Gold Medalist Dorothy Hamill Says Figure Skating Is "So Different Now"
Things have changed quite a bit since Dorothy Hamill won a gold medal in figure skating back in 1976.
With her short and sassy hairdo, the 5’4” dynamo became the last figure skater to take home the top prize at the Olympics by performing just double jumps. These days, athletes are expected to show off triple jumps at the very least.
“They have to do such difficult things right now,” says Hamill.
But the physical demands aren’t the only things that have shifted. Hamill says entering the sport, with costumes that can cost thousands of dollars -- let alone turning professional -- is much harder now, too.
“I used to skate on a pond, go to public sessions and spend all day [there] for $5,” says Hamill.
Heightened media attention and intense international competition have put today’s skaters under more pressure, she says.
“My heart goes out to them because they’re so young.”
Hamill’s comments come a day after the Olympics’ short program, in which all three female American figure skaters took tumbles on the ice, putting together the worst performance in the event since before Hamill’s time.
For full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/figure-skating-legend-dorothy-hamill-shares-advice-for-americas-young-figure-skaters).
William Karlsson, William Carrier and Jonathan Marchessault are finally getting another chance in the Stanley Cup Final, after the first one that came so quick for the Vegas Golden Knights.
Tenzing Norgay, who shares the honor of first ascent with a New Zealander he guided, was honored with Kami Rita, who submitted the mountain for the 28th time this summer, and Sanu Sherpa, who has twice climbed all of the world's 14 highest peaks.
NFL player R.K. Russell made history in 2019 when he was the first ever active player in the league to come out as bisexual. He's also an accomplished poet and writer and his new book The Yards Between Us: a Memoir of Life, Love and Football is out. Russell sat down with Cheddar News anchor Hena Doba to talk about his experiences.
Carmelo Anthony, the star forward who led Syracuse to an NCAA championship in his lone college season and went on to spend 19 years in the NBA, announced his retirement on Monday.