
Michael Christian Martinez of the Philippines missed the podium Friday (August 31, 2012) by a mere 0.37 points while competing at the Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating in Lake Placid, New York.
    Although the Philippines is not a natural skating country,  they have a naturally talented figure skater that began turning heads last  season: Michael Christian Martinez.
    The 15-year-old from Muntinlupa, a city of 400,000  inhabitants south of the capital Manila, confirmed just this week that he is an  emerging young skater by finishing fourth at the ISU Junior Grand Prix (JGP) in  Lake Placid, USA. The teen missed the podium by a mere 0.37 points.
    Martinez hit his first ever triple Axel in competition in  the short program at Lake Placid, but was so focused on this jump that he went  on to double the solo flip and the Lutz in combination. He ranked seventh.
    The short program to Toccata and Fugue, however, was not  the program he originally had planned.
    "In August, I joined two local US Figure Skating  competitions which were endorsed by our Philippine Federation just to have a  warm up competition prior to the Lake Placid JGP," Martinez explained. "I used  these competitions to test my two new programs and test my triple Axel. I did  not have good PCS (program component scores) in my short program in these two  competitions, and a judge told me that the music and program does not fit me,  so I decided to change it."
    With Andy Chang, he quickly mounted a new program just a  week before Lake Placid.
    "I was so nervous during my short program, because it was  just a week old and has not been polished yet," Martinez admitted. "It was a  rushed choice and I didn't have much time to choose good music and just decided  to use my novice music so at least I would be familiar with it."
    "We will change the program after the JGP (in Lake Placid)  as we still have two weeks before my next competition in mid- September,"  Martinez he added.
    In his free skate to King Arthur, the Filipino pulled off  the triple Axel again as well as four triples and three level-four spins to  move up three spots. The mistakes in the short cost him the medal in the end,  which would have been a historical first for the Philippines. However, Martinez  will get another chance when he competes in his second JGP in Zagreb.
    Before the event in Croatia, however, Martinez will debut  at the international senior level at Nebelhorn Trophy in Oberstdorf, Germany,  at the end of September.
    The skater is currently training in California, mostly with  Ilia Kulik, but also with John Nicks and Peter Kongkasem. Over the summer he  learned the triple Axel.
    "I was actually landing the triple Axel since 2011, but was  very inconsistent and sometimes cheated so we decided not to put it in my  programs as it might harm my scores," the teenager shared.
    Martinez' talent is obvious; otherwise he would not have  made it from a recreational skater from the Philippines back in 2005 to a  Junior Grand Prix contender with a triple Axel seven years later. Especially  since he started out in a shopping mall.
    When training at home, the skater faces a lot of  challenges.
    "It's an Olympic-size rink that we have in Manila, however,  it is mainly intended for public use and there is no freestyle session,"  Martinez revealed. "The ice is cut (resurfaced) only a maximum of twice a day  and is not properly zambonied. It does not have the same smooth surface as in  the USA. As a result, it's very hard to execute multi-rotational jumps."
    "The ice is rough and has too many bumps and too many  people," he continued. "I need to stay in the rink for six to eight hours,  transferring from one rink to another, just to be able to execute my needed  elements and to be able to practice."
    Martinez always has to check which of the two mall rinks  available have less people before practicing.
    "Over the years I suffered many injuries as a result of the  poor ice condition like two torn ligaments on my ankle and a torn medial  ligament in my knee," he said. "Also, the coaches are all recreational coaches  only; nobody has been properly trained for ISU coaching, so the coaching style  is very different."
    In order to progress, the young skater had to go abroad. In  2008, he trained in Colorado Springs, USA as he wanted to become a competitive  skater.
    "I was a Pre-Juvenile skater in 2008 and was training under  Janet Champion and other coaches," said Martinez. "I landed my first triple  jumps, triple toe and triple Salchow, in June 2008 with their Russian guest  coach Mr. (Alexander) Zaitzev."
    Martinez was deeply impressed by the level of skating in  Colorado Springs.
    "I thought I could never be the same as the elite skaters,"  he recalled. "I was just watching then during the elite sessions since their  maneuvers looked so impossible to do." 
    He did learn his first two triples, nevertheless.  Unfortunately, he lost them again when going back to the Philippines as he was  not able to receive professional coaching, but this setback didn't stop the  skater.
    He went on to compete in novice competitions in 2009 in  Europe.
    "I took first place in three out of my three competitions  in Slovakia, Slovenia and Austria," noted Martinez. "After those competitions,  I set my eyes on even higher competitions. Even though I was just 13 with just  a couple of triple jumps, my mother pushed me to be a Junior skater to have the  experience in competing at a higher level."
