From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jamie
Salé

Salé and Pelletier compete at the 2002 Grand Prix
Final |
| Personal
information |
| Country represented: |
Canada |
| Date of birth: |
April 21, 1977 (1977-04-21)
(age 32) |
| Residence: |
Edmonton, Alberta |
| Height: |
155 cm |
| Partner: |
David Pelletier |
| Former partner: |
Jason Turner |
| Former coach: |
Jan Ullmark
Richard
Gauthier |
| Former choreographer: |
Lori Nichol |
| Skating club: |
CPA St-Leonard |
| Retired: |
2002 |
Jamie Rae Salé (born April 21, 1977) is a Canadian pair skater. With
husband and partner David Pelletier, she is the 2002 Olympic Champion and 2001 World Champion.
Sale & Pelletier are also notable for being "the Canadians"
during the 2002
Olympic Winter Games figure skating scandal.
Early life
and career
Salé was born in Calgary, Alberta.
She competed first as a singles skater, winning the novice bronze
medal and placing and 8th in junior ladies at the Canadian
Championships. In 1994, Salé won the short program and finished
with the bronze medal in the junior event at the Canadian
Championships. That same year, she achieved her biggest success to
date by winning the senior bronze medal with her pairs partner, Jason Turner. They were
named to the 1994 Canadian Olympic team and placed 12th at the Lillehammer Olympics. They placed 16th at
the 1994 World Championships in Chiba, Japan, but ended their
partnership that August.
Salé returned to singles skating. She placed 5th at the 1995
Canadian Championships, but struggled with injuries which caused
her to withdraw from the 1997 Championships. Salé returned in 1998
and skated a strong short program, but was only able to land one of
five planned triples in her long program and placed 6th.
Return to
pair skating
Salé had a tryout with David Pelletier in the summer of 1996,
but it did not lead to a partnership. After her moderate success in
singles, she decided to give pairs one last shot. Coach Richard
Gaulthier, who was helping Pelletier find a partner, suggested
Salé. He and Pelletier went to Edmonton in
February 1998 to try out with Salé again. "The first time we
grabbed hands, it was just great," said Pelletier, and by the next
month Salé had moved to Montréal to skate with Pelletier.
The Canadian Figure Skating Association invited
the pair to compete at Skate Canada, where they
placed second in the short program - ahead of reigning Canadian
Champions Kristy
Sargeant and Kris
Wirtz - and third in the long program to win the bronze medal.
Because of their success, they were invited to the NHK Trophy in
Japan and won another bronze medal.
Their fall successes made them favorites for the Canadian title,
but they struggled technically and finished second. The silver
medal earned them a spot on the Four
Continents and World team, but Pelletier's back pain forced the
pair to withdraw from both competitions. They spent two months off
the ice recuperating.
Love
Story
In the summer of 1999, Gaulthier enlisted the help of Lori Nichol, a
successful Canadian choreographer who was known for her work with
Michelle Kwan.
She created a playful tango piece for their short program, and,
after a suggestion from coach Marijane Stong, set their long
program to music from the movie Love Story.
They won several competitions with this program. At the 1999
Skate America competition, they defeated the reigning and two-time
world champions and Olympic silver medalists Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton
Sikharulidze by winning both the short and long programs. At
their second Grand Prix event,
Nations Cup, they finished second to Russians Maria Petrova and Alexei
Tikhonov. With these solid results they went into the Grand
Prix Final with high hopes and even higher expectations. However,
several errors in both programs landed them in fifth place.
They competed at the 2000 Canadian Figure
Skating Championships in Salé's hometown of Calgary. They
skated a strong short program but exceeded even their own
expectations by skating a nearly flawless long program, earning
five 6.0 marks in presentation - the first for a pair at the
championships. They also captured another 6.0 and the gold medal at
the Four Continents Championships in Osaka, Japan.
Expectations mounted before the 2000 World Championships in
Nice, France. There, Salé had a major error on a spin in the short
program, and they were placed third. During the long program, she
again struggled, this time with her jumps, and they placed fourth
overall.
2000-2001
Season
Salé and Pelletier returned to Lori Nichol for their 2000-01
programs. She choreographed a jazzy short to "Come Rain or Come
Shine" and a dramatic, mature long to Wagner's opera "Tristan und
Isolde." They returned to Skate America and Skate Canada that fall,
winning both over Shen/Zhao and Berezhnaia/Sikharulidze,
respectively. Berezhnaia/Sikharulidze then defeated them at Trophée Lalique.
The pair was again successful at the 2001 Canadian Championships
in Winnipeg, but did not
earn the string of 6.0s that "Love Story" had brought them the
previous year. They went on to win again at Four Continents in Salt Lake City,
the site for the 2002
Olympics, and revived "Love Story" to win the Grand Prix Final
- despite Salé missing the side by side triple toe loop in all
three phases of the competition.
