Yuri Plisetsky (
yuri_plisetsky) wrote2017-05-23 02:39 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Moscow: Rostelecom Cup, GPF Qualifer Short Program (1.08)
The Rostelecom Cup is the last event of the 2014 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series. In the men's figure skating division, two competitors -- Otabek Altin of Kazakhstan and Christophe Giacometti of Switzerland -- have secured their places in the Grand Prix Final. The remaining four slots will be determined by the final standings of the six skaters competing in Moscow, based on their scores in previous ISU Grand Prix events:
- Michele Crispino (Italy): 3rd Place, NHK Trophy
- Yuuri Katsuki (Japan): 2nd Place, Cup of China
- Seung-gil Lee (Republic of Korea): 2nd Place, NHK Trophy
- Jean-Jacques Leroy (Canada): 1st Place, Skate Canada
- Emil Nekola (Czech Republic): 3rd Place, Skate Canada
- Yuri Plisetsky (Russian Federation): 2nd Place, Skate Canada
As the competitors arrive in Moscow, two particular skaters are the focus of much press and fan speculation. Fifteen-year-old Yuri Plisetsky is making his senior debut in his first major competitive event in his home country, after a strong showing at Skate Canada in Kelowna, British Columbia. At the same time, Japanese skater Yuuri Katsuki has arrived in Moscow with his coach, the long-reigning world champion Viktor Nikiforov, and based on his remarkable performance at the Cup of China in Shanghai...
...but all of this is only to be expected from the official press coverage.
On the ground, the reality is a little more complicated than that.
- Michele Crispino (Italy): 3rd Place, NHK Trophy
- Yuuri Katsuki (Japan): 2nd Place, Cup of China
- Seung-gil Lee (Republic of Korea): 2nd Place, NHK Trophy
- Jean-Jacques Leroy (Canada): 1st Place, Skate Canada
- Emil Nekola (Czech Republic): 3rd Place, Skate Canada
- Yuri Plisetsky (Russian Federation): 2nd Place, Skate Canada
As the competitors arrive in Moscow, two particular skaters are the focus of much press and fan speculation. Fifteen-year-old Yuri Plisetsky is making his senior debut in his first major competitive event in his home country, after a strong showing at Skate Canada in Kelowna, British Columbia. At the same time, Japanese skater Yuuri Katsuki has arrived in Moscow with his coach, the long-reigning world champion Viktor Nikiforov, and based on his remarkable performance at the Cup of China in Shanghai...
...but all of this is only to be expected from the official press coverage.
On the ground, the reality is a little more complicated than that.
no subject
Yuri's manages to half-stumble, half-flounder it through two or three more questions before it happens. The rush of success still warm in his chest gathering a sibling in the fast fading endorphins that are leaving his muscles and bones throbbing everywhere. Making him wish this part was done already, and he could lean on a wall and just drink some water, while Victor was the only person this close, or talking this persistently at him. (Victor who would keep talking, but not be a problem if he just didn't answer for a few long breaths. Or more.)
Still, he tries. Something light here. Something definitive there. A warbled gratitude for those implied to be watching for him and cheering on, an anything but warbled gratitude for any reference that he qualifies back to the relation of Victor. The unwavering support and focus of what they were doing with these programs. The way he has to try not to let his gaze linger too long to the side, even when he can feel Victor just off from his shoulder. Not close enough to bump into without meaning to, but not far enough that it's forgettable.
But it happens all the same. You could almost time it to every single one of the after Kiss n' Cry on the spot interview.
A roar of applause comes from the audience, washing over where they are, overshadowing whatever had come after the light laugh of the man talking to him, when Yuri had looked out to see what had caused it. Except that it's already over, whatever the move or jump was, and Yurio is a far away shape on the other side of the ice. A small and soft, but gleaming, blur to his vision in the bright floodlights against the massive, all but endless, white ice, but even at that Yuri can see that he's chasing the thing he'd been missing earlier.
Trying to grasp it with his fingertips. The missing thing, and what was left of this performance. It's much cleaner, if not graceful, and demanding perfection, if not unconditional. It looks hard in a way Yuri knows it shouldn't, but he's familiar to the feeling of all too well. Yurio isn't giving up out there, and it shows. Strongly. The refusal to give in to whatever it was that had hamstrung him through his beginning.
But it's all Yuri has time to see or think before that voice is talking more loudly at him, again, trying to maintain a high lit and innocent, but demanding, question, and Yuri looks back with a blink, only catching the last few words while his vision shifts from focusing far to near. "Sorry. What?"
"I was asking--" The reporter starts again, and Yuri is dragged back into the undertow and the closer faces and brighter, more immediate lights and clamoring voices, that want answers he still feels he has to spend far too long putting together than makes any reasonable sense for how good his English actually is. Each question dominating into the next and the next. While Victor remains disquietingly quiet at the corner from him, more thn Victor ever has. Making this feel at least as much, if not more, like he's still on stage.
