DAVID KING: LAST SEASON IS NOW BEHIND US

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Well with our season behind us we took the start of our new term a little easier than normal to get our heads in the right place. We visited family in Kent and trained in Gillingham for a while as we have no real base in the UK.

Talking to family and friends always lifts our spirits and with Europeans in Sheffield this season we have a very clear goal. With all this in mind we knew we could no longer train in Poland and couldn’t stay in the UK for too long so I phoned our friends Amanda Evora and Mark Ladwig who are currently ranked USA’s number 1 pair team and asked if they would mind us training in Florida.

And three weeks later we are arriving at Tampa Bay airport with a little luggage and a lot of hope! A British expat who coaches at the rink took us in, one Mrs Alison Smith. She actually coached the infamous British skater John Curry along with a very successful coaching career and is still going strong.

She lives in a beautiful area of Florida with two Huskies and one other very talented skater. We were welcomed warmly and told to treat the place like home which we felt like we have really settled in well and just think that everything feels so right. The training centre, the athletes and especially the coaches all have a very much ‘we are the best’ mentality.

The whole package works as a well oiled machine that just believes in hard work to get the job done. We have four new coaches Mr Lyndon Johnson who works our lifts and elements, Mr Jim Peterson our programme choreographer, Mrs Smith our jump technician and Mr Jeremy Barrett our new primary coach who kicks our ass in to gear.

So a fresh season has begun, anything can happen. As part of the training here we were assigned a very motivated young lady called Barb Fitzpatrick who plans our off-ice conditioning and pushes through our plateaus. In our strength classes Barb plays famous American Football speeches one that starts with “all men are born equal but some work harder in pre season!”

So with a little bit of pre season left our new base coach Jeremy Barrett pushed us harder than we ever worked before. Six days a week training with four on ice sessions a day and two or three off ice sessions a day. It is mentally and physically very demanding but if we want to be the best we can be we must push our bodies to their very limits.

Two weeks into our new training schedule at our new base we competed at our first competition of the season in the prestigious South West Florida Figure Skating Club Competition. We had only put our free programme together the week before and knew it would be tough but managed to come away with a Bronze medal.

We landed our first ever side by side double axels (a jump element where you turn two and a half rotations in the air) together and held our own against the best pair teams in the USA. Needless to say we were more than impressed with our fast progress we’ve made over the last few weeks.

Next week we compete for Great Britain at Coupe de Nice our first international assignment of the new season and feel in great shape, ready to be the best we can be.

All my best, a changed man.

David King and Stacey Kemp
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DAVID KING: WE CAN OVERCOME ADVERSITY

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Time has passed since the end of this harsh season and with a sense of pride I look to our critics and say: “What we actually achieved in the face of extreme circumstances is the fact that we can overcome adversity, we can compete with the best when our world crashes down around us and we can still become what we aspire to be.”

Just take the World Championships as a tiny snippet of the kind of season we have had:

The World Championships was delayed from Tokyo and moved to Moscow, fair enough as it was a tragic disaster and we lost £200 of the £2000 in flights for us and our coach. We had told our ice rink that it would be the end of March so they sold our ice and we had to train in different places every other day. As any athlete will know routine is key when you’re working at a world class level and ours was truly thrown out the window.

At the same time our coach said he had some kiddie competition commitments so couldn’t come away with us to train, and not only that he won’t make worlds because he was contracted to an International Skating Union seminar in Berlin. Next problem, my skates broke in Belgium whilst training for a week with our British women’s champion Jenna McKorkil and Belgium men’s champion Kevin Van Der Perren, who promptly offered us one week of their ice time.

With two weeks to go before worlds I had to train in rock solid brand new Edea skates that left a bunion that made most of the skaters in Moscow cringe, on top of my half a golf ball extra heel, formed a massive blister that only the largest school blister plaster could cover, needless to say stepping on to the ice every day was complete agony. So with two weeks to go before worlds we had no rink, no skates and no coach, remind me again what I need to skate at my best for a World Championships? We managed to hop skip and jump between Dumfries and Altringham for our training and contrary to popular belief they’re not close!

