CBS 김연아 금메달 보도
CBS 김연아 보도
And Poetry in motion and plenty of emotion in Vancouver. From CBS News world headquarters in New York, this is the CBS Evening News. You can’t blame anyone for cutting loose폭음하다 after winning a gold medal. But did the Canadian women’s hockey team go a little too crazy after beating the US last night for the championship? The Canadians held a rocky celebration on the ice, swigging꿀꺽꿀꺽마시다 beer and champagne and apparently smoking cigars. And Olympic officials said today that’s not what we want to see.
And it could be the US vs. Canada for the gold in men’s hockey on Sunday. The Americans made the finals by clobbering두들겨 패다 Finland today 6 to 1. The Canadians play Slovakia tonight in the other semifinal. But for so many, the Olympics’ marquee가장 유명한 event is women’s figure skating. And as Jeff Glore tells us, last night was one for the record books.
It was a figure skating competition that delivered a record score and remarkable emotion. But for once이번만은, little argument. “What we saw last night was one of the greatest performances in Olympic history.” 19-year-old Kim Yu Na took the ice bearing the weight of a nation. Her celebrity in Korea so intense열정적인 that she left to train 6,000 miles away in Toronto. “I mean beautiful jumps. They were so light. They have the perfect art.”
Terrill Lorenski, the 1998 American figure skating gold medalist, says Kim did everything right. “This is a big jump. The triple axel, the height was incredible. In the triple toe, she has such… in between the jumps, she has a lot of flow.” “It’s one of the greatest Olympic performances I have ever seen.” The performance left the typically unflappable동요하지 않는 athlete in tears. A long program score of 150, the highest ever. The only woman who’s beaten Kim in the last two years is Mao Asado of Japan. She did do something Kim did not. Two triple axels. “She was skating for gold and she wasn’t skating safe.” But she was docked빼다 for two minor mistakes.
The night’s emotional highpoint, though, was Joanne Roushet, the Canadian whose mother died suddenly of a heart attack only four days before. Rousher’s skate was powerful. Her self control only breaking when she was on the medal platform. A bronze medal completing a dream. It was an event that ended without American medalist for the first time in 46 years. But it seemed to have just about everything else. Jeff Glore, CBS News, Vancouver.
And that is the CBS Evening News. Tomorrow the Early Show is all about jobs and how to find one, then Jeff anchors the Evening News from Vancouver and on Sunday Morning, the annual money issue. I’m Katie Couric. Thanks for watching. Have a great weekend. Good night.