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T E C H
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The Once and Future Queen
By DJ Murphy EXPN.com Aug. 19, 2000
SAN FRANCISCO -- At last year's X Games, Fabiola da Silva suffered one of the few losses of her vert skating career when she was upset for the gold medal by Ayumi Kawasaki of Japan. This year's edition was again a two-horse race as the rivals battled it out at a higher level than the other competitors in the event. This race, however, went to Fabiola by a nose.
The skaters almost staged a mini-revolt before the competition even began. Miffed at the early start time and the lack of spectators (the X Games main gates had yet to open at 10 a.m.), the four skaters, led by da Silva, considered not skating. Event organizers rushed in to smooth ruffled feathers and assure the athletes that if you skate, they will come. By the time the competition was scheduled to begin the gates had opened, the stands had filled and the competitors were ready to rock.
"It was just really early, that's why [we were upset]," said da Silva, by way of explanation. "It's hard to skate when it's that early, but everything went cool."
da Silva's first run definitely went cool. The skaters each took two runs, keeping the better score of the two. Her first run was clean, highlighted by big air, a 720 and a flatspin, the latter two of which no other competitors tried in this competition. The flatspin is a new addition to her bag of tricks and another example of how she keeps raising the bar in women's skating. She scored a 64.75 on the run, good enough for the lead coming out of the first round.
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