Some Athletes Skip Opening Ceremony to Rest Up for Events

Several figure skaters said Friday they're skipping the ceremony's often spectacular but occasionally tedious parade of athletes to rest up for their competition the next day.

Many athletes at the Sochi Olympics have decided to stay off their feet for the Opening Ceremony because they'll be on their skates or skis the next day.

Several figure skaters said Friday they're skipping the ceremony's often spectacular but occasionally tedious parade of athletes to rest up for their competition the next day. The U.S. women's hockey team had a meeting after practice Friday and decided not to march in the opening ceremony to rest up for Saturday's game against Finland, a noon start local time.
"We're here to compete for a gold medal," U.S. forward Julie Chu, who already has two silvers and a bronze, said before the meeting. "The Opening Ceremony is a very special part of the Olympics, but isn't it more (important) to win a medal?"
The opening ceremony is expected to showcase the country's post-Soviet identity to the world, but the parade of 3,000 athletes at past Olympics has been known to drag on like a classic Russian novel. Athletes often have to line up an hour or more before the opening ceremony starts, and they could still be on their feet five hours later.
That's why three-time Olympic figure skating medalist Evgeni Plushenko, who might otherwise have been a candidate to be the host country's flag-bearer, said he will not attend to rest for the team events on Saturday night. American skater Ashley Wagner said ice dancers Meryl Davis and Charlie White told her their legs felt heavy for a few days after marching in Vancouver four years ago.
"Of course I have a fear of missing out, but I'm here to compete," Wagner said. "So we're having a viewing party, and I get to go hang out in Charlie White's room."
Finnish women's goalie Noora Raty, a three-time Olympian, said she will also stay home.
"There's no point of going, just standing eight hours," she said. "I've been there twice."
The U.S. and Canadian men's hockey teams have a different problem: Their NHL players are still committed to their pro teams and haven't even left for Russia yet.
"It's a personal choice, and a lot of athletes choose to walk, even if they're competing the next day," said Jane Almeida, a spokeswoman for the Canadian Olympic Committee. "It's really up to them and their coaches."
Copyright AP - Associated Press
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