And he is. One for performance, and one for commentary.
Even as Yurio skates, and even as the music comes to an end, with loud cheering.
Yuri isn't certain when he ended up with a towel in his hand, but he rubs it against his neck and chin, more as an absent tic than in the need to brush anything off of his skin just now, as someone frames a question as to him having surprised them all, his coach included, at the end of China's Free Skate and should all his fans be expecting more of that tomorrow, the smile of reporter just as indicative of the question under it as the words, which leaves him with a mumbled Uh...., whether that's about Victor's flip and their plans or not having them for tomorrow, or Victor kissing him, before a rumble turns everyone's head. To a side and then up.
Yurio and his coach and trainer appearing on the high screens in preparation for the next score reveal.
When had two minutes felt so long and so short? (Aside from only, what felt like seconds ago, when he was out there himself.)
no subject
Nothing distracts him aside from the crowd reactions to Yurio's short program, the Agape Victor had created as a way of reminding himself what his duties were, when his heart lay so far away from everything he knew he should be, ought to do. Even when Yuri glances that way, he doesn't, stays focused on this moment and this interview.
(It's been made clear to him that their interest and support aren't welcome, momentary excitement in the kiss and cry aside. If Yurio would prefer to cut Victor out of Agape and out of his life altogether, it's a wish Victor can respect.)
The reporters won't be distracted, however, and soon enough Yuri is back to chatting with them, as Victor maintains a carefully bland expression of satisfaction. (After Yuri's dismay that morning in Shanghai, he has no desire to give the media any more fodder than he already has.
At least, not since he regained his sanity after his joy at Yuri's most recent perfect performance.)
no subject
(As he strikes the final pose and the high, clear music fades away, the sensation of the cooling sweat on his face invokes the thinnest of memories, the fine mist of a freezing-cold waterfall somewhere more than a thousand miles away.)
Crude muscle memory often takes over in these immediate ending moments, when the higher thought processes are still somewhere else and post-performance fatigue is on the point of commandering everything above the brain stem. Drop the pose, partial turn, acknowledge the crowd. Start moving again before your joints lock up; avoid whatever's landed on the rink surface so you don't break your kneecaps tripping over a wrapped flower or a random plush object. And usually, all of this is enough -- except that one of Yuri's fans has an aim that should qualify her for her country's Olympic marksmanship team, because the cat-eared headband that she tosses out onto the ice lands squarely on Yuri's head, giving him a pair of pointy white ears that couldn't match his Agape costume better if they'd been part of the ensemble all along.
Bad enough that the crowd's cheering gives way to the kinds of fevered squeals that had greeted him at Sheremetyevo. Still worse that the final skater on deck to see all of it in real time is Jean-Jacques Leroy. And when he greets Yuri at the gate with loud applause, a sweeping bow, and a drippingly faux-polite 'Oh, ladies first', Yuri has to dig deep into his dignity to fight the urge to emasculate the asshole Canadian on the spot with a toepick to the groin. I forgot there was someone even more annoying than those two...JJ!
Yet he still has the judges' verdict to come, and so he storms off to get his skate guards and jacket. For whatever reason, Yakov doesn't start in on the lecture the second they're in the kiss-and-cry. But when Yuri plops down to sit in the most inelegant pose he can come up with on short notice -- leaning back, arms tucked behind his head, feet propped on the table, knees up and spread wide, giving the main camera a prime view of his crotch -- his coach has to at least make the effort to enforce decorum, where the microphones won't pick up.
('Sit up straight,' Yakov snaps. 'I'm stretching,' Yuri snaps back, not entirely a lie.)
As the scores come up, it's hard to say whether the 98.09 or the 2nd place designation is more irritating. Because the first day of the Rostelecom Cup isn't over for him just yet. Right outside the rink's main entrance are the press and the sponsors and the skating federation, all circling like sharks who've scented his blood in the water. He'll have to make it through tonight alive before he can face whatever awaits him tomorrow.
no subject
The score, like the surprisingly strong end to his skate, isn't all that terrible. Even if Yurio looks like he could burn a hole through the space in front of him just by staring at it. While sitting there in what looks like he picked or planned for the most rebellious way possible. The cute white cat ears he'd left perched on top of his head both detracting from the belligerence of the image and making him look even younger in it.
Yuri does stare at the number for what feels like a long moment -- possibly feels more than is, because the reports around him become a buzzing murmur of at least half of what is buzzing in his own head. That Yuri is still the holding the first place score.
what had happened when he'd stayed in first at the end of the Free Skate day.)
His eyes drift for a moment to the tall purple-clad figure of Jean-Jacques Leroy on the ice, talking to his coaches. A hazy memory of whatever, still not understood, conversation he'd tried to have with Yuri or Victor before Yuri went out mixing with the knowledge the Canadian had pulled gold in Skate Canada, taking first place in both his short and free skate.
That this performance would or could shift all of it again.