Canada's Keegan Messing had dreamed of being world's 1st to land quad axel
30-year-old says injury concerns stopped him from pursuing it as he got older
The quadruple axel is a love/hate thing for Canadian figure skater Keegan Messing.
"I see it — and I just want to quit," he said, with a laugh.
Messing once dreamed about being history's first to land the most difficult jump in figure skating, but the 30-year-old said age caught up with him.
And so he had mixed feelings when 17-year-old Ilia Malinin of the United States landed the first fully-rotated quad axel in competition. He did it first at a lower-level U.S. event last month and then again at Skate America last weekend, where he won gold in his senior Grand Prix debut.
"I can't wait to see where the sport goes," Messing said. "It's definitely a love/hate relationship I have with the quad axel, because I'm still competing, and I see it and it just makes me want to quit. But then to see someone able to do it, and what appears to be so effortless, unreal. Honestly, hats off to him. Congratulations."
WATCH | Malinin wins Skate America title with quad axel:
Messing headlines the Canadian men's field at Skate Canada International this week in Mississauga, Ont., and while quadruple jumps have become must-haves in men's skating — American Nathan Chen landed five in his free program to win Olympic gold in Beijing — the quad axel takes the sport to a completely new level.
Messing had been trying to master the elusive jump, both while wearing a harness — which looks like a giant fishing pole — and without.
"Actually I got pretty close. I got within a quarter [rotation] on it," Messing said. "It is such an unreal [feeling]."
Messing, who plans to retire after this season, said as he got older, injury concerns stopped him from pursuing the quad axel.
'Longevity becomes the issue'
That's part of why the jump has received mixed reviews. Three-time world champion Elvis Stojko made the quad jump his calling card, and has been thrilled about the proliferation of the four-revolution jumps. But even Stojko believes there's a fine line between pushing the sport and physically punishing the athlete, particularly when the big jumps favour a particular narrow-hips body type.
"The days of my body type are gone. Now you've got to be a twig, tall and thin," Stojko said in an interview Thursday. "But now longevity becomes the issue. We've seen that with [Japanese star Yuzuru] Hanyu with injury after injury after injury. How long can their bodies take that type of pounding?
The quad axel is actually four-and-a-half rotations, and the only jump where skaters take off facing forward and land backwards.
"It's the one jump where you can't cheat it on the takeoff or on the landing, it's a true four-and-a-half," said Skate Canada's high performance director Mike Slipchuk, who competed in men's singles in the '92 Olympics.
WATCH | What will it take to beat Malinin's quad axel?:
Skaters land quads with the force of seven times the body weight, on a blade barely thicker than a toonie. And the forward-facing takeoff makes the axel a recipe for disaster.
"If you're short on the landing, axels kill you," Stojko said. "I used to snap blades on the landings of axels that came up short. And because you take off forward, if you're under-rotated, a lot of times you [come down] facing forward, and oh my god."
"It's the one jump you lose sense in the air," Slipchuk added. "You can come out of the axel and not have a clue where you are."
Steven Gogolev has watched the video of Malinin's quad axel several times, and said he figured if anyone was going to land it, it would be the young American whose Instagram handle is Γåòquadg0d.
"Because he has really good axel technique," Gogolev said.
WATCH | Malinin lands 1st-ever quad axel in competition at U.S. Classic:
Gogolev, who's also competing at Skate Canada this week, became the first Canadian to land three different quads in a program when he was only 13, and five foot two. He's since sprouted to six feet, a rapid growth spurt that took some adjustment.
He believes the emergence of the quad axel is good for the sport.
Despite the different views on the jump, there was at least consensus on Malinin's execution of it.
Textbook.
"You'd think maybe the first quad axel will be a squeaker. But it's not," Slipchuk said.
To which Stojko added with a laugh: "It's a swisher."
Skate Canada International begins Friday at Paramount Fine Foods Centre. It's the second event on the ISU Grand Prix circuit that culminates with the Grand Prix Final in Turin, Italy in December.
Watch live coverage of Skate Canada International on CBCSports.ca, CBC Gem and the CBC Sports app for iOS and Android. Action kicks off Friday.
Schedule of events
- Friday, Oct. 21: Women's short program (1:55 p.m. ET), Ice dance rhythm dance men's short program (3:45 p.m. ET), pairs short program (6:40 p.m. ET), men's short program (8:05 p.m. ET)
- Saturday, Oct. 22: Women's free program (1:10 p.m. ET), ice dance free dance (3:20 p.m. ET), pairs free program (5:55 p.m. ET), men's free program (7:31 p.m. ET)
- Sunday, Oct. 23: Gala exhibition (2 p.m. ET)