
Figure skating embraces the future with new technology, modern concepts to engage athletes and fans
So when the International Skating Union put in motion its ambitious 'Vision 2030' plan, which is designed to grow and expand the sport through improved fan engagement, it made sense that they would call Wagner, a three-time U.S. champion and former world silver medalist, and Agosto, who won an Olympic silver medal with ice dance partner Tanith Belbin.
If anyone was going to interview athletes at this week's world championships at such an emotionally raw moment, the minute after their programs have concluded, it ought to be someone who has been through it themselves.
'I would have loved this when I was an athlete, to have the post-skate interviews right in the kiss-and-cry, when the emotions are so fresh,' Wagner said. 'That's something being brought into this production. We've never seen anything like it.'
Look closely, and you might notice a lot of things never seen before at this week's worlds: cutting-edge LED dasher boards surrounding the rink, grand entrances for the athletes, and more energetic music — like the rocked-out version of 'I'm Shipping Up to Boston' by the Celtic punk band Dropkick Murphys that keeps blaring inside TD Garden.
The idea is simple: The ISU wants to make figure skating feel cool again.
Or at least, cool to more people.
Those who love the intricate, nuanced sport — the spins and jumps, the brilliant landings and bitter falls — tend to follow it year-round. But there are just as many fans that tune in once every four years, during the Winter Olympics, when like a shooting star the athletes spring onto the public consciousness and then fizzle as soon as it ends.
"Skaters are the reason why this sport exits," explained ISU president Jae Youl Kim, who granted The Associated Press a behind-the-scenes tour of the world championship setup Thursday, shortly before the start of the men's short program.
'We are so proud of our athletes and we want to make sure we shine a brighter, stronger spotlight on our skaters.'
That is why those brilliant LED dasher boards are showcasing each athlete's social media tag, and why each is being introduced individually for the first time, something track and field and other Olympic sports have embraced over the years.
The ISU wants to create a spectacle for the 14,000-plus fans in the arena, along with the millions watching around the world.
'There's much more to come. I mean, we can brainstorm here a lot about potential marketing and sponsorship activations as well,' said Wieland Lüders, who manages the world championships for the ISU. 'Each skater has their own partners, potentially, so there are many more thoughts. But for now, we are just at the beginning. This is the basic concept.'
In the future, the Vision 2030 plan hopes to improve the TV presentation, simplify the sport's complex rules, increase sponsorship and expand revenue streams. It will also promote skating through grassroots initiatives, reimagine the season-long calendar, and explore new technology that could help to usher the sport into the modern era.
The athletes aren't just benefiting from increased exposure, and the potential boon for their pocketbooks, but also from back-of-the-house upgrades that are a part of Vision 2030. In Boston, an expansive lounge is off limits to everyone but competitors, and back at their hotel, there is a calming room complete with a rotating cast of therapy dogs.
Kim visited it this week. Nobody paid any attention to the ISU president because everybody wanted to see Penny, the dog.
If the calming room is meant to destress, the new hot seat in the arena will probably do the exact opposite.
Much like the time trial in Olympic cycling, where the leader sits uncomfortably on a throne until someone else takes the lead, the ISU has created the same thing at the world championships. But rather than some roped-off backstage area, where leaders have waited for decades, the hot seat is right next to the kiss-and-cry area in the heart of the arena.
The athletes who are coming off the ice after their performance can't help but stare down whomever is in the lead.
'We want the fans to see how that person is reacting when he or she climbs over to take the throne, or how they are reacting when they cannot make it,' Lüders said. 'They could have interactions with each other, some hugging or high-fives, something like this. So we hope we get more engagement between the two skaters.'
Ultimately, more engagement with the fans, too.
