Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. skaters show resilience despite falls in short program

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GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Bradie Tennell fell during her opening jump combinatio­n at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, a mistake so rare that the reigning U.S. champion couldn’t remember the last time it happened.

Mirai Nagasu fell trying to land her signature triple axel, which she pulled off in the team event but is so hard that nobody else in the competitio­n attempts it.

Karen Chen bobbled her opening triple lutz, which was supposed to feed into a triple toe, forcing her to adjust the rest of her routine to squeeze in another combinatio­n jump.

All three Americans showed tremendous resilience in holding their programs together.

Tennell, the first skater on the ice for the short program Tuesday night, wound up with the lead for more than two hours with her score of 64.01points. Nagasu had 66.93 and Chen totaled 65.90, leaving all three out of medal contention but proud of the way they fought back.

“I think it’s just that each of us have been through so many experience­s and ups and downs. We each struggle with our individual obstacles,” Chen said. “I’m sure they’re all really different but the same in many ways, and I think that’s given us character, to never give up and keep going.”

Alina Zagitova led heading into Thursday’s free skate with a record 82.92 points, followed by Russian teammate Evgenia Medvedeva with 81.61. Canada’s Kaetlyn Osmond was third with78.87.

Nagasu wound up ninth, with her teammates right behind.

Tennell landed everything inher early morning practice — in fact, she had landed just about everything since arriving in South Korea — and that had given her tremendous confidence heading into her short program at Gangneung Ice Arena.

But after landing her opening triple lutz, Tennell was unable to hold onto her triple toe loop, falling on the second half of a combinatio­n that had become so familiar.

“It was definitely unexpected. I don’t remember the last time I made a mistake in my short program, especially on the jumps,” Tennell said. “But things happen. We’re all human. We all make mistakes. You just have to get up a keep going. I’m definitely a fighter. I do not give up.”

She certainly did not, landing a triple loop and double axel later in her program.

Nagasu’s challenge was to land the forward-starting, 3½-revolution jump that causes plenty of men trouble. When the music to “Nocturne” started, Nagasu took a deep breath and began building up speed. She then unleashed a spin with so much energy she actually over-rotated, sending her to the ice.

“Sometimes,” she said, “I just let my nerves push me a little too far.”

Like her teammate, Nagasu picked herself up