Date: Fri 04-Aug-1995
Date: Fri 04-Aug-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Illustration: I
Quick Words:
Rollerskating-Quintiliano
Full Text:
Roller Skating Champion
Chrystie Quintiliano
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
Chrystie Quintiliano, 11, of Sandy Hook will be heading off to Fresno,
California, later this month and it's all because of some birthday cake and a
pair of $2 tag sale roller skates.
Chrystie, who will be entering the sixth grade at Newtown Middle School in the
fall, will be off to Fresno for the United States Roller Skating Championships
and she is heading there as the Northeast Regional Champion after placing
first in figures and first in freestyle at competition in Schenectady, New
York. It is the same type of thing professional figure skaters like Nancy
Kerrigan are doing, only there is no ice and the sharp blades of steel are
replaced by four wheels and a stopper.
Chrystie got into the sport simply from attending a friend's birthday party
three years ago at Skate Tyme in Monroe. She got into roller skating really
for the first time at Skate Tyme and asked to be brought back.
" She loved it so much, " said Chrystie's mom, Betsy, " that we kept going
back. "
The first class she took was a Saturday morning group session, and that led
was the first step to Chrystie joining the Skate Time Club in July of 1992. In
September of 1992 she moved on to private lessons.
For almost a year she kept practicing on her first pair of roller skates until
her mom went for the upgrade.
" They told me better equipment would make her skate better . . . the bearings
are better, she would roll better, that kind of thing, " said Betsy. " I kept
thinking, how much better could you possibly be with better equipment?
" It was like night and day, " she added.
Chrystie's first competition was in Rahoboth Beach, Delaware, in January of
1994. For the first time out, she did well . . . finishing 12th out of 32 who
entered. " It was scary, " said Chrystie, " because I didn't know what to do.
It was my first time out and I was really confused. "
Chrystie made it to 1994 United States Roller Skating Championships in
Buffalo, New York, in her first year of competition after finishing second in
the 1B girls' singles competition at the Northeast Regional Championships in
Milford. Massachusetts.
She got there that early in her career because of lots of hard work.
Chrystie spends about four or five hours a day practicing. Generally, she
skates on Mondays from 5 to 8 pm, Tuesdays from 3 to 8 pm, Wednesdays from
5:30 to 7:30 pm, Thursdays from 3 to 9:30 pm, Saturdays from 3 to 7 pm, and
Sundays from 8 am to 12 noon. Sprinkled amid that hectic schedule are figure
and freestyle lessons.
The woman guiding Chrystie through all this is coach Sherri Nichio, who
designs and choreographs the routines - the jumps, the spins, the footwork and
hand work - for the whole Skate Time Club.
But it's Chrystie's routine that is going to need some work in the next couple
of weeks.
" I'm going to have to practice really hard, " said Chrystie. " I've changed a
few jumps and all of my spins from the regionals. "
She will be practicing hard, too, because next month, when the 1995-96 season
starts, Chrystie will be moving up into Elementary Singles, which is in the
Standards division.
There, she will be asked to perform a lot of double jumps - double mapes,
double sowcow, and double flip - and lots more difficult spins.
It's a far cry from $2 roller skates and practicing in a friend's basement,
that's for sure.