___
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
34 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Album reviews: CMAT Woody Guthrie Bryan Adams
CMAT is a natural talent with a big voice, a social conscience and an impish sense of humour, writes Fiona Shepherd Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... CMAT: Euro-Country (AWAL Recordings) ★★★★ Wolf Alice: The Clearing (RCA Records) ★★★★ Woody Guthrie: Woody at Home, Vol. 1 & 2 (Shamus Records) ★★★★ Bryan Adams: Roll With The Punches (Bad Records) ★★ CMAT | Getty Images Ciara Marie-Alice Thompson - you can call her CMAT - has enjoyed one of the most deserved success stories of the last few years, building a bigtime cult following for her Celtic country tones with a twist. She's a natural talent with a big voice, a social conscience, an impish sense of humour and a healthy dose of devil-may-care - how else do you explain the horrible sleeve image of her third album Euro-Country? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The title reflects her musical genre, Ireland's place in Europe and CMAT's anxieties about the current world order which she yodels over a plangent country backing and intrusive shuffling drumming on the title track. Much of the album looks inward, however. CMAT reckons with her own anger triggers on The Jamie Oliver Petrol Station over an inexorable indie krautrock groove, which builds along with her ululating vocals. Country confessional Take a Sexy Picture of Me is her twist on the make-me-pretty prayer. She is a gloriously free performer but not immune to body shaming barbs. The soaring easy listening soul of Ready is a declaration of willingness from a protagonist who is denied opportunity. 'I'm 23 and everyone is having fun except for me' she sings on country soul lament Coronation Street, before purging her yearning on the luxurious Janis Joplining. And though it may sound like she wishes disaster to rain down on a certain broligarch, Lord, Let That Tesla Crash is actually a tribute to a late friend and encourager. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Wolf Alice | Rachel Fleminger Hudson Wolf Alice also wield power thoughtfully on their excellent fourth album, The Clearing. This London four-piece have progressed well beyond their indie roots to evoke Blondiesque rapture on Bloom Baby Bloom as well as owning the swirling disco pop of Just Two Girls and the Stevie Nicks huskiness of Leaning Against the Wall. The Scotsman's arts newsletter is now sent twice a week - subscribe today Ellie Rowsell is a bewitching singer, switching at will from soft and demure to tough and punky tones while her bandmates get stuck into the ELO odyssey of Bread Butter Tea Sugar with its rhythmic strings and soaring backing vocals. The Clearing is so much more than bread and butter. WoodyGuthrie | Sid Grossman In his relatively short lifetime, Woody Guthrie, the father of western protest music, wrote a stack of songs which remain unrecorded, let alone unreleased. Woody at Home, Vol 1 & 2 is therefore a rare treasure, a double album repository of previously unreleased home demo recordings from 1951-52. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Even divested of its vestigial hum, this is as far from fancy as it gets but puts you right in the room with a musical legend at a time of fragile health. His signature song, This Land Is Your Land, sounds curiously low-key and introspective here, while the intimate, conversational take on Deportee is a resonant reminder that any country can be measured by how it treats its most vulnerable. Themes of peace, struggle, righteousness and the working man dominate. Backdoor Bum and the Big Landlord is a parable of hubris and humility, while Buoy Bells from Trenton concerns the Trenton Six, black men wrongly convicted of killing a white shopkeeper in 1948 - sadly as relevant as ever almost 80 years on. Bryan Adams, meanwhile, is still pulling for world peace in a rock song with A Little More Understanding. His latest album, Roll With the Punches, is happy to trot out the commercial rock cliches, with the air-punching power rockers coming out on top of the chest-beating ballads. The message is one of generalised positivity - Love Is Stronger Than Hate, Life Is Beautiful and the like - but he does take time out to tick off a philanderer on the marginally meaner squall of How's That Workin' For Ya. