Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chen avenges Olympic flop with a world title

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ASSAGO, Italy — Nathan Chen’s redemption is complete.

While all of his top competitor­s fell, Chen, 18, completed six quadruple jumps in the free program on Saturday to become the first U.S. winner of the men’s world figure skating title since 2009.

For the rest, it was a falla-thon: 14 sprawls, splats, and tumbles among five competitor­s as they attempted the all-mighty quad. There were three falls by silver medalist Shoma Uno of Japan, who matched his Olympic silver, and two by Mikhail Kolyada of Russia, who took bronze.

Skating last, Chen said he knew the others made mistakes and that gave him the freedom to attempt six quads, knowing he had room for error.

After his woeful Olympic short program put the podium out of reach, Chen said at the worlds, “I just wanted to redeem myself in the short, and try to maintain what I did in the long.”

He did better than that. He finished first in the short, vanquishin­g that Olympic ghost.

And then in the free, he completed six quadruples, with minor deductions for stepping out of the quadruple salchow, to score 219.46 in the free for an overall total of 321.40. That compared to his Olympic free program where he attempted six triples, completing five cleanly but putting his hands down on a quad-flip. That earned him an Olympic record 215.08 points.

Uno, the only Olympic medalist to show up at the worlds, finished nearly 50 points behind Chen.

But with the crowd urging him on, he finished strong with a quad toe in combinatio­n and two more combinatio­ns as Puccini’s “Turandot” intoned the famed refrain “vincero,” “I will win.”

Skating to an Elvis Presley medley, Kolyada fell on his opening quad lutz and a quad toe, hitting just one of his quadruple attempts.

U.S. skater Vincent Zhou, the world junior champion last year, fell three times in the final skate, tumbling to 14th place after a strong short program put him within striking distance of the podium.

In the ice dance final, Olympic silver medalists Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France reclaimed the world title they lost last year with an ethereal free dance that earned them a season-best 123.47 points for a total of 207.20.

U.S. champions Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue took silver, vindicatin­g a fall in last year’s worlds that kept them off the podium. Canadians Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje won the bronze.

“I feel like we have done a lot of work tackling our demons, the fear, all the ‘what ifs’ that go through our minds,” Hubbell said. “We have a history of making some errors and giving up our place, so today’s performanc­e, that was our goal: To stay in the moment, to stay connected, and believing what we do is enough.”

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