SOCHI, RUSSIA – Brian Orser rattled off the names, one by one. Elvis Stojko. Kurt Browning. Jeffrey Buttle. Donald Jackson.
Along with Orser himself, they all belong to a brotherhood that would like to close the door to new members: great Canadian figure skaters who never reached the top of the Olympic podium. Friday night, their ranks grew by one. Patrick Chan, thought to be the man who could finally break the streak, was undone by three flawed jumps in the men's free skate at Iceberg Skating Palace and finished second to Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu.
As Hanyu's coach, Orser should have been jubilant. The 19-year-old from Sendai became the first Japanese man to win the Olympic gold medal, a feat Orser predicted will be a huge boost to the sport in Japan. Hanyu also fell on one jump and touched both hands to the ice on the landing of another, but his expressive "Romeo and Juliet" program scored 178.64 points, giving him a total of 280.09 and Japan's first gold medal of the Sochi Games.
Chan took silver with a total score of 275.62, and Denis Ten earned the bronze to become Kazakhstan's first Olympic medalist in figure skating. Chan put on a brave face afterward, but Orser — himself a two-time silver medalist — both understood and shared his heartache.
"It's bittersweet for me," said Orser, who lost on home ice to American Brian Boitano in the famous "Battle of the Brians" at the 1988 Calgary Games. "I got more emotional giving Patrick a hug than I did with my own skater.
"I think of all our great male skaters, and not one of them has won. The list goes on and on. I hate when they say it's a curse; it's not a curse. But it's just not happening. And I feel bad."
There had been speculation all week about whether Chan would become another victim of the "Canadian curse," entering the Winter Games as a contender and leaving unfulfilled. His résumé is loaded, with three world championships, two Grand Prix Finals crowns and seven Canadian titles.
On a night when few skaters stayed upright through an entire program, Chan's three mistakes prevented him from becoming the first Canadian to win Olympic men's skating gold. Hanyu set a record with a score of 101.45 in the short program and led Chan by 3.93 points.