• Skip to content
  • Accessibility
  • Home
  • Media Centre
  • Contact Us
  • FAQ
  • Français
  • Dream
  • Discover
  • Celebrate
  • Shop
  • Search
  • Athletes and Sports
  • Competition Schedule
    and Venues
  • Ticketing Information
  • Spectator Information
  • Torch Relays
  • News
    • News Releases
    • Feature Stories
    • Media Centre
    • Podcasts & RSS Feeds
  • Culture and Education
  • Sustainability and
    Aboriginal Participation
  • Work and Volunteer
  • About VANOC
  • Fun Zone

Feature Stories

Search Feature Stories

 

In Their Words: Joannie Rochette

Feb 26, 2008

Figure skater Joannie Rochette of Montreal, Quebec is the reigning female Canadian national singles champion. She is the first Canadian female figure skater to have won Nationals at all three levels (novice, junior and senior ladies) and she is one of Canada’s medal hopefuls for Vancouver 2010. In her first Olympic Winter Games, Torino 2006, Rochette claimed fifth place.

Those Five Rings by Joannie Rochette  

I started figure skating when I was a young child who could barely walk on the ice. From day one I enjoyed sports, but I quickly fell in love with figure skating after my first time on the ice. 

In the beginning, competing was my favourite aspect of the sport. I wanted to win, I liked to win. I entered many regional championships despite not being favoured to win: I lacked a certain new jump in my arsenal that was the key to success. However, typically, I would often only land that new jump for the first time during practice the week before. Though I often cut it close, I loved the adrenaline of competition, and liked to perform so much that I landed the tough jumps when it counted the most. It’s that passion for performance that led me to win my first provincial championship at age 11, as a pre-novice. 

Adrenaline  

That same passion for performance led me to win Canadian novice, junior and senior titles. It is that exact same passion that helped me place fifth at the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games; I achieved my goal of a top-10 finish. It is my enduring love for performance that pushes me toward 2010.

Speaking of Torino, my discipline of ladies’ free skating was one of the last events held at those Games. I arrived there one week before the Opening Ceremony, so when I started competing with my short program, I had been there for almost three weeks. And for 10 days, I had seen many fellow athletes celebrating the results of their Olympic adventure. I was patiently waiting for my turn to compete, and finally celebrate, too. 

Four minutes  

You train all your life for Olympic competition, and, in the end, four minutes means everything to you. If you mess up, you have to wait another four years! It is all about delivering at the right time, peaking at the right time. Then, when you’re in front of the noisiest crowd, and all eyes are on you to deliver — it’s important to feel like you gave everything you had.

That is exactly how I felt in Torino. After a ninth-place finish in the short program, I entered the long program with the objective of climbing a bit in the standings. After my name was announced, “Representing Canada, représentant le Canada, Joannie Rochette,” I skated onto the ice to take my starting pose. I saw the rings, those five Olympic rings. I started thinking about where I was, about what was going on. I thought about that little girl who could barely walk on the ice at one time and who was now at the Olympic Winter Games. Then, I woke up. I could not let those emotions take control of the situation. 

I ended the night in fifth place, which was amazing! I was “on” that night, the most important night so far in my career. I had the third-best technical score of all the ladies — of all the best ladies competing in figure skating from around the world! 

For me, and Canada as a nation, the 2010 Winter Games mean a lot. For many of us, the Games mean pride, accomplishment, challenge and excellence, and hopefully, a fantastic experience highlighted with the very best performances of a generation.

 

In Their Words Series

In Their Words is a celebration of the two-year countdown to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games. This 17-part series is comprised of personal stories written by Olympians and leaders with a passion for the Games. Visit vancouver2010.com every day from February 12 to 28 for a fresh story of inspiration, triumph and hope.

In TheirWords: Kristi Richards

InTheir Words:François-Louis Tremblay

InTheir Words:Cassie Campbell

InTheir Words:Kati Wilhelm

InTheir Words:Cristobal Huet

InTheir Words:Mike Moffat

InTheir Words:Bill Demong

InTheir Words:Brad Gushue

InTheir Words:Jeff Pain

InTheir Words:Dominique Maltais

InTheir Words:Lascelles Brown

InTheir Words:Johann Olav Koss

InTheir Words:Tewanee Joseph

InTheir Words:Joannie Rochette

In TheirWords: Davey Barr 

InTheir Words: KeithSashaw

  • Meet the Mascots
    • Meet the
      Mascots
    • Shop Now
  • Spectator Information & tickets
    • Ticketing
      information
    • Spectator Information
    • Coming to
      Vancouver 2010
  • Torch Relays
    • Torch Relays
    • The Route
    • Interactive Map
  • Cultural Olympiad
    • Cultural Olympiad
    • Artist Registry
    • One Year
      Countdown
      Celebration
  • /EDU
    • /EDU
    • Feature Programs
    • Project Showcase
    • Home
    • Procurement Opportunities
    • Host Communities
    • Four Host First Nations
    • Protecting the Brand
    • Official Languages
    • Media Centre
    • Sponsors and Partners

International Olympic Committee International Paralympic Committee London 2012 Sochi 2014
  • Official Languages
  • Web Linking Policy
  • Brand and Logo Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • RSS

© 2009 The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games
Olympic and Paralympic Games photography © Getty Images, unless otherwise stated.

Bell Logo