|
Post by Admin on Aug 14, 2017 20:38:45 GMT
http://instagram.com/p/BXie-8-Bau2 kaetkiss Thank you @_proskate for the early morning visit to get me into a new pair of skates and blades! #newfeet Foam glow Edmonton ! Who is going to be here tonight ?! #fridaynights #foamglow
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 24, 2017 19:43:06 GMT
#ACI17 / #ICA17: Kaetlyn Osmond (Ladies/Femmes Gold/Or) "Maybe it took the tumble to get it done" - @kaetlyn_23 on her first seven-triple LP at #ACI17
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 25, 2017 20:12:54 GMT
Kaetlyn Osmond landed seven triple jumps for the first time in her career on Saturday to win gold in women's singles at the 2017 Autumn Classic International figure skating competition. The Marystown, N.L., native came within less than a point of her personal best with 217.55 in Pierrefonds, Que., Mai Mihara of Japan was second at 199.02 and Elizabet Tursynbaeva of Kazakhstan third at 181.00. "It's so exciting I love both my programs this year," said Osmond. "And to do them both well here means so much to me. To get the seven triples is a big bonus."
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Oct 3, 2017 19:48:59 GMT
Osmond: "I don't want to be at my peak now" Welcome to Team Nulo, Canadian figure skater @kaetlyn_23 and her pets, Rasquette and Annie!
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Mar 29, 2018 19:18:15 GMT
One of the great things about winning a world championship is returning to Canada and having dozens of people waiting to embrace you at the airport. It’s a scene that Kaetlyn Osmond didn’t get to experience at Edmonton International Airport after becoming the first Canadian to win the women’s world figure skating title in 45 years this past weekend. Instead, she flew from Milan, Italy, to Japan, where considering her gold left two Japanese skaters with the silver and bronze, her arrival was not celebrated. That it took 45 years is a surprise because we’ve had many strong women in skating. Osmond also got cheated out of the coverage Canadians used to receive at the worlds. Sportswriters such as Neil Stevens, Bev Smith, Cam Cole, Steve Milton, Steve Buffery, Rosie DiManno and myself used to cover them virtually every year. Not one member of the Canadian print media was there to record Osmond’s triumph this year. Not once in all those years, and I covered 21 of them, did we get to write about a Canadian woman winning the world crown.
|
|