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Far from being the last frontier, the microgrid has become an incubator for collective innovation. It might be an island but it is also a bridge. Connecting people one idea at a time. He plays an active role in open innovation with strategic customers, overseeing pilot programs in the domain of Distributed Energy Management, Digital Substations, Microgrids and Big Data Analytics solutions. Surya Bonaly: No, not the Olympics. Well, we had the World Championships in Japan.

Latif Nasser: Just to set this up, the World Championships are the second most important event in figure skating after the Olympics. Tracie Hunte: And, at the Olympics, which were just a month before, the top three ladies-. Tracie Hunte: Oksana Bayul got gold-. TV Announcers: Nancy Kerrigan is physically-. Those top three ladies: Oksana, Nancy, Lu-. Latif Nasser: Out of the picture. Tracie Hunte: Out of the picture.

Jad Abumrad: Why? Tracie Hunte: For various reasons. Latif Nasser: Injuries, and some turned pro and stuff, but whatever. Jad Abumrad: Okay. She was going to take it. It was hers for the taking. TV Announcers: This is her winning season. Will it be gold? Latif Nasser: So jumping forward to the final day of the Championship, Surya is in second place.

She takes the ice-. TV Announcers: -years old from Nice in the south of France. Latif Nasser: Starts her program-. Tracie Hunte: Immediately starts with this double axel. TV Announcers: That's very incredible. Tracie Hunte: After that, it's just triple, triple, triple, triple, triple. It was just one of the best skates of her life. Surya Bonaly: I know I did my best, I did everything. It was not perfect because nobody is perfect, but pretty good competition overall. Latif Nasser: Eventually after about four and a half minutes, she finishes her skate-.

Loads and loads of technical difficulty. The question is, "How will they see her artistic effort? Latif Nasser: And she goes over off to the side to a bench with her coach to await her results. For the technical merit, it's the 5. Those are as high as any we've seen. Latif Nasser: When she gets her marks, she jumps into first place, and there's only one skater left.

It's a skater who usually finishes below Surya in competitions. Sandra Bezic: Yuka Sato. Latif Nasser: Again, that's Sandra Bezic. Sandra Bezic: We all know Yuka's skating. She's the kind of skater that puts a smile on your face. Elvis Stojko: Yuka was one of those really lyrical skaters.

Latif Nasser: Making his return, Elvis Stojko. Elvis Stojko: And Yuka had this very-. Elvis Stojko: Beautiful. TV Announcers: Style and grace. Elvis Stojko: To her skating. Sandra Bezic: This gentle, almost soundless quality, like a whisper across the ice. Latif Nasser: Basically, her skating style was the exact opposite end of the spectrum from Surya's.

Latif Nasser: So she gets up, does her final skate in front of the home crowd. TV Announcers: Yuka's one of my favorite skaters, but she doesn't have the combination jump like Bonaly did, so she's going to need all her jumps. Opening up with her triple lutz. Tracie Hunte: And she hits her first jump, crowd loves it. Surya Bonaly: She did good, she did good. She had maybe less triples than me, but she was maybe more prettier.

Tracie Hunte: In her routine there were these moments where it just looks like she was sort of skipping across the ice, just very balletic moves. Surya Bonaly: Yeah, no. She was good, you know. Now it's down to the judges as to whether the gold medal belongs to Sato of Japan or Bonaly of France. Tracie Hunte: So Yuka gets off the ice, she goes to wait for her marks. TV Announcers: The first marks, of course, the technical merit, Bonaly's strength, although Sato skated and jumped so well, and every one of those marks except the Finnish judge go to Bonaly.

She wins 8 out of 9 technical merits. Tracie Hunte: But when it came down to the artistic marks-. TV Announcers: It's just the opposite from the technical marks, 8 of the 9 judges, all but the French judge, giving her higher marks. Tracie Hunte: Those go to Yuka Sato. TV Announcers: Boy, this is going to be close. Tracie Hunte: It actually ends up being a tie.

Latif Nasser: So it goes to being a tiebreaker. Tracie Hunte: And that's when the judges basically pick first, second, and third. And in a decision-. TV Announcers: There it is, she's got it! Five to four, Sato is the new World Champion. Surya Bonaly: Unfortunately, they chose her.

TV Announcers: Off to the dressing room for the new champion. She'll be back, and so will we for the medal ceremony. Tracie Hunte: What happens next is one of these moments that really defines Surya's story for a lot of people.

Latif Nasser: So what happened was that right after all the results were out, they set up the medal ceremony, they called out the skaters. They first called out Yuka, she comes out from this tunnel backstage onto the ice, waves, smiles at everybody.

And then, after about a minute. TV Announcers: And now the silver medalist. Latif Nasser: They called out Surya. Latif Nasser: But-. All the cameras crowding around and-. Latif Nasser: She didn't come out. Tracie Hunte: Not immediately. TV Announcers: A late arrival, and here she comes. Tracie Hunte: She skates out onto the ice, she waves, but her face isn't smiling. Tracie Hunte: And when she gets to the podium, she congratulates Yuka Sato, but then-.

TV Announcers: Bonaly has chosen not to stand on the podium. Latif Nasser: She just stopped before getting on the podium. She just stood right next to the podium. TV Announcers: I think this is a form of protest. TV Announcers: I really hope she doesn't go through with this. Elvis Stojko: She wouldn't stand on it. She was crying. Tracie Hunte: Elvis was actually in the crowd watching. Elvis Stojko: I felt bad for her because I know what she was going through, where you know you outskated your competitor, and they just wouldn't give it to you.

And I was like "Surya, just get on the podium, take the medal". Latif Nasser: The figure skating official who was giving out the medals, he gives Yuka the gold, puts it around her neck, but then when he turns to Surya, he just sort of stands there, looks at her. He says something, but you can't hear what it is. She shakes her head. Tracie Hunte: He puts the medal around Surya's neck, shakes her hand, and then he holds onto her hand, and just kind of pulls her onto the podium.

TV Announcers: Oh, this is a first for me, that's for sure. TV Announcers: She's heartbroken. Oh, and she takes off the medal. Latif Nasser: She takes the medal off of her head-. Elvis Stojko: Like oh my go, holy bleep , she's actually doing this? It was huge. It was a huge deal. Latif Nasser: The camera zooms in on her face and she is just weeping. TV Announcers: Oh, what's going on inside that young woman?

Latif Nasser: So after the medal ceremony's over, she just gets mobbed by reporters. TV Interviewers: Why did you not accept the medal? Surya Bonaly: Because it's not my place, and I'm just disappointed.

TV Interviewers: Are they unfair to you Surya? Surya Bonaly: What? TV Interviewers: Are the judges unfair to you? Surya Bonaly: It's [inaudible ]. TV Interviewers: Do you feel you were robbed tonight? Is that what you're saying? TV Interviewers: Did you deserve the gold medal Surya? Tracie Hunte: And eventually, what she says is-. Surya Bonaly: I don't know, I'm just not lucky.

Tracie Hunte: I'm just not lucky. Latif Nasser: What was going on? What happened? Surya Bonaly: I think it was more like a point of saying this is it. Stop now. You put your fists on a table and say, "Enough is enough, that's it. I keep my eyes open. That is not fair. That has to stop. Mostly it was not fair. Latif Nasser: What about it felt unfair? Surya Bonaly: Just that I'd over and over it so many times, that every time, it's never me because whatever I can do, how many triples, I can be pretty, I can have the best choreographer, so everything was made to be on the top.

And still, what do you need more of me to do at this point? How many triple triple you want me? If I don't, do you kill me? And if I do, you don't care. And anyway, you chose somebody else. Robert Krulwich: Don't you think that that's a little unsportsmanlike? Jad Abumrad: Yeah. Tracie Hunte: Yeah, totally. Latif Nasser: Yeah, but if she-. Robert Krulwich: I mean all these other girls have worked just as hard as she has, one presumes. Latif Nasser: Sure, but picture yourself if you're in that position, and you find yourself getting second, second, you feel like you're not-.

Robert Krulwich: She came in second, that's not bad. Latif Nasser: The margin was so close. It was so close. Tracie Hunte: I just felt empathy for her. I can't imagine what it must be like, well I can imagine what it must be like. But on that scale, to be the only one. A friend of mine told me once that racism can make black people crazy, which is a very broad way of looking at it, in the sense that you almost never know why people are reacting to you the way that they do.

And you're always second guessing. That guy just came in, he said hi to everybody in the room but he didn't say it to me. What is that about? So there's no obvious thing about it, but it can make you feel a little paranoid, a little crazy. Tracie Hunte: Now, I cannot imagine how Surya felt in that moment, but I didn't necessarily think that these prejudiced people had denied her this.

If anything, I felt more like, man, it really must suck to be the only black woman skating at that kind of level, and not really understand why things are happening. It must be a very confusing situation to be in. And it's more like empathy. I don't know if there was racism. Quite frankly, Yuka Sato is an amazing skater. Robert Krulwich: And I think it's very legitimate to feel like you can't out your finger on this feeling that never goes away and never absolves and is always there and always makes you feel weird.

Matt Kielty: What happens after the-. Jad Abumrad: That's our producer Matt Kielty. Matt Kielty: After the ceremony? Tracie Hunte: I think the rep that she got after this was that she was a sore loser.

And that she was defiant. That she had a bad attitude. Jad Abumrad: And does she quit at this point? Latif Nasser: No, she keeps going. Jad Abumrad: She competed in the World Championships in , the very next year and she came in second.

Latif Nasser: Again. So three years in a row. Robert Krulwich: In a similar pattern? Was there just the one sort of-. Latif Nasser: That one wasn't as close, but she was second again for the third year. Matt Kielty: Did she skate in a lot of other competitions after 95? Latif Nasser: I think she did. Latif Nasser: Yeah, she was doing a lot. Matt Kielty: But she never wins?

Jad Abumrad: So she never gets first? Latif Nasser: I guess it depends on how you define first. Jad Abumrad: What do you mean? Latif Nasser: Oh, you'll see. So that actually takes us right back to the beginning.

TV Announcers: We're here live at 10 a. Surya Bonaly: I knew it was my last Olympics, last major big competition.

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