From the German newspaper "Sueddeutsche Zeitung,"
February 4th, 1995,
translated by Luise Wuetschner
With elan to the title, with caution on the pedestal,
Ilia Kulik (17) is European Champion and together with Alexei Urmanov an
outstanding representative of the Russian figure skating school.
Carefully he climbed the pedestal with his skates. A
wary step on the first step, then another on the highest point. He looked
down to his feet, which he carefully straightened. When he had the feeling
he would stand worthy to fit the occasion, he looked up. After that, Ilia
Kulik didnīt move his head. Only his eyes traveled excitedly back and forth,
as the Russian boy may have feared that there was somebody coming soon to
take him off of this unusual and wonderful place.
And there was somebody. But Olympic Champion Alexei
Urmanov was content to congratulate the new European Champion and stand
still on the lower step. Ilia would be "a worthy competitor," said the
Europeans second place winner about his countryman, though from this you can
hear that the opinion "worthy champion" Urmanov (21) wasnīt able to say.
Kulik is only 17 years old; last year he was Junior
World Champion, and in Dortmund he won his debut at an international senior
championship. He even led after the short program, and in the free program,
he showed six triple jumps. Heīs already training the quad toe loop, and he
announced "I will show it" at the world championships in March.
But also between the athletic highlights of his
programs, Kulik offers much. You can recognize in him the classical figure
skating school of the former Soviet Union: The body stretches like a ballet
dancer, the arms he moves despite his youth without fidgeting.
But at the first go, such a success? Before the
competition, the thought of the title was "very small and far away," Ilia
said. He said he wanted to prove ``that I can compete with the others. I
succeeded in doing that." A smile spread out on his face. Kulik masters with
skill the modesty to demonstrate self-confidence.
Urmanov, who not only in his opinion "skated the best
free program of my life," got more applause and even a 6.0 in Dortmund. But
the handicap of being only in 6th place after the short program prevented
him from winning his first European title. Nevertheless, Urmanov is on the
right way to present his success of being Olympic Champion in Lillehammer.
Also Kulik, who skated to Gershwin's "An American in
Paris" in his free program, is representing this trend. Like Urmanov, he
completely stands in the tradition of Soviet skaters. His skating technique
is immaculate; he learned it at the sports army club in Moscow. The
conditions there got rapidly worse, so itīs always surprising to see
excellent junior skaters from the former USSR still reach the top of the
world.
Sponsors? "Nyet," says Kulik's coach Viktor Kudriavtsev
sadly. Money? "Nyet." The Ukrainian Olympic Champion Oksana Baiul eft
amateur skating at the age of 17 and lives in the USA now -- rich. Could
Ilia Kulik imagine such a progress, too? "Thatīs hard to tell, but properly
I want to skate at the amateurs a long time. I want to participate at the
Olympic Games -- and not only at the next ones."
by Detlef Hacke
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