Whilst still grieving the death of Stacey’s Grandad our federation asked for footage of our programmes, not training much over the week we didn’t really know what to say. With a little delay we got them filmed and sent off, not to our usual polish but they weren’t dreadful. In a few days time we received an email conveying their disappointment in us and our lack of enthusiasm… Remember we pay them to skate, not the other way around!

After a long winding road to actually get to the World Championships. It was a very early start for the flight and we were doing some last minute packing the night before when I started feeling really ill. I just went to bed without saying a word to Stacey, two hours later she rushed upstairs to find me making friends with the toilet seat, I threw up so much and couldn’t even keep water down. The next morning I was bundled on to the flight and slept the whole way (even through our connection in Zurich I think) I have no idea how Stacey coped but I arrived in Moscow and our team leader just filled me with drugs. I didn’t eat from the Friday evening until breakfast Sunday morning and needless to say I didn’t make practice. We finished in 17th place and ended the season still ranked 12th in the world.

So although we had many mountains to climb in this short time we also had a surprising amount of support so I would just like to thank a few special people who are trying their best to help our dreams come true. Always first, our Parents, Angela, Lynne and Michael, absolute pillars in our skating and quite simply could not be here without your love and support. Next are Pam and Jim at North Lancs Training Group, long time supporters and good friends. A big thank you to Colin, Derrick and John at Dumfries and Galloway Council and Mike Petreous Manager of Planet Ice for giving us loads of solitary hours of practice time at such short notice. Last but no way least to the guys at HD sports John Wilson blades, Sabrina at Edea boots and the backbone of British skating Coach Joy Sutcliffe.

Without the support of any one of these people we could achieve nothing and it is your good will that keeps us competing at a World Class Level.
Thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

David King and Stacey Kemp
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DAVID KING: WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS MOVED TO MOSCOW

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The week we were supposed to fly to Tokyo the devastating tsunami hit and The World Championships was put on hold. Weeks of discussions passed and was finally announced to take place the end of April in the city of Moscow home of the great skating nation of Russia.

I just think it was so difficult for the International Skating Union to take decisive action after the terrible disaster in Japan. Yes they should always have contingency plans but so close to the event nobody could foresee this kind of thing. Whatever decision ISU could make it was going to upset people, if it’s the skaters, organizers, fans, TV, judges or corporate sponsors each want different things and without one of these the event can’t go ahead.

So that finally draws a conclusion under our season, 2011 we came 17th at the World Championships at the rearranged city of Moscow. Not the result we wanted but it’s been a difficult few weeks and just glad to get back out there again.

As you would expect from Russia, the crowd was amazing! The noise when we took to the ice was immense and when our marks came up we felt disappointed and they actually booed the result. As ever the judges’ decision is final and our remarks are merely whispers in the whole political scheme of things. We love to skate but it’s never simple, we have a lot of real life decisions to make when we get back from our break and with no money options are slim.

As of right this minute though I’m happy to carry on for at least next season, with Europeans in Sheffield next year it would be great to say farewell properly.

After a good break things will seem clearer and we have quite a few events coming up, starting with us attending a show called Cirque de Glace which is an iceskating take on Cirque du Soleil that our friend is starring in.

Then I have a quick blade technician course I’ve been eyeing up for a while then off to Spain to see Stacey’s brother’s family. I’m really looking forward to not only our time off but also getting stuck in to next year’s programs and our new stuff for next season.

All the very best and I will write again soon.

David King and Stacey Kemp
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DAVID KING: WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ON HOLD?

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We’re supposed to be leaving for our World Championships in Tokyo this Friday but due to the devastating disaster in Japan we’re now left wondering if we should go. As of now the International Skating Union are saying the Championships will go ahead as the Arena has not been damaged but I don’t think this is the biggest worry for the athletes.

Our own federation are saying just do what the ISU say and we’re left to wonder do the Japanese people really want the Championships right now? Skaters training there now have been sent home and two athletes and their coach have been reported missing.

