SOCHI, RUSSIA – For most athletes, reaching the Olympics represents a pinnacle. For figure skater Ashley Wagner, news she made her first Olympic team initially felt like a two-ton anchor.
Congratulations Ashley, you've been chosen to represent your country at the Sochi Olympics! Boo, hiss!
I can't imagine the pressure Wagner will carry when she skates onto the ice Wednesday evening for the ladies' short program. Wagner doesn't even deserve to be here, according to the prevailing sentiment inside the figure skating community after Wagner fell twice in the U.S. national championships in Boston last month and finished fourth.
The Olympic qualifying process is fairly cut-and-dried in many other sports. It's based on times at national trials and success at qualifying tournaments. No wiggle room there. Figure skating is different, more ambiguous.
U.S. Figure Skating doesn't just consider one competition in selecting its Olympic team. The governing body weighs an entire year's results, and Wagner had a strong enough résumé this season that she received the final spot ahead of third-place national finisher Mirai Nagasu.
You can imagine how that decision went over in today's social media climate. Boo, hiss!
It's hard not to feel bad for Nagasu, a fourth-place finisher at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. Being left home is a tough pill to swallow. But the over-the-top vitriol directed at Wagner missed the mark. After all, she didn't put herself on the team, someone else did. Blame the U.S. Figure Skating and its goofy way of choosing an Olympic team.
Wagner, 22, absorbed an avalanche of criticism from those who felt she is undeserving of this opportunity.