The 2001 World Championships were held in Vancouver, and Salé and Pelletier entered as
heavy favorites. Trouble on the side by side jumps landed them in
third place in the short program, but the team was able to skate a
nearly flawless long program (Salé singled a side by side double
axel) to capture the title. They were the first Canadian pair to
win Worlds since Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler in 1993,
and the first pair to win at a Worlds held in Canada since Barbara
Underhill and Paul
Martini in 1984. They would later win the Lou Marsh
Trophy as outstanding Canadian athlete in 2001.
Olympic
hopes
Salé and Pelletier again had early success in the 2001-02
season, winning both Skate America and Skate Canada with their new
long program to "Adagio Sostenuto" by Rachmaninoff,
nicknamed "Orchid" for its flower theme. Perhaps more importantly,
they demonstrated technical consistency in both competitions.
The Grand Prix Final, held in Kitchener, Ontario, was important
because it was the only chance to test their programs against the
top contenders before the Olympics. Despite a rough performance of
"Orchid" in the first long program, Salé and Pelletier once again
won the event, skating a clean performance of "Love Story" for
their second long program. They headed into the 2002 Canadian
Championships in Hamilton, Ontario with confidence,
having defeated Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze, their biggest rivals.
They were able to win the title despite missing several elements in
the long program, and the performance increased talks that they
would revert to "Love Story" for the Olympic Games.
The pressure for the Olympics was intense. Despite several
silvers and bronzes, Canada had only won two gold medals in figure
skating, in 1948 and 1960. All eyes were on Salé and Pelletier to
break the streak and win, overcoming the Russian pairs dominance
that had lasted for 40 years. They skated a clean short program,
only to trip and fall on their closing pose. Because the fall was
not on an element, it did not receive a deduction, but it marred
the program enough to land the pair in second place behind
Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze.
Skating after the Russians, Salé and Pelletier delivered a clean
performance to "Love Story" and captured the audience and
commentators alike. A minor jump step out error from Sikharulidze
and a clean program from the Canadians had many convinced that Salé
and Pelletier were Olympic champions. But when the judges' scores
came up, Salé and Pelletier were placed second in the long program.
Five judges had awarded the long program to Berezhnaya and
Sikharulidze, and only four to Salé and Pelletier. This result
spurred an outcry from the North American media and booing from
many audience members, but Salé and Pelletier accepted the silver
medal. The next day, the French judge Marie-Reine Le Gougne admitted
she had been pressured into awarding the long program to the
Russians in exchange for a first-place vote for the French ice
dancing team of Marina Anissina and Gwendal
Peizerat, and a judging
controversy quickly blew up. The scandal ultimately resulted in
the suspension of several judges and officials, and Le Gougne's
vote was discarded, leaving the long program a tie. Salé and
Pelletier were awarded gold medals in a special ceremony later in
the week.
The controversy resulted in several changes to the judging
system. First, anonymous judging was incorporated to "relieve
outside pressure" from judges by separating their names from their
marks so pressurers could not assert whether the judge had acted as
they wished. After two years of this system, the Code of
Points was implemented and began use in the Grand Prix season
of 2003-04, and full usage for all 2004-05 competitions and
thereafter.
Since Salt
Lake City
Since the Olympics, the pair has turned professional and are now
touring North
America with Stars
on Ice, a figure skating show.
Salé and Pelletier were engaged on Christmas Day of 2004 at their Edmonton, Alberta home[1] and
married on December 30, 2005 at the Fairmont Banff Springs hotel in
Alberta.[2] In 2006, they served as commentators on
Olympic Ice which
aired on USA Network
during the XX Olympic Winter Games in Torino, Italy. They welcomed their first
child, a boy named Jesse Joe Pelletier, on September 30, 2007 at
the Sturgeon Community Hospital and Health Centre in St. Albert,
Alberta.[3] Jesse
weighed in at 7 lbs and measuring 19 inches.
Salé and Pelletier were inducted into the Skate Canada Hall of Fame
in 2008.[4] They
were inducted into the Canadian Olympic Hall of
Fame on March 26, 2009.[5]
Salé was paired with Craig Simpson, a Canadian hockey player
and now the lead analyst for Hockey Night in Canada, for
the Battle of the Blades
competition in fall 2009, which she won.
Competitive
results
Pairs
Amateur
(with David Pelletier)
(with Jason Turner)
Professional
(with Pelletier)
2003:
- World Team Challenge: 1st place (Team)
- Ice Wars: 2nd place (Team)
2002:
- Hallmark Skaters' Championship: 1st place
- Sears Canadian Open: 1st place
Singles
- J = Junior level; WD = Withdrew
Awards
References
External
links