As for us, well it’s been tough but we’re back in the rink training. We flew back to Poland a few days after the funeral and we’d not asked about the temperature, just expected the weather to be similar to the UK.
Dressed in a T-shirt and jumper with a thin rain jacket to keep warm and as the doors of the plane opened we were greeted with a -20C wind. As most our family and friends say, you should be used to it now, no, no were not! With cold weather comes appropriate clothing and we had a long walk from the plane to the terminal in very inappropriate clothes.

We survived and as of now aren’t ill, so the last thing to check off is to get fit for our intended World Championships if indeed we do fly out. This one should be a real fight to beat last year’s 16th place but that’s out of our hands, we’ve had a tough month so I would be so happy with two clean skates.

Tokyo is a great city and although it sounds like it has shaken the Japanese people they’re very resilient and I’m sure things will be back to normality soon. We’ve been a few times and always enjoy their hospitality and with our deepest sympathy think of the lives that have been affected in this terrible disaster.

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DAVID KING: TOUGH TIMES ON AND OFF THE ICE

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So, apart from ‘that fall’ we had a great European championship in Bern Switzerland, the city itself was beautiful but expensive and very quiet. For those of you who didn’t see our performances we made a great start by skating a clean short program and were lying in seventh place.

We started the free program strong with a huge triple twist (the first British team ever to do this element) and throw triple toe, with all our spins receiving good levels which means lots of points. Unfortunately as we couldn’t train flat out over Christmas we struggled with our conditioning in the second half of the program. Stacey just couldn’t hold the edge on the second throw then after falling played safe on the jump straight after, losing lots of our well earned points.

To top off a pretty tentative second half our last element is a lift that scores big points for us. We whipped round the corner knowing we had this one element left, set it up and as I made my first turn in the lift I caught my right edge and we went down with a crash. Poor Stacey fell from above my head on to the ice, luckily nothing was badly hurt other than our pride.

We peeled ourselves off the ice and finished the program to that applause that you hate. You know the one where it’s “bless them” for trying. We only dropped seventh to eighth and just three points behind our season’s best score. Shows how our season has been going!

We arrived home with mixed emotions about the whole thing, lots of positives and negatives from the week’s skating. The judges were very flattering about our skating and the improvements we’ve made. We flew back the Friday night and decided that Sunday we should have a family get together around a pub roast.

My parents were heading down under for two months to stay with family and attend my cousin’s wedding, so it gave me a good chance to see them off. The next morning Stacey’s granddad got rushed into hospital, we went to see him in the afternoon visiting hours, he was a little distressed but well. I decided to cook tea that evening with Stacey’s brother while Stacey, her mum and gran went back for the evening visiting.

We got the call that you never want to hear, Tom, a fit and healthy 84 year-old, had taken his last two breaths just as they walked in the door. Stacey was very close to her granddad who was a tremendously gentle hearted man, a real pillar in our lives that has been pulled from underneath us.

The World championships are six weeks off, so we need to get on with our skating which will hopefully take our minds off things for a while. A hard few weeks but what can you do but roll with the punches and get back to what we know and what we do best.

Well until next time and our very best wishes to you all.

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DAVID KING: HAPPY NEW YEAR

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Happy New Year! Well with our festive period passed our European Championships is firmly upon us. Over Christmas we spent our most time in England for three years and we got to spend quality time with friends and family.

We decided to drive to England from Poland through six countries on an epic 36 hour journey! Because of severe weather we were stopped at the Polish border for seven hours, which meant we only had two hours sleep at our hotel before we had to leave again.

Our cat Amber found this very amusing but I must say by the end of the trip I was sore and my patience for traffic was wearing thin, but we were home. Unfortunately in the weeks over Christmas Amber’s condition deteriorated and she passed away the first week of January. She was a big part in our life and we would do anything to have her back. We loved her so dearly and we miss her so much.

We were back for roughly four weeks and based ourselves on weekdays in Coventry at Yuri Burieko’s International School of Skating. Then at weekends drove home to good cooking and familiar faces, which I’m sure most people will think of Christmas but our last few years have been intense.

