week of September for her second competition. In the short program, she successfully completed all of her elements, but she also had a fall. She still easily led, and followed that up by winning the long program, similarly with a few blips. She opened with a clean triple flip/double toe loop, and then landed a clean triple lutz/triple toe combination—marking the first time she had successfully completed it in an ISU competition. However, she singled the triple loop, struggled with her double axel/triple toe, and fell on her final triple lutz. It was not the performance that she was capable of, but she was still head and shoulders above the rest of the field, and she won her second gold medal of the season. Already, her results this season were superior to last season, but could she win her first Junior Grand Prix Final title?
[[http://www.isuresults.com/results/jgpbul2005/|2005 JGP Sofia Cup Results]]
==== Junior Grand Prix Final 2005 Qualifying ====
Yu-Na easily became the top qualifier going into the Junior Grand Prix Final, the only skater to win both of her assigned events. She had the highest combined scores from those competitions by a whopping margin of 28 points over the skater with the next highest total, Aki Sawada from Japan. That was a much larger margin than she had trailed Mao in the previous season.
Four of Japan’s talented juniors had qualified for this year’s JGPF. Yu-Na would once again be facing off against an Asada from Japan. But this time, it would be Mai Asada, older sister to Mao. With the existing rules, Mao, like Yu-Na, was not old enough to skate at the upcoming Olympics or the senior World Championships. For Mao, having gone undefeated the previous year as a junior and having a weapon that no other ladies skater had—a triple axel—the benefits of competing on the Senior Grand Prix outweighed the risks. She was facing off against much more experienced skaters who would be competing at the Olympics. Yu-Na would not compete against Mao head to head until the 2006 Junior Worlds, where Mao would be defending her title.
[[http://www.isuresults.com/events/jgp2005/jgpsladies.htm|JGPF Qualifying]]
==== Junior Grand Prix Final 2005 ====
The JGPF took place in Ostrava, the Czech Republic, during the last week of November. The competition was simply a dream come true for Yu-Na. Her short program performance was smooth and elegant. She was slightly off balance in her final combination spin, but there was nothing else that the judges could find fault with, and she easily went into first.
All of Yu-Na’s scores in the short program this season were higher than her scores in the short program last year. Perhaps it was a testament to Yu-Na’s maturing artistic ability, or the daring choreography, or both. Whatever it was, “Roxanne” was a clear success.
Washing away the bad memories of her performance at the last JGPF, Yu-Na, with a new dress, had her most perfect performance of her long program to date. She landed all seven triples, including the triple loop, and all of her intended combinations. For the second time in her career, she did not receive a single negative GOE on any element in the long program, though she did receive a deduction for finishing after the music ended. Yu-Na earned nearly 6 points in GOE, which meant that the judges were rewarding her for the clean execution of all her elements, the difficult entry into her double axel/triple toe loop combination, and the superior technique of her triple flip/triple toe combination. It was one thing to plan a harder program, another to actually succeed at it, and even then there was no guarantee that the judges would reward it. But they did.
That many points in GOE was worth as much as a triple lutz jump, so it was almost like Yu-Na had completed 8 jumping passes over her competitors to get that many points, even when she had completed 7 as they did. In comparison, the second place finisher, Aki Sawada, actually lost points when factoring in her GOE, as mistakes cost her points that outweighed the positive points she received for other elements.
Yu-Na easily won the JGPF title, her first and Korea’s first, running away from the field. And she did it with style, with a new personal best total score that was 25 points higher than her previous personal best. She was simply ecstatic in the Kiss & Cry area with her coach, Kim Se-Yol. The difference between this year’s JGPF and last year’s was remarkable. Yu-Na had not skated to her potential at the previous JGPF—far from it, in fact, with her worst long performance of that season, while here she had the satisfaction of skating perfectly.
Though her last coach had been good for Yu-Na in terms of technique, she was known to be rather strict in training with Yu-Na. Kim Se-Yol had a far more kind and considerate manner in training Yu-Na, and her increased happiness seemed to help her on the ice, both in allowing her to explore a new range of emotions artistically and in skating to her ability.
[[http://www.isufs.org/results/jgpf0506/|2005 JGPF Results]]
** 2005 JGPF SP **
** 2005 JGPF LP **