ESPN Network: ESPN | NBA.com | WNBA.com | NHL.com | ABC | Radio | EXPN | Page 2 | INSIDER | Shop |
Figure Skating
Skater Bios
Results/Schedule
 Sport Sections
MLB
Scores
NFL
Scores
Col. Football
Scores
NBA
Scores
Golf
Scores
Golf
Scores
Motorsports
Soccer
Boxing
NHL
M Col. BB
W Col. BB
WNBA
Horse Racing
Recruiting
Sports Business
College Sports
Olympic Sports
Action Sports
ESPNdeportes
ProRodeo
 Broadcast
ESPN Radio
TV Listings
Video Highlights
Audio Highlights
 Community
Sign-in/Home
Chat
Message Boards
Arcade Games
 ESPN Inc.
The Magazine
ESPN Radio
ESPNEWS
ESPN Wireless
TV Listings
This is SportsCenter
ESPN National Golf Challenge
The ESPYs
Ask ESPN
ESPN Zone
SPECIAL SECTIONS
Fantasy Games
Contests
ESPN Classic
SportsFigures
Training Room
 Tuesday, August 29
Bobek to skate professionally
 
 Associated Press

Putting the stress and high expectations of Olympic-eligible skating behind her, Nicole Bobek said Tuesday she is turning professional.

The 1995 U.S. figure skating champion, who never reached that level again, signed a four-year contract with the Tom Collins Champions on Ice tour.

"I would like to get more creative," said Bobek, 22. "I feel amateur skating is very competitive now and it's missing the artistry of the sport. The women always were known as the artistic part and the men were more athletic.

"I felt a little bit restrained as far as projecting a further style, taking programs to the limit, giving it everything and being more creative. There is always a certain line in amateur, with everything that is required. In professionals, it is not."

Bobek never really lived up to her advance notice, especially after winning the '95 U.S. crown. She often changed coaches, and when she found one with whom she was comfortable in Carlo Fassi, he died a few months later.

She put her career together in 1998 to qualify for the Olympic team. Although Michelle Kwan and Tara Lipinski clearly passed her by then, Bobek seemed a solid contender for a bronze medal at Nagano.

Instead, she crashed her way to 17th place.

"My Olympic performance wasn't amazing or anything like that," she said. "I am fine with it. I made it and that was an honor."

Injuries and lack of training slowed her since then and she didn't skate in the next two American championships.

"It is my time right now (to turn pro)," said Bobek, who is engaged and plans to get married next summer. "I still want to go out there and do lots of things and I have a lot in me. I want to take figure skating to a further level as far as artistry and performing."

Bobek also plans to compete professionally, with her first event the Grand Slam in October. She'll also be busy on the tour, on which she has been a semiregular as an eligible skater.

"I have always done champions on ice and have a connection with Tommy and a big group of skaters, and I love the show," she said. "It has a great support group of people and the skaters feed off each other."

 



  
ESPN.com: Help | PR Media Kit |Sales Media Kit | Contact Us | Tools | Jobs at ESPN | Supplier Information | Copyright ©2007 ESPN Internet Ventures. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and Safety Information/Your California Privacy Rights are applicable to this site.