FALMOUTH — They understand they have no chance at a medal.
That won’t stop Briella Doherty of Portland and Hans-Erik Jerosch of Yarmouth from having a blast at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, which get underway Friday at the Detroit Figure Skating Club.
Briella, 10, and Hans, 13, are taking a break from their busy ice hockey schedules in order to compete as juvenile pairs Friday afternoon. Briella appears to be, by roughly seven months, the youngest figure skater from Maine ever to qualify for nationals.
“I’m not expecting to win,” the fifth-grader at Longfellow Elementary School said after a recent morning workout at the Family Ice Center. “I just want to do well in our program.”
Briella and Hans both play defense, shoot left and wear the same uniform number (3) for Casco Bay Hockey Association teams. She started skating at 2 but picked up hockey only two years ago. He also started skating at 2, but stuck to pucks for six years before dipping his toe into a boot with jagged teeth on the blade front.
“I originally started skating to help my hockey, because figure skating helps the edges,” said Hans, an eighth-grader at Harrison Middle School in Yarmouth. “I’ve always wanted to play at a pro level in hockey, and at a college level. But now, with figure skating, this is really fun.”
This season marks their third as a figure skating tandem, coached by Briella’s mother, Kristin Andrews, who also gives power skating instruction to hockey players. Andrews also coaches Hans’ older brother, Franz-Peter Jerosch, 17, who partnered with Jade Hom of Massachusetts to win the novice pairs national championship last winter in San Jose, California.
Jerosch and Hom have moved up one level to juniors and were scheduled to compete in Detroit but pulled out Thursday because Hom has a leg injury.
Hans was in San Jose last winter to see his brother skate at nationals, so he said the environment will be familiar.
“It’ll be a little different,” he said, “but I know how it feels.”
Off the ice, Hans plays piano and French horn and in spring plans to run track. At 5-foot-7, he’s nearly a foot taller than Briella, who stands 4-8. She plays soccer and the violin, and is the more outgoing of the two. Her mom says Briella could make friends with a wall.
“You have to rein her in at times,” Andrews said. “And Hans, he’s so good with her. They have a great working relationship.”
They qualified for nationals in November by placing fourth at the Eastern Sectionals in Wake Forest, North Carolina, where, because of injuries, there were only three other teams in juvenile pairs.
Skaters up to age 16 are allowed to compete at the juvenile level. Of the other 11 pairs who will compete against Hans and Briella at nationals, each scored at least 38 points at sectionals around the country. In seven competitions over two seasons, the pair from Maine has yet to surpass 28 points. In Detroit, they are hoping to reach 30.
“These guys keep it realistic,” Andrews said. “They have a great dynamic and they just love to skate.”
This could be their only shot at nationals for a while. Beginning with the 2019-20 competitive season, the USFSA will use a new format that funnels the best juvenile, intermediate and novice skaters to high performance camps and development teams rather than sending them to a national competition.
“I’m sure I will have fun,” Briella said. “We don’t always focus on the other teams and how well they’re doing. We just want to do better than we did the last competition.”
Glenn Jordan can be contacted at 791-6425 or at:
Twitter: GlennJordanPPH
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