SportsLife 2016, issue 1 | Page 10

Deidre and Danae Russell: For the Love of the Sport By Scott Taylor, Photos by Jeff and Curtis Miller There will always be critics. Figure skaters, especially the country’s elite skaters, hear those critics all the time. Deidre Russell knows that people will say, “At 21, she’ll never be this or she’ll never be that.” They’ll say ‘Why not retire from competition?’ but Russell just laughs. After all, there is a lot more to being a figure skater than winning Olympic medals. “I’m not really sure when I’ll give it up,” said Russell recently. 10 / sportslife “It’s going really, really well and I still love it. I see no point at all in quitting. I still love doing it. Why would I stop?” Indeed. Deidre Russell is 21, she’s still the best Senior Ladies skater in the province and in December, she competed in Edmonton at the 2016 Skate Canada Challenge Competition. She still loves it but she knows times are changing. In fact, she’s begun to coach other skaters and she serves on Skate Canada Manitoba’s Events Management Committee. She has not, however, registered to Skate at this month’s 2016 Skate Canada Manitoba Open Free Skate Competition at the Arborg and District Arena. Instead, she has left that competition in the capable skates of her 15-year-old sister Danae. For Deidre, a science student at the University of Manitoba, being the top senor ladies skater in Manitoba is quite an accomplishment. But until the end of the Manitoba Open, she remains the province’s only senior ladies skater. Since the Open is not a qualifying event for Skate Canada, it’s a tremendous event for young skaters like her sister to hone their skills and work on their programs. Deidre started figure skating for obvious reasons. Her mom, Margo, is a figure skating coach and to this day, is still Deidre’s coach. Deidre has taken up the mantle and Skate Canada Manitoba’s executive director