| Article by Karen Frank.
Just
over six years ago, Michelle Scott attended her brother’s
hockey practice, and wandered over to another rink.
After watching the figure skaters on that rink, nine-year
old Michelle was hooked. “I quickly ran to my
dad and told him I wanted to do that,” Michelle,
now fifteen, recalled. For Michelle, skating was never
just a hobby; her goal to skate competitively was
formed as soon as she stepped onto the ice. “The
first time I was on the ice I knew it, it just felt
so right.”
Meanwhile,
twenty-one year old Alex Clark began his skating career
as a hockey player. When he was twelve, he switched
to figure skating, and at the suggestion of his coach,
began ice dancing competitively, partnering first
his sister De Anna (from 1996-1999) and then Melissa
Kamin (from 2000-2001).
An
Internet search brought the two of them together,
and after a successful tryout, Alex moved from Michigan
to Delaware to train at the Skating Club of Wilmington
under the guidance of coaches Irina Romanov and Igor
Yaroshenko. Alex is Michelle’s first partner,
but already their partnership has met with success.
In the 2002-2003 season, Scott and Clark finished
second at Eastern Sectionals to qualify for Nationals.
Their subsequent ninth place finish in Novice qualified
them for an assignment in the North American Challenge
series this summer.
Both
skaters credit Romanova and Yaroshenko as a great
influence on their skating career thus far. “My
coaches are Two-Time Olympians, they push me to do
my best and they use some of their own experiences
to teach,” Michelle said. Alex agrees. “They
push us to become better skaters.” Also, their
families are large parts of their lives. “My
family supports me the most, they are so awesome and
are always there for me. My mom, Liz is the one who
drives me everywhere, my dad, Gary Sr. does the work
to pay for my skating, and my brother Gary and sister,
Stephanie, support me so much,” said Michelle.
Alex also names his family in Michigan as his support
system, “my mom Susan Musser, my dad John,
my brother Dustin, and my sister De Anna. . . they
are very supportive of me on and off of the ice.”
Since
2003 Nationals, the team has moved up to Juniors,
using the Lake Placid International Ice Dance competition
to try out their new programs on the junior level.
“At Lake Placid our performance wasn't our best
but it was a good way to start the season,”
Michelle said (the team finished sixth in their Free
Dance group and tenth in the original dance). Two
weeks later the team competed at the Thornhill, Ontario
NAC (finishing fifth in novice ice dance). “I
am disappointed by how we skated in Thornhill,”
Alex said. Michelle added, “I think we, as well
as all the other competitors, got thrown off by "
‘the Black Out’.”
At
both competitions, their new free dance
generated a bit of spectator buzz with their creative
costumes and the music by the Russian band t.A.T.u.
It was Michelle who discovered the music. “I
heard the music on the radio and I loved it, so I
brought it to Irina and said could we maybe use this,
and so we did.”
Aside
from skating, Michelle and Alex have busy academic
lives. Michelle is a sophomore at Timber Creek High
School and Alex is a senior Mathematics major at the
University of Delaware. “I play the card game
'Magic: The Gathering' and I also enjoy playing video
games,” Alex says about his off-ice time, while
Michelle spends her free time, “hanging out
with friends, going to school, dancing, and talking
on the phone.”
But
with long term goals that include skating “well
in all competitions and compete at worlds and Olympics
– basically to be successful,” and goals
for this season “to do well at all competitions,
get an international assignment, and make it to Nationals
again,” free time can be pretty hard to come
by. “My friends, well some hate that I skate
so much and don't have time to spend with them,”
Michelle said, “but then there are others that
are amazed at how dedicated I am.” So dedicated,
in fact, that skating will always be a part of her
life – when she has finished her skating career,
she wants “to coach and have a family.” |