Last year we didn’t manage three days at home split between two households. We even had to take our turkey sandwiches on the plane to eat on our own. Training has been going a little slow as it was Christmas and Stacey had some pain in her wrist and ankle.

The Europeans were too close to take much time off so we took it easy and iced it, luckily ice is a commodity we have close to hand in our line of work. After this week we have time to get some hard work done as the Worlds are at the end of March so we can push ourselves to the next level.

Great talking to you all anyway and most importantly Europeans is here, this Wednesday 26th January at 8pm and Thursday 27th January at 6pm on Eurosport we skate against the best Europe has to offer. Enjoy!

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DAVID KING: MERRY CHRISTMAS TO EVERYONE

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We got back from London only to find out that Stacey’s pride and joy, our two year old black and white cat has leukemia. Apparently it’s common in cats but Stacey took it quite hard and made the week before nationals quite tough.

We had to leave her in the very capable hands of our close friends in Poland and headed once again back to England. Unfortunately our Polish coaches each had internationals to attend so we had to ask our good friends UK based Russian coaches, Marina and Yuri Bueriko to watch over us.

This was our eighth British Championship so we really just needed moral support; all the hard work has already been done. We just had to go out and skate like we do every day.

It’s a great event for us as it’s the one time our friends and family can watch our performances. A car full of my friends made the arduous journey from Carlisle to Sheffield and battled the snow to get there. It meant a lot to me as they are typical lads, Sunday league footballers not avid skating fans but they were there to support me.

It was a good Championship with both programs going well, no elbows to the head this time just a slight mistake on our side by side combination jump in the free program. The judges were impressed and we had great feedback, saying how our speed and lines had really improved.

It’s fantastic news for us as this counts for our second mark which needs to be raised if we want to move up the rankings. We had a clear lead over second place and retained our sixth British Senior Pairs title. We had a surprise when we were awarded with acceptance into NISA our federations Hall of Fame.

Just this week we got our long awaited news about lottery funding for the next four years, and the news was very bad. UK Sport withdrew all funding of ice skating which leaves us wondering where do we go from here.

We’ve not received funding of any kind since we got off the ice from our free program back in February for the Vancouver Olympics. We had the best Olympic result for ice skating in over a decade, now we’re rewarded the least funding in over a decade and the Sports minister just says it’s because were “Not top athletes.”

It’s insulting, as there’s a few less successful sports getting millions to improve and move forward, and we’re literally left with nothing. I mean would you not like to see another Torvill and Dean in your life?

One of the most watched sporting events ever was their 1994 Olympic skate where 29 million people of the British public tuned in. Ice skating is by far our most successful Winter Olympic sport and now without investment it will rapidly decline to become unrecognizable to us and to skating fans.

Can’t worry about that now though, we’re mid season and need to get our heads down until Europeans at the end of January. Plus Christmas is soon anyway and there’s nothing like friends and family to cheer us up!

Merry Christmas all!

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DAVID KING: BRING ON THE BRITISH NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

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On the way out to America we flew via Vancouver and reminisced over our fantastic Olympic games. Skate America itself was an interesting event. I messed up an easy element in the short program which left us again at the bottom of the pile.

Feeling a little upset with ourselves we skated quite a poor free program and received a similar score to what we achieved in Nice. Disappointing yes but it was a good lesson. We have to be able to turn things around if it’s not going our way. We always have been able to in the past but it’s a great reminder to put us back into gear.

Another problem we encountered was at the start of the free program we do an element where I throw Stacey in the air, she turns three times then I catch her and put her down. It may sound easy but this time Stacey caught me with her elbow on the final rotation, just above my right temple.

I have no idea how I stayed on my feet but from there on out I was a little shaken to say the least. The program itself just had too many little things wrong with it and this added up to a very low score. It’s annoying because all the hard work we put in and a bad five minutes can ruin it all, until the next event at least.

We received word in America that organisers of the London Eye Christmas rink wanted us for their 21 November opening. This was great as we should return home for our National Championships that week anyway and finally with some good skating news we were ready to head home.