    Martinez went back to the USA to attend training camps and  started to work with Ilia Kulik in December 2010.
    "In 2011, we went to the USA again and I had lessons with  Ilia for a total of four months," he confirmed. "So far this year I have taken  lessons with him for three months."
    Martinez also went to California in July and August in 2010  to train with John Saita in Anaheim and also a few times with John Nicks in  Aliso Viejo.
    "Mr. Nicks helped me with triple jumps," offered Martinez.  "The lessons with Mr. Nicks, though, was very limited since his rink in Aliso  Viejo was too far from the house we were staying at, but Mr. Nicks was very  helpful."
    Martinez, then 13 years old, competed in September 2010 at  the Golden West Championship in California, landing his triples and finishing  third. Shortly thereafter, he debuted at the Junior Grand Prix in Japan,  finishing 17th.
    "I was so nervous," he recalled, "but my mother told me I  have nothing to lose, just to gain, from this competition."
    Since then, Martinez has progressed significantly. He was  ranked seventh at the Youth Olympic Games in Innsbruck. He considers this event  as his highlight of the past season, although he was disappointed with his  result.
    "I felt so lucky being part of the top 16 young skaters in  the world that competed in the Youth Olympic Winter Games," he said. "I was  very proud of my accomplishment; especially as I came from a developing-skating  country. Not even our skating federation could believe that I would make it to  the YWOG." 
    "My final placement was a complete disappointment though,"  Martinez continued. "I wanted to finish in the top five, but failed. I was in  third place in the short program, but fell to seventh in the free skate."
    "We could not bring my coach, Ilia Kulik, to the  competition because we did not have enough money to pay for his fees," Martinez  explained. "Prior to and during the Youth Olympic Winter Games, there was no  financial support from our Philippine government, so it was just my mother  (Maria Teresa Martinez) who coached me in such a prestigious competition. I was  so saddened about it."
    Martinez added that he received a little support by the  Philippine Skating Federation and Philippine Olympic Committee only after the  competition.
    Last March, Martinez went on to finish in a respectable  15th place in his debut at the World Junior Figure Skating Championships.
    "I landed six triple jumps," he pointed out. "My program  component score was low, thus I was in 15th place. In the short program, my  technical score was the 8th highest, but due to low component scores, I ranked  only 16th in the short program. I realized that I needed a good program and not  just land my jumps."
    At Junior Worlds he also realized that he needed a triple  Axel and triple-triple combinations to be competitive.
    "This meant that I would have to train more and harder,"  acknowledged the teen. "It also entails a lot of sacrifice and hard work on my  part, and more expenses for more lessons, not to mention the sacrifice by my  family in terms of time and finances."
    Martinez has set high goals for himself this season.
    "The goal is to land two triple Axels in the free skate and  to learn a quad," he announced.
    "My ultimate dream is to win an Olympic medal for the  Philippines," he added. 
    Although figure skating is an unusual sport in his country,  the athlete feels that he gets recognition by people at home.
    "Whenever they see me on the ice, they are fascinated with  the moves, the jumps and spins that I can do," he said.
    In skating, Martinez looks up to Patrick Chan, however, off  the ice, his mother is his idol.
    "She is a single parent, yet she managed to give us all a  good life," he shared. "If not for her persistence and dedication, I could have  not done what I have accomplished in figure skating in such a very short time."
    In addition to being proud of his mother, Martinez is also  proud of his heritage.
    "I can say that I am a truly "home grown talent" and that I  can truly represent the Philippines being born and raised there and having  started and skated in the Philippines. Not like other team members that come  from another country to the Philippines just for a couple of days to compete  during our national championships then leave immediately right after the  competition."
    In April 2012, the skater suffered a severe injury, tearing  ligaments in his knee.
    "I was off the ice and could not jump for two months,"  Martinez explained. "I had to re-learn my jumps again, which was so  disappointing."
    Martinez' doctor suggested to the skater that he  discontinue the sport due to the injuries he had accrued over the years.
    "Then I would start asking myself if what I'm doing is  really worth it," he said. "I had been out of regular school since 2008, and my  time had been eaten up by skating and gym and competitions. I've learned many  important lessons in life through the sport of figure skating, and one is to  never give up."
    When asked what he wants people to say about him at the end  of the 2012-13 season, Martinez gives a precise answer: "That I deserve to  represent the Philippines in the 2014 Olympic Games. 
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