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad CLASSICAL Helen Grime: Chamber Music (Delphian) ★★★★★ In its sixth composer portrait for Delphian, the Hebrides Ensemble turns to Scots composer Helen Grime. The spotlight is on her chamber music, a panoply of works bearing an intimacy that is both engaging and thrilling. The opening work - Seven Pierrot Miniatures, commissioned in 2010 by Hebrides - is a masterclass in compositional clarity and concision, exploding with ruthless precision and scintillating freshness. Here, and beyond, the morphing Hebrides apply their characteristic virtuosity impeccably: in the shivering trio exchanges of Snow and Snow, the crystalline duetting of To See the Summer Sky, the lustrous French horn coupling in the Alexander McCall Smith-inspired Braid Hills, the bleak impressionism of Five North-Eastern Scenes (inspired by Joan Eardley's paintings), and the evocative solo pianism of James Willshire in the nuanced colourations of Harp of the North. Into the Faded Air, for string sextet, serves up a luxuriant conclusion to a transfixing survey. Ken Walton FOLK Sarah-Jane Summers & Juhani Silvola: How to Raise the Wind (Eighth Nerve Audio) ★★★★


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Celtic ultras group blast board as they name SEVEN grievances with club chiefs including signings, tickets and STADIUM
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A CELTIC ultras group have launched a stinging blast at the club's board in the wake of Wednesday's Champions League flop. The fed up fans have fired out a list of SEVEN grievances they currently have with under-fire chiefs. Sign up for the Celtic newsletter Sign up 4 Bhoys Celtic have hit out at the board 4 Peter Lawwell and Michael Nicholson were subjected to chants at Celtic Park Credit: Kenny Ramsay 4 It was a frustrating night for manager Brendan Rodgers 4 The Hoops were held to a 0-0 draw by Kairat Almaty Credit: Kenny Ramsay The Celtic board were the subjects of fan fury during the Champions League play-off clash with Kairat Almaty. On a night when many Hoops fans would've been expecting to see their team take control of the tie, they instead watched their team labour to a forgetful 0-0 draw against the Kazakhstan outfit. It's a result that means there's still plenty to do in next week's 7,000-mile round trip to a country that borders China with Champions League qualification hanging in the balance. Loud chants of 'sack the board' echoed around Celtic Park at various points during the second half while chairman Peter Lawwell and chief executive Michael Nicholson were also singled out with other X-rated chants. Much of the Celtic fans' current state of unhappiness stems from the recruitment - or rather, a perceived lack thereof. Manager Brendan Rodgers has repeatedly spoken of his desire for more players throughout the summer. Celts supporters have felt the board should've built on last season's strong position, investing in more quantity and quality, especially following the exits of high profile stars such as Kyogo and Nicolas Kuhn for big money. Those frustrations came to a head with the chanting during Wednesday's Euro clash. Now, prominent ultras group Bhoys Celtic have made their feelings known. But the situation on transfers is far from the only issue they currently have with those running the club. Helicopter Sunday: Rangers seal one of the most dramatic titles EVER as Celtic collapse on final day It's just one of SEVEN key grievances they've laid out, with topics ranging from transfers to tickets and season ticket costs to the STADIUM. They did, however, call on Celtic fans to unite and "back the team, hold the board accountable." In a lengthy Instagram post, the group said: "On Wednesday night we joined thousands of Celtic fans throughout the stadium in chanting 'sack the board.' "For us, this chant was not just about one poor result in a European qualifying campaign, although the last two decades have seen many of those - often due to a lack of timely investment to strengthen our playing squad, something many of our managers have called out during their time here. "While 'sacking' the board may not be a realistic demand, such chants are one of the few methods of airing discontent available to us due to the way our club operate. "For us, this is about the board's continuous incompetence and total disregard of the opinions of Celtic fans who spend thousands of pounds every season supporting the club and see little to no return on investment either in the playing squad, the stadium and the match day experience to name just a few grievances. "Examples include: "1. The recent season ticket price increase for the 2025/26 season. These were justified by the club as necessary to cover the recent national minimum wage and national insurance increases for match day staff - while we have tens of millions of pounds in the bank. "2. The severe lack of investment into an ageing stadium, with ordinary fans seeing no improvement of their match day experience over many years. "3. The lack of transparency around ticketing: tickets for away matches becoming more difficult to attain for fans who've attended matches for years, a dysfunctional ticketing office and a slow march towards pricing increases throughout Scotland which our club are complicit