Sunday May 27, 2012

Ice skating rinks cash in on Vancouver Olympics

Ice skating rinks cash in on Vancouver Olympics
Children figure skate at an Osaka sports center ice rink.

OSAKA —

Ice skating rinks in Japan are enjoying renewed popularity thanks to the Vancouver Winter Olympics. In Osaka, in particular, ice skating rink operators say numbers have been up, attributing it to heightened interest brought about by Olympic skaters such as silver medalist Mao Asada and gold medalist Kim Yu-na.

The number of skaters this winter at Hirakata Park and Furitsukadoma Sports Center is much higher than the last two years, say rink operators. Another factor, they said, was the success of speedskater Keiichiro Nagashima who won the silver medal and figure skater Daisuke Takahashi who won the bronze medal.

On the weekend after the women’s figure skating competition, the number of skaters surpassed 2,300, a 30% increase over last year at this time.

“Usually, numbers are down from the end of February, but when Nagashima won the silver medal, we saw more people coming, and then after Kim and Mao performed, we saw a bigger increase,” said an official at Naniwa Sports Center in Osaka.

To celebrate Asada’s silver medal, the center held a free skating session one afternoon last week. In the waiting line were many elementary school and middle school students. “I think the accomplishment of Japanese skaters at the Winter Games have had a big impact on the kids,” said the center official. “I think the great turnout will continue until the end of winter.”

The same scenes were repeated at Furitsurinkai Sports Center in Takaishi City and Uenoshiba Green Club in Sakai City in the Kansai.

At Hirakata Park’s Skate Arena Ice Square, 62,859 people had visited the rink as of Feb 28, about 80% more than last year.

News reports

  • 0

    DenDon

    my local ice skating rink closed down a cpl years ago after the reported 'torino boom' .it is now a Tullys coffee shop. Yuko Kavaguchi used to train there

  • 0

    Smythe

    I hope that so many of the Japanese people to those also living in Japan will injoy the art of skating. It is, without question, a good excercise to sport to learn. I wish them the best. Really the Silver medal by Mao Asada, in the mind of many of us should have been Gold, but judges have the final say.

  • 0

    xpompey8

    That's super! The Japanese skaters did well at the Games. This in turn will make it popular with the youngsters and future stars.

  • 0

    Disillusioned

    This will only last another fortnight. Then, it will be back to hanging out in convenience stores reading manga.

  • 0

    kimosabi

    Absolutely terrible for the hockey players around the country. Icetime availablity is dwindling down because of figure skating. It's not super at all. It sucks.

  • 0

    Shaolin7

    That's true, kimosabi! Finding ice time is becoming increasingly difficult, and reminiscent of beer league hockey times in Canada (late at night, after all the minor leagues have played their games).

  • 0

    TokyoRoughGuy

    This is terrible news! Give them pads and hockey sticks!

  • 0

    Weasel

    Give the fad about 18 months before it dies down again till the next Olympics.

  • 0

    HonestDictator

    I say phooey on ice skating rink fads. Slap on a pair of inline skates find a nice path for biking and skating and have fun! Or they don't have normal skating rinks I guess.

  • 1

    flammenwerfer

    I was chatting with a bunch of middle aged J-people and they were saying the number of rinks has decreased dramatically over the years, they listed of a about a dozen rinks that have closed down in the region. Expensive places to maintain and take up large tracts of prime land.

  • 0

    bicultural

    Disillusioned: no, it'll last more than a fortnight. But Weasel's 18 months sounds about right.

  • 0

    tmarie

    Shall we talk about the crappy quality of ice and skates here? I loved skating home and have been about three times in the years I've been here and never once has it been fun - dull skates, crappy ice. If they want to make a go of skating here as a business they might want to put some money into quality so people can actually enjoy it!

  • 0

    ratpack

    Didn't i read this exact story 4 years ago. Only the names and places have changed!!!!

  • 0

    Fadamor

    They probably had their biggest surge after the Nagano olympics. The expense of training means most will try it until the weather turns warm, then it's off to other pasttimes.

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