How are russian women able to do quads and not others in figure skating

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I think part of it is the training philosophy that allows for very very heavy practice schedules at a very young age and continues that even as bodies start to break down. Trusova has a very strong and athletic build naturally which may have protected her from some of the wear, though.
 
The thing is I don't want to attribute it all to drugs, because I don't think it is all drugs. We see skaters in other countries learn quads but lose them due to wear-and-tear and subsequent weight gain. Though if anything it might be that the drugs hide the wear-and-tear longer.

Edit to add that Eteri is, in fact, a monster though
 
A number of skaters trained quads but chose not to compete them regularly. I remember multiple Japanese skaters and Sasha Cohen all training quads in the early 2000s and landing creditable ones in practices.
 
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A number of skaters trained quads but chose not to compete them regularly. I remember multiple Japanese skaters and Sasha Cohen all training quads in the early 2000s and landing creditable ones in practices.
Oh yes I remember vividly Sasha' s 4sal. She abandoned the attempts quick enough due to back injury.
One of the reasons Eteri girls do quads is due to a 'clever' cheating technique - > than a quarter on take-off and spin on the landing = approximately 3.25 - 3.5 rotations in the air and they call it a quad. But of course considering most ladies chronically underrotate their triples, yeah it can count for a quad.
 
To be fair, the proper technique in figure skating does include pre-rotation on the ice. It was a really hard thing for me to learn when I started skating after having been so strict about not pre-rotating anything in gymnastics. Anything up to just under a half rotation on ice in takeoff can be considered correct, and anything under a quarter rotation shy on landing is accepted as well. This means up to just under 3/4 of a rotation is technically fine on ice for some jumps. Loop jumps tend to have a longer pre-rotation to get the spring, in toe loops you almost have to draw your foot through to get the proper technique and it's more like 1/3 a rotation pre-turned. It varies by jump.

To pre-rotate more than 1/2 rotation makes the jump sort of weird, though, and I will say I've seen some odd technique from some camps. Eteri's skaters don't necessarily do this, but they do "whip" their jumps around a lot. It's no wonder that Medvedeva now says she can't turn her back in one direction after all of that for years.
 

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