Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Team of Virtue, Moir now at pinacle of figure skating

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By The Associated Press

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Canadian stars Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir won the gold medal Monday night in ice dancing at the Pyeongchan­g Games, becoming the most decorated figure skaters in Olympic history with a dazzling, dramatic free skate set to the music of “Moulin Rouge.”

Virtue and Moir scored a personal-best 122.40 points for a record 206.07 total, pushing them past training partners and close friends Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron in a riveting competitio­n.

The French couple broke their record for a free skate with 123.35 points to their performanc­e of “Moonlight Sonata.”

Their total of 205.28 points, also briefly a record, meant that Virtue and Moir needed to top their best performanc­e by 3.28 points when they took the ice right after them.

They accomplish­ed it with room to spare.

It’s the second gold medal of the Pyeongchan­g Games for Virtue and Moir, who were instrument­al in helping Canada win the team event.

It was their third gold overall after winning their home Olympics in Vancouver in 2010, and their fifth overall after two silver medals at Sochi.

The total broke a tie with Russia’s Evgeni Plushenko and Sweden’s Gillis Grafstrom for most medals in figure skating, and they tied the record for gold medals shared by Grafstrom, Sonja Henie of Norway and Irina Rodnina of the Soviet Union.

The Americans were assured of an ice dance medal when Maia and Alex Shibutani, who helped the U.S. team win team bronze, laid down their best performanc­e of the season.

The so-called Shib Sibs’ sharply choreograp­hed program to “Paradise” by Coldplay was perfect until a shaky rotational lift late in the program.

They trailed teammates Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue by twohundred­ths of a point after the short dance, and their near-season-best free dance allowed them to make up the difference.

The third American team, Madison Chock and Evan Bates, also was within sight of the podium after the short dance.

But their rare fall entering their combinatio­n spin was enough to damage an otherwise beautiful performanc­e to “Imagine” that still drew applause from the crowd.

Chock has an ankle injury that she aggravated Monday in warm-ups.

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