SPORT / MISCELLANY
American-born Chinese skater looks to Olympic debut in Beijing
‘Chase your dream’
Published: Dec 02, 2021 04:53 PM
Audrey Lu (front) and Misha Mitrofanov compete during the pairs free skating at the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating NHK Trophy in Tokyo, Japan on November 13, 2021. Photo: IC

Audrey Lu (front) and Misha Mitrofanov compete during the pairs free skating at the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating NHK Trophy in Tokyo, Japan on November 13, 2021. Photo: IC



Audrey Lu skated her last program in an International Skating Union (ISU) figure skating Grand Prix of the Olympic season at the Exhibition of the Rostelecom Cup in Sochi, Russia on Sunday, with her desire to skate as an Olympian in Beijing in February becoming ever more intense.

The 19-year-old American-born Chinese and her partner Misha Mitrofanov were just one step away from a podium finish at the sixth and last Grand Prix in Sochi, a result not good enough to qualify them for the final in Osaka, Japan from December 9 to 12. They came fifth at the NHK Trophy a fortnight ago.

"Audrey has been dreaming to compete in an Olympic Games since she was a little girl," Lu's mother told Xinhua via an online interview.

"She decorated a wall of her room with the Olympic rings with ropes she made and wrote under it - 'Chase your dream.'"

"The dream became even more vivid when it comes to Beijing 2022, as she was selected into the United States national team," added Mrs Lu.

Born to Chinese parents in Dallas, Audrey Lu, known as Lu Yao in ­China, started figure skating at the age of 4 on the rink of a shopping mall in her neighborhood and didn't switch to pairs skating until May 2016.

"I started skating at 4," Lu said in an October interview. 

"I remember I got on, and I was falling so much. But I never cried, and I didn't get off the ice. I could tell that I really, really enjoyed the sport. My favorite part about it is definitely jumping. I like flying across the ice. It's just a great feeling."

Her coach Alexey Letov suggested that the 13-year-old Lu, who skated singles at that time with zero pairs experience, should team up with Mitrofanov, who was 18 and trained on the same rink.

"For me, I was actually doing singles at the time," Lu said in October. "It was the beginning of the season. And Misha and Alexey were like, 'Do you want to try pairs?' So we tried for a couple days. I wasn't sure if I really wanted to do this, and I did singles for another month. Then we talked about it, and I thought about it, and [thought] that pairs is giving me opportunities. So I decided to switch to pairs."

Steady progress

In the next five and a half years, Lu and Mitrofanov made steady progress, as they won the 2018 Junior National Championships, finished fifth at the 2018 Junior Worlds, claimed a Grand Prix medal at the 2020 Skate America in their first senior season, and finished fourth at the 2021 US Nationals.

"The Olympics are our mind-set; that's where we want to go," 24-year-old Mitrofanov said in October.

"Obviously, it's in the back of our minds that it's the Olympic season. But we treat it like every other season," Lu echoed. "We work hard every day and set goals for ourselves. And we ­slowly build up. When we get to the ­Nationals, we're all prepared, and we just show what we can do." 

As US Figure Skating won just two pairs' berths to Beijing 2022 through the World Championships in Stockholm early this year, Lu and ­Mitrofanov have to vie for a place with fellow Americans Alexa Knierim and Brandon Frazier, the reigning national champions, and Ashley Cain-­Gribble and Timothy Leduc. Both of those pairs rank higher than Lu and Mitrofanov in the overall standings of this season's ISU Grand Prix series. The coming 2022 US Nationals might offer the last weight to help decide the country's Olympic roster eventually.

"I'll be thrilled if we're able to skate on the ice of Beijing 2022," said Lu, adding that an Olympic Games on Chinese soil will be extraordinarily meaningful for her, who speaks Chinese and began attending ­Chinese school at 4 years old.

"My last time in Beijing was when I was 5 years old, and the Great Wall impressed me the most," recalled Lu, whose idol is Michelle Kwan, the most successful American-born ­Chinese figure skater in history.