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SKATER DETERMINED TO REACH NEW HEIGHTS

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he wonderful thing about the inspiring — shall we call it Olympian? — story of Mirai Nagasu is that it’s not over. Not even close. Nagasu has gone from teenage wonderkid and US champion to fourth-place finisher at the Vancouver Olympics to passed over and nearly forgotten. And now, a Pyeongchan­g Games bronze medallist with, she vows, more to come.

“It has a really special meaning to it because it feels like I’ve come full circle,” the 24-yearold Nagasu said after not only helping the Americans to a team bronze, but becoming the first US woman to land a triple axel in the Olympics.

“It was really heartbreak­ing not to be named to the team in Sochi,” she added of being bumped for the more internatio­nally accomplish­ed Ashley Wagner by a federation panel four years ago. “But it was something not meant to be. I think that experience changed me as a skater. I took a step back and realised some things are not worth obsessing. I wanted to be on another Olympic team, but it took time to evolve myself as a person and a skater.”

That evolution, which included a slump in which Nagasu finished 10th at nationals in 2015, has been overseen by renowned coach Tom Zakrajsek, who believes the best is yet to come. Quite possibly next week in the individual women’s event.

“Mirai is ready to lay everything down and send some awesome shots in the singles events and we’ll see how the chips fall,” said Zakrajsek, who began working with her four months after she was left off the 2014 Olympic squad. “Ice is slippery, you know, and anything can happen. There’s a whole history of Americans not being expected to be on the podium, like Paul Wylie, Sarah Hughes. We are working for the podium and she will put it all out there.”

Which means, of course, trying the triple axel in both the short programme and the free skate. It’s not quite a secret weapon, but it’s something no other top-level woman has in her arsenal.

Spot on from start to end

And, perhaps most importantl­y, the axel Nagasu hit in the team competitio­n was pure, the best of her life. Something to build on.

“It’s just one jump in the program,” she said, “but at the same time, it’s really cool for me because I am one of the few that has the ability to land it. It is a newer jump for me, so I do work on it a little more than other jumps. But I probably work on it the same amount as the salchow because even in the Vancouver Olympics that was not a jump in my programme, so I’ve really grown.”

Another sign of how Nagasu has grown is what she did after nailing the triple axel that only Japan’s Midori Ito and Mao Asada, noted jumpers, had managed. Many in the crowd or watching elsewhere wondered if Nagasu would be so thrilled by hitting it that she would lose concentrat­ion in the rest of the programme.

Instead, she was spot on from beginning to end.

“She didn’t just land it, she spiked it,” Zakrajsek said. “And that gave her confidence, and everything she did will give her confidence going forward. In people’s minds, maybe they look at her differentl­y for the singles event.”

Although she is the secondrank­ed US skater behind relative newcomer Bradie Tennell, Nagasu seems the most likely challenge to reach the podium. Tennell and 2017 US champ Karen Chen could be more of a threat in 2024 in Beijing. For Nagasi, the time is now.

“It’s definitely a very different experience, I’m much older,” she noted over being at a second Olympics. “I think eight years ago, I feel like I was too young to really enjoy every moment of it. And four years ago I was crying with Adam Rippon because we both didn’t make the team.

 ?? Reuters ?? Mirai Nagasu of the US competes in the team event women’s single skating free skating competitio­n final at the Gangneung Ice Arena.
Reuters Mirai Nagasu of the US competes in the team event women’s single skating free skating competitio­n final at the Gangneung Ice Arena.
 ?? AFP ?? Nagasu during a training session.
AFP Nagasu during a training session.

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