What a beautiful scene they have for their rink, situated on the Thames right in front of the London Eye. We had a lot of fun, got some great shots for our portfolio and made a few headlines.

But fun and games are over as this week is our British National Championships, can we make it six in a row..? Well if you can’t make this Friday and Saturday at the Sheffield Arena I’ll just have to let you know how it goes.

Thanks guys and here’s to a good Championships!

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DAVID KING: NOT SO NICE

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Sorry but I’m writing yet another flight blog, I just get so bored flying and have a lot of time just to think. Anyway, I’m looking back at last weeks event in Nice and it was a very disappointing competition. Our coaches say not to worry as it was our first of the season and we had a break after last season but I’ve never been one for excuses and I’m not starting now.

I mean we competed at World’s this time last season when Stacey had a kidney infection. I woke her up before each program and she went back to bed straight after. I didn’t complain, but here we were fit, aiming for a medal and we ended 5th with a clear deficit!

It’s tough to take, in this sport you put your heart and soul into the programs then put them up to be judged. It’s a very personal process, if they don’t get a good score that program is a part of you and that’s an attack on your pride.

I’m not saying I’m scared to fail but more that I hate to lose and in Nice we lost big. Luckily we are moving on, with a few minor adjustments I’m sure the judges will be on our side and the next stop is Kingston Canada for the Skate Canada Grand Prix. We’re flying out a week early to get used to the time change and settle into the North American Hockey rinks, they are slightly smaller and a lot faster.

Canada came and went very fast and as for the judges being with us, well they were and they weren’t. We didn’t have a British judge, which is never a good thing but we got a huge 10 points higher than in Nice. We took out some of the difficulty from the programs and made the look smoother and faster.

This progress can only continue and I would be very happy if we can add 10 points at each event. It didn’t hurt that the week prior to the event we were skating in Montreal at our coach’s old rink with some of the best teams in the world.

No special venue, and no high tech gadgets just good old fashioned hard work and good coaching. I don’t know if it’s the English in me but that’s the way I like to do things, blood, sweat and tears.

Anyway, off to Oregon now for our final international of 2010 and let’s hope it’s another grower! Speak soon people.

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DAVID KING: THE BUZZ IS BACK

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It’s the eve of our first 2010/11 season assignment and we’re feeling the buzz of competing once again. We have to hit the ground running as we’ve started late this season, well it was a busy year you know! We’re ready though as ever, all we ask from ourselves is what we do in training every day and a little luck wouldn’t go a miss.

Cost of us skating is a bigger problem at the moment though as this week (and the whole of the country is getting similar news) have been hit with big cuts. It’s £28k to be precise, which puts very big doubts over our future dreams for a Sochi 2014 Olympic Medal. It’s unfortunate and more annoyingly it’s distracting but we’re trying our best just to finish this season then make bigger decisions when we can look at the full picture.

Now writing this from the plane and wondering if the 5am start was just a dream or reality. We’ve ventured on all transport today bar a boat but with all the strikes in France who knows where our journey may go next?

2pm now with a 5am start and we’re not even in France yet, well you know what they say about Polish trains. I remember once going up to a Polish training camp in the mountains and the train was literally walking pace.

The flight luckily enough is direct to Nice and we’re flying over some beautiful mountain ranges that I guess are the Alps. I’ve never been to Nice before and have heard many good things about the place, mostly about the great weather, let’s hope that it lives up to the reports.

The competition itself is a prestigious event in the International Skating Union calendar as it’s one of very few events you can achieve world ranking points. For those who don’t know much about skating, when competing skaters have to skate two programs to music with the points from each skate adding up to a total amount of points.

First skate is called the short program which is 2min 50seconds long and is classed as a technical program because you have set elements to skate. Next is the free program that’s 4min 40seconds and is often called the long.

Every element is awarded points. The harder the element the more points you get, simple. Now you know the basics come competition time you’ll understand what I say when I talk about both the programs.

Right, I’ll leave it there but got some more Coupe de Nice content coming soon!

Best wishes

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