Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Chen wins World Figure Skating Championsh­ips

His performanc­e puts him as favorite to win at Beijing Olympics

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STOCKHOLM — Nathan Chen already has establishe­d himself as one of America’s greatest figure skaters. His performanc­e Saturday lifted him into the company of history’s best worldwide.

In becoming the first American since Scott Hamilton to win a third consecutiv­e World Figure Skating Championsh­ips men’s title, the 21-year-old Salt Lake City native also outskated two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan. And Chen believes he has been — and can be — even better.

“I wouldn’t say this is my best free program ever,” he said. “But it’s one I will definitely remember forever and cherish, being able to skate like that and skate this piece here at worlds.”

Russia completed its medals run when Victoria Sinitsina and Nikita Katsalapov took the ice dance gold. Anna Shcherbako­va won the women’s competitio­n, and Anastasia Mishina and Aleksandr Galliamov earned pairs gold.

Chen was dynamic in easily surpassing short program winner Hanyu and stamp himself as the man to beat at next year’s Beijing Olympics. Hanyu struggled mightily Saturday and fell to third place behind 17-year-old countryman Yuma Kagiyama, who took silver in his first senior worlds.

“The fact I’m able to be here at this world championsh­ips after this unpreceden­ted year, it’s amazing. I’m elated right now,” Chen said. “I just tried to really remind myself to enjoy being here. I don’t know how many more world championsh­ips I’ll get to be at. Doing that, I was able to be a lot more calm.”

Last year’s event was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

No one has had the jumping mastery of Chen. His “Quad King” reputation is well founded, and he landed his five four-rotation jumps with what NBC analyst Johnny Weir dubbed “technical wizardry.” But there was more to it : an intensity, even a ferocity, as if Chen was conquering each quad rather than simply completing them. Plus a balance of artistry and technique that has improved since 2017, when Chen won his first of five successive U.S. titles.

Even the look on his face at the conclusion of his free skate was intensely focused rather than celebrator­y.

Besides, Chen had to await Hanyu’s performanc­e, which was, for the Japanese star, rather pedestrian. He opened up on two jumps, had sloppy landings on others, and seemed to know it was not nearly enough when he shook his head before taking a bow and leaving the ice.

Hanyu, whose artistry is unmatched among today’s men, might not have been at his best physically.

“Coming into this competitio­n I have been working a lot on my quad axel and so I have overworked my body,” he said. “So it is important to get my body well. I want to go back to practicing it again. I want to be the very first person to land it cleanly in an official competitio­n.”

That won’t happen for a while with the major events of a truncated season concluded. It’s possible Chen and Hanyu won’t face off again until December’s Grand Prix Final — or perhaps even until the Olympics.

Kagiyama couldn’t sit still awaiting his marks after a personal best by 11 points in which he landed three quads and, despite a couple of bobbles, was a solid second to Chen in the free skate. Kagiyama leaped and ran in place in the kiss-andcry zone, then sat and practicall­y danced in his seat as the magnitude of his achievemen­t hit home.

“When I go back to Japan, I want to practice more because today I have seen so many things I need to work on,” he said. “So with that takeaway I want to go back on the ice immediatel­y.”

Hamilton won four successive worlds from 1981 to 1984. Since then, three others (Canada’s Kurt Browning and Patrick Chan, Russia’s Alexei Yagudin) have gotten three in a row.

Chen has not lost a competitio­n since the 2018 Olympics, when perhaps the worst short program of his career doomed him. He rallied with a spectacula­r free skate to climb from 17th place to fifth.

He’s been unmatched since, winning at worlds, nationals, Skate Americas and Grand Prix Finals. And the quads keep on coming, though he chuckled when Hanyu mentioned a 4½-rotation quad axel.

“I am looking forward to next season and what everyone else brings to the table,” Chen said, “and challengin­g myself to be as good as I can be.”

A fourth-place finish for Mikhail Kolyada assured Russia, which is having an outstandin­g worlds, of three men’s spots at Beijing. The United States and Japan also are assured that.

American Jason Brown, who doesn’t have the bigger jumps to match the medalists but is masterful at artistry, finished seventh.

 ?? Martin Meissner The Associated Press ?? American Nathan Chen performs at the Figure Skating World Championsh­ips in Stockholm. Chen, 21, of Salt Lake City, won his third straight title.
Martin Meissner The Associated Press American Nathan Chen performs at the Figure Skating World Championsh­ips in Stockholm. Chen, 21, of Salt Lake City, won his third straight title.

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