Choice is important for Pelletier because, growing up, he didn’t have a lot of it. Pelletier was raised in a tiny Quebec town where a rink was a “30-second walk” from his backyard. But his mom insisted that, if he wanted to play hockey, he also had to take figure-skating lessons. “Through the ears of a kid, the music was disdainful to listen to. To use the language of a seven-year-old, the outfits were dumb. You know, skating a figure eight for an hour in silence? That’s like being sentenced to community work,” Pelletier says.
But his attitude changed when he began pairs skating, which involved a whole new set of challenges that he started to enjoy. And when he was paired with Salé, that’s when things really fell into place. “This is when I really started to love figure skating,” Pelletier says.
For Salé, her love for figure skating was never in question. Her mom gave her a choice between figure skating and gymnastics when she turned seven. She was excelling at both, but her mom knew she’d only be able to pursue one. “I immediately said, ‘I want to skate,'” she says. “My mom said, ‘Take your time to choose.’ But I didn’t need to.” Salé excelled as a young skater, but during her teenage years, she started to struggle with injuries and a lack of motivation. A coach told her she should just quit and try something else. But she persevered, winning competitions at times, failing at others, until she was finally paired with Pelletier.
It was an electric pairing from the start. “We had huge chemistry,” Salé says. “And yet, some days I wanted to kill him on the ice. We are very different in the way we handle stress. My way of getting through it is always to laugh it off, slough it off, and [say,] ‘Oh, it’ll be better tomorrow.’ But Dave will kick a garbage can, or kick the boards, or the ice; he’d get really angry.” As soon as the relationship ended, the rumours started. Before they filed for divorce in 2010, Salé says they were privately separated for a year. During that time, Salé met Simpson on Battle of the Blades, a CBC TV show pairing hockey players with figure skaters. The pairs trained extensively for several weeks before performing in front of judges. The two won the competition with an exuberant routine set to the Black Eyed Peas song, “I Gotta Feeling.” But Salé was still hoping to work things out with Pelletier – who later went on to also win another season of the show – and even requested he help coach her and Simpson. “I had a great experience, and then came home to, ‘No, we’re done,'” she says. She formed a friendship with Simpson that later developed into a relationship, and she continued on as a judge for Battle of the Blades.