THE SKATER’S ARMS move up and down to an ‘80s punk ballad that grates the air around her. Gliding down the ice, she swings her shoulders back and forth to the beat.
With eyes and expression as dark as her braids and the lace ruffles around her collar, the skater glares, throws her head back and continues on a purposefully awkward and yet confident journey through purple stagelights in the shadowy arena.
It is Kamila Valieva’s recreation of Jenna Ortega’s haunting “Wednesday” dance, from the streaming TV series spinoff of the Addams Family, in an exhibition at the conclusion of the Russian figure skating championships last December.
The performance lives in the video library of Andrei Minakov’s phone.
“How can you not like it?” he says.
To Minakov, a Stanford science, technology & society major and world-class swimmer, figure skating – especially in the example of Valieva – is the essence of sport. If you could grind athletics to their base, you would end up with something like what is seen on Minakov’s screen: storytelling through movement and competition.
“I have a strong feeling that sports is another way to show art,” Minakov said. "Sports like figure skating or artistic swimming do that in the best way. Nathan Chen … once he steps on the ice … Just incredible.”
Smooth … that’s the closest English word that Minakov, a native of Saint Petersburg, Russia, can think of that relates to this feeling, this sense. But does the same apply to Minakov?
“I don’t think it’s possible to channel something like that into swimming,” Minakov said. “The only thing that matters in swimming is speed and technique. If you want something smooth, you have artistic swimming.”
Those closest to him do not agree.
“When I watch him swim, it’s like art,” said Andrei’s sister, Uliana Stoliarova, a San Francisco artist. “The way he moves, the way his face looks – the expression of motivation. He doesn’t see it. He thinks his sport has nothing to do with art. But I see it.”
Art has different interpretations. When Dan Schemmel, Stanford’s Goldman Family Director of Men’s Swimming, considers what makes Minakov so special as a swimmer – Minakov is the defending NCAA 100-yard butterfly champion and holds three individual school records – he first describes technique.
“I don’t know if he does anything unique,” Schemmel said. “But when you watch his freestyle and butterfly from a technical standpoint, he does everything right. It’s that beautiful technique along with someone who’s as strong as an ox.
“When he moves at full speed and he’s applying his full strength … that’s when the magic happens.”
At the 2019 World Championships, the then-17-year-old became the first Russian in history to swim the 100-meter fly under 51 seconds. In the next day’s final, he swam even faster, setting a national record of 50.83 while earning a silver medal.
A month later, he won three gold medals at the World Junior Championships – in the 100 fly, 100 freestyle and the 400 medley relay in which he helped break the world junior record.
At the 2020 Russian Championships, Minakov, still only 18, broke a world junior record in the 100 free that Australia’s Kyle Chalmers set while winning the gold at the Beijing Olympics. He broke another in the 50 fly.
In 2021, two months before he attended his first class on the Stanford campus, Minakov placed fourth in the 100 fly at the Tokyo Olympics and fourth in the 400 medley relay.
“For the Olympics, World Championships, or European Championships, every time you go to a meet, every year, you try to think of a little thing you can improve on to get a better result,” Minakov said. “For one year, it was my sleep schedule. For the next one, it was nutrition. Then, what if I do more stretching here? What about my start? What if I move my head here?
“I have a set of rules of things that I have to do to be at the highest level: hydration, nutrition, rest, stretching. Still, nothing is perfect. I’m still looking for some things that I need to improve on, every day, every practice.”
Schemmel said Minakov lives a “championship lifestyle. He takes care of his body better than anyone I’ve ever worked with … He’s very in tune. Phenomenal body awareness.”
It shows in the water. Efficiency and power.
“I see art in everything he does,” wrote Andrei’s mother, Irina Stoliarova, in an e-mail. “I’m surprised he thinks swimming is any less artistic than figure skating. Swimming, especially butterfly, is very artistic and beautiful. The body movements are akin to rhythmic dancing, which definitely is a form of art.”
The appreciation Minakov has for figure skating preceded his own ability to skate. Minakov only learned in December, on an outdoor rink on Moscow’s Red Square, with the help of TV host and former Azerbaijani Olympic figure skater Emma Hagieva.
Whenever he’s in Russia, Minakov is drawn to the ice. He is a huge fan of SKA Saint Petersburg of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League and tries to attend figure skating competitions. At an SKA game a few months ago, he took a photo with Aliona Kostornaia, the 2020 European figure skating champion, each in SKA sweaters.
“Figure skating is very popular in Russia, you would find skating rinks everywhere and he has a lot of skater friends who are top level sportspeople, just like him,” Irina wrote. “They have a lot in common, especially the hard work behind success, and discipline. Many of his friends take swimming classes from him and he tried figure skating with them. They have this genuine admiration of each other.”
Andrei said his appreciation for the sport is even greater than for the skaters themselves.
“All of the skaters are different and all have a unique style,” Minakov said. “I’m more of a fan of the culture in general and the art that they’re making on the ice.”