With
partner Eve Chalom, Mathew Gates was a two-time
US National silver medallist and competed at the
1997 and 1999 World Championships. He briefly
returned to the eligible competitive scene in
the 2002-2003 season with Emilie Nussear, finishing
5th at US Nationals.
In Newington, Connecticut, Gates coaches Kaitlyn
Weaver and Charles Clavey, a novice
team who recently won the free dance portion of
the Lake Placid ice dancing championships. He
recently took some time to answer a few questions
from ice-dance.com about his coaching pursuits
and other experiences.
Mathew,
awhile back you had worked on choreography with Michael
Weiss. Have you created other programs for singles
skaters? Are you interested in doing more singles
choreography?
I
did some choreography for Michael, but it was more
focused towards the footwork sections of his programs.
I also worked on his basic skating for a month or
so. I would have liked to continue developing his
style but took the Dance directorship in Dallas. I’ve
been interested in doing other choreography as it’s
one of my many passions but I’ve put more focus
on developing Kaitlyn and Charles. I’ve recently
done a senior long Pair program for a new team taught
by Natalia Mishkatunok. I think the team is going
to be representing Azerbaijan. I really enjoyed that
and I hope to do more in the future.
What
are the challenges for choreographing for singles
as opposed to dance?
I
don’t think there is too much difference between
singles and dance choreography these days. The way
I create programs is much the same for singles, pairs
or dance.
You
were with Shpilband back when the Detroit FSC had
the top four or five dance teams in the country, and
later worked with Tarasova when she had several teams
as well. When you were in Texas, it was a smaller
program. Which training atmosphere do you prefer?
When I lived in Detroit I didn’t know any different
so I always wanted to train alone and have all the
attention from the coach. After moving to Dallas I
realized that it’s really important to train
with other teams or at least have other competitive
teams around, but I do think there are exceptions.
Although I liked having the sole attention from a
coach I found myself wanting a competitive environment
that I had for so many previous years. Sometimes you
don’t know when situations are good unless you’re
in a place where you can tell the difference. I relished
the idea of training with other teams again when I
re-enstated. The daily rivalry was truly fun and brought
a new vigor in my thought process. I think if Eve
and I had moved to Tarasova it could have been a completely
different story. I’m happy to have gone back
to skating to confirm what I had believed for the
previous two years about what kind of training situation
works best. I wish I had done it in my prime, but
I learned so much from my experience I feel I have
so much more to offer than before.
Tell
us about Kaitlyn Weaver & Charles Clavey?
Kaitlyn
and Charles came to me a couple seasons ago driving
up from Houston to Dallas on weekends. When I decided
to get back into skating they felt they had no other
option but to follow to Hartford, Connecticut. They
are so well matched physically -- they’re often
mistaken for a brother and sister team. They work
hard and have a good temperament, which is key to
staying together and working in the system. They’ve
improved from day one and have now started to develop
the skills needed to be competitive. I’ve really
enjoyed training and coaching them.
Are
you coaching other teams in Newington as well?
I’m
only teaching one team at the moment. I’ve been
teaching at other rinks Katonah, Cromwell and Simsbury.
If
you were offered a few hundred thousand dollars and
asked you to put together a skating show, what kind
of show would you put together?
I’ve
been teaching a little with Eve lately and have discovered
that we work well together in a teaching environment.
Like in skating I feel we complement each other in
coaching, choreography. So, I would hire Eve for a
start. I would love to do a show like Kurt Browning’s
Singing in the Rain T.V special. That is one of the
most amazing things ever done on ice in my opinion.
I would do it exactly like what Kurt did but along
those creative lines. I guess it would be more like
Ice Theatre with a cast of my choice. Iceskating is
such a unique sport/art/dance. It encompasses so much
and has so many dimensions -- the possibilities are
exciting and endless. |