チーズ柿種

探してたチーズ柿種をショップ99で見つけた。
記憶にあった味よりかなり脂っこく感じたんだけど
その頃はまだ胃袋が若かったのか。

ジェーニャのファンボードで貼ってくれた<a href=http://www.goldenskate.com/articles/2006/051307.shtml>ベルネル(チェコ)のインタヴュー記事</a>。
Antonela (ARG): What figure skater did you admire? Why?

Tomas: Evgeni Plushenko. He is Mr. Perfect on the ice.
There are some more, but he is the one who I admire most.

そーか。ワールドのEXでその片鱗は見せていた(笑)
カッコいい俺を演出するよりは、おどけて笑わせるというアプローチだったもんね。

あと<a href=http://p083.ezboard.com/fevgenyplushenkodevotionfrm1.showMessageRange?topicID=899.topic&start=41&stop=57>COI@ミネアポリスのレポ</a>をいくつか
ジェーニャの部分だけ引用してくれている。
特にこの記事↓でジェーニャが王者の王者たる演技の所以を表現した部分が的確でいい。
もちろんファンボードでも引用してあるけど、ここにもそのまま貼っておこう。
<a href=http://www.startribune.com/503/story/1181043.html>『The spin: More than talent in being the best: It's a state of mind』</a>
But after wading through the posturing and the look-at-me peacocking,
what remained were the finest ice skaters in the world:
Sasha Cohen, Evgeni Plushenko, Johnny Weir and Kimmie Meissner, among others.
Watching them, frankly, was breathtaking -- and enlightening. Why?
<b>Because I could see a difference between the very best -- Plushenko,
the three-time world champion and 2006 Olympic gold medalist --
and every other talented skater out there.
It was in his command. It was in his mentality.
It was in the way he knew he was the best.
All of these are intangible ideas, but all three very much permeated his routine</b>
It brought to mind the blade-thin difference between being a good athlete
or team and being the best.
How do you identify "the best" at anything? And of equal importance,
how and why is that status lost?