Houston Chronicle

Bell has plenty of fun in short program win

- By Dave Skretta

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Mariah Bell remembers walking into the practice rink a couple of years ago and jokingly telling Adam Rippon, her training buddy at the time, that she was so nervous about nationals that she shouldn’t even go.

“He was like, ‘So don’t go,’ ” Bell recalled with a laugh. “The whole point was like, this is a sport. It’s truly for fun.”

Well, the 25-year-old Bell is having the time of her life at the U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ips.

She landed the triple flip-triple toe loop that had been causing her problems Thursday night, then ramped up the energy inside frigid Bridgeston­e Arena. By the time Bell spun to a finish, she had Rippon — now one of her coaches — leaping in the air and the masked fans circling the ice standing in ovation at the U.S. Figure Skating Champions.

Bell’s score of 75.55 points put her one point ahead of Karen Chen, the 2017 champion and 2018 Olympian, and more than four ahead of two-time national champion Alysa Liu, who also is aiming for her first spot on an Olympic team.

Earlier in the day, Ashley CainGribbl­e and Timothy LeDuc upstaged a brilliant performanc­e by Jessica Calalang and Brian Johnson to take the lead after the pairs short program. Audrey Lu and Misha Mitrofanov are in third.

“Every day is a new day,” Johnson said. “Go out there, enjoy, have fun and whatever happens, happens.”

Enjoy it just like Bell is these days.

She was the silver medalist in 2020 and twice has earned bronze at nationals, but her flawless technical routine and strong performanc­e in Nashville put her in Friday night’s free skate with a strong shot at the top step of the podium.

She knew it, too, smiling ear to ear after landing her triple lutz and pumping her fist after her final spin.

Chen was next on the ice and put together a performanc­e nearly as good. She landed a triple lutz-triple toe loop right at the start, breezed through a double axel and landed a triple loop to score 74.55 for her short program.

Meanwhile, the 16-year-old Liu didn’t do anything to harm her chances of competing in Beijing next month, though a fall on her opening triple axel left her playing catch-up. She rallied to land her triple lutz-triple toe loop and is well within range of one of the three spots that the U.S. women have for Beijing.

The biggest ovation might have come for crowd favorite Gracie Gold, whose well-known story of overcoming anxiety and an eating disorder has been an inspiratio­n for so many. She buried her face in her hands at the finish to prevent the crowd from seeing what she called her “ugly cry,” but she was all smiles when her sixthplace score of 67.61 was posted.

Cain-Gribble and LeDuc, skating last among the eight teams at Bridgeston­e Arena, were nearflawle­ss in their pairs program. It was highlighte­d by a soaring triple loop and net 79.39 points, a score that would have been thirdbest in the world during the Grand Prix season.

The U.S. has two pairs spots for the Beijing Games, and one of those could go to defending U.S. champions Alexa Knierim and Brandon Frazier. They were forced withdraw Wednesday night following his positive COVID-19 test, but they plan to petition U.S. Figure Skating for one of the spots based on their exemplary scope of work. If they are successful, that would leave just one spot up for grabs.

 ?? Matthew Stockman / Getty Images ?? Mariah Bell landed a triple flip-triple toe loop that had been giving her trouble during practice during the short program. She leads Karen Chen by one point.
Matthew Stockman / Getty Images Mariah Bell landed a triple flip-triple toe loop that had been giving her trouble during practice during the short program. She leads Karen Chen by one point.
 ?? Andrew Nelles / Associated Press ?? Ashley Cain-Gribble and Timothy LeDuc lead after the pairs short program. Jessica Calalang and Brian Johnson are second.
Andrew Nelles / Associated Press Ashley Cain-Gribble and Timothy LeDuc lead after the pairs short program. Jessica Calalang and Brian Johnson are second.

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