Here’s the thing that Patrick Chan wants to understand about his fellow figure skater, Kurt Browning… after 45 years on ice, how has Browning managed to stay in love with his sport? Not just stay active in it- because hey, a job’s a job, but stay enamoured with it all? Browning has a one-word answer to the question: Curiosity. Browning can’t help himself, he’s still curious about the next solo, the potential to make an audience feel something, the process of getting tuned up for performances…That, and the pure simple glide of skating, keep him hooked. With the Skate Canada event at October’s end in mind, Anastasia asks Kurt for his assessment of skating now, and looking ahead. The way he sees it- the scoring system rewards skaters for giving the judges what they want, more or less on a silver platter. The downside is, that makes one skater look a bit like another. If anyone deviates too far from the formula, there’s no way they can succeed. So that puts the more creative routines on the endangered list. But the system also encourages very strong technical skating- and the performance aspect has not gone away, so that’s all to the good. Browning loves the ever-increasing global popularity of the sport. He is a big fan of what he sees from Asian skaters, in particular. Looking a little bit ahead, Browning predicts some necessary growing pains. Like many sports, figure skating needs to come to terms with some abusive situations in the past. And he says the sport still needs to tackle cheating- both varieties, pharmaceutical and judging varieties. That’s all part of the maturation process, and he welcomes it.