MOSCOW -- Irina Slutskaya won the gold medal for the second time at the world championships Saturday, combining strength and style to cap an extraordinary season in which she prevailed despite a heart ailment and knee injury.
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The Russian delivered a bold and draining program that featured seven clean triples to the delight of the home crowd. She finished ahead of Sasha Cohen, who won the silver medal for the second straight year.
"I'm happy because it's so difficult to come back so many times, to suffer so many misfortunes," said Slutskaya, who missed the 2003 worlds because of her ailing mother.
Carolina Kostner of Italy won the bronze. Michelle Kwan, the five-time world champion, was fourth, the first time since 1996 the American finished a world championship without a medal.
"I can leave Moscow satisfied, but disappointed, satisfied -- kind of a roller-coaster ride and not as consistent as I wanted it to be," Kwan said.
The only indication of Slutskaya's health problems -- an inflamed heart lining for which she's taking medication -- was an apparent ebbing of energy in the steps sequence near the end of the program. Her confident skate to jazzy piano music was a striking contrast from the worlds a year ago in Dortmund, Germany, where she was low on energy and uncertain, finishing ninth.
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| Irina Slutskaya shows off her gold as Sasha Cohen looks on. (AP) |
Cohen was within three points of Slutskaya after the short program, but she was penalized for flaws in some jumps and for an off-balance landing on a triple flip. The U.S. skater finished more than eight points behind Slutskaya.
"I was really happy today," she said. "I stayed on my feet and I tried really hard and I'm really proud of my effort."
Cohen said the International Skating Union's new scoring system, used at the worlds for the first time this year, will help her refine her skating. The system gives precise scores for each technical element, rather than one general technical rating.
"You understand what's going on," she said. "You know the points mean something. You know that you bettered your performance, get more points. You can't really compare your performances under the (old) system."
Kostner was the first Italian woman to win a worlds medal since Susanna Driano's 1978 bronze. She capitalized on the new system's stronger technical emphasis with a triple-triple-double cascade that earned substantial points that helped offset small problems.
"I'm speechless, I can hardly believe it," she said. "Now this long, hard week has paid off."