in. "4. The fans survey which was undertaken a year ago with much fanfare from the club, yet the results are still unreleased and excuse after excuse is given as to why not. "5. The lack of meaningful engagement and unwillingness to work with active fan groups to improve match day atmosphere, at times descending into total farce, such as the suspended ban currently imposed on the Green Brigade. "6. Unwillingness to explore or work towards a 'Celtic End' - one of the key results of the fans survey, despite many examples now of other clubs in Scotland working proactively with their active fan organisations. This total refusal to increase standing capacity despite overwhelming demand leads to 'solutions' such as fencing off parts of the stadium and introducing enhanced security checks with no regard for fan safety. "7. The lack of update on or release of the Fairhurst Inquiry into the unacceptable kettling of Celtic fans nearly five months on. "Wednesday night was just one poor result, but taken with the above issues, highlights our many grievances with the way the club is run. "While we may still win the tie and we may strengthen the squad this transfer window, the issues outlined above are just some of many which will not change without accountability and transparency from the Celtic board." Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page


The Herald Scotland
3 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Celtic ultras launch scathing statement amid 'sack the board' chants
The result leaves the Hoops needing to make the long trip to Kazakhstan knowing that they need to win away from home to progress to the league phase of the Champions League, and the £40m riches that would bring. Michael Nicholson and Peter Lawwell got it in the neck from supporters in Glasgow's east end on Wednesday evening. Now, Bhoys Celtic have launched a scathing statement on the situation at the club, as they pointed to the reasons why so many fans have become agitated. The group wrote on Instagram: "On Wednesday night we joined thousands of Celtic fans throughout the stadium in chanting 'Sack The Board'. "This chant was not just about one poor result in a European qualifying campaign, although the last two decades have seen many of those – often due to a lack of timely investment to strengthen our playing squad, something many of our managers have called out during their time here. "While 'sacking' the board may not be a realistic demand, such chants are one of the few methods of airing discontent available to us due to the way our club operate. "For us, this is about the board's continuous incompetence and total disregard of the opinions of Celtic fans who spend thousands of pounds every season supporting the club and see little to no return on investment either in the playing squad, the stadium and the match day experience to name just a few grievances. "Examples include: The recent season ticket price increase for the 2025-2026 season. These were justified by the club as necessary to cover the recent national minimum wage and national insurance increases for match day staff – while we have tens of millions of pounds in the bank. The severe lack of investment into an aging stadium, with ordinary fans seeing no improvement of their match day experience over many years. The lack of transparency around ticketing: tickets for away matches becoming more difficult to attain for fans who've attended matches for years, a dysfunctional ticketing office and a slow march towards pricing increases throughout Scotland which our club are complicit in. The fans survey which was undertaken a year ago with much fanfare from the club, yet the results are still unreleased and excuse after excuse is given as to why not. The lack of meaningful engagement and unwillingness to work with active fan groups to improve match day atmosphere, at times descending into total farce, such as the suspended ban currently imposed on the Green Brigade. Unwillingness to explore or work towards a 'Celtic End' – one of the key results of the fans survey, despite many examples now of other clubs in Scotland working proactively with their active fan organisations. This total refusal to increase standing capacity despite overwhelming demand leads to 'solutions' such as fencing off parts of the stadium and introducing enhanced security checks with no regard for fan safety. The lack of update on or release of the Fairhurst Inquiry into the unacceptable kettling of Celtic fans nearly five months on. "Wednesday night was just one poor result, but taken with the above issues, highlights our many grievances with the way the club is run. "While we may still win the tie and we may strengthen the squad this transfer window, the issues outlined above are just some of many which will not change without accountability and transparency from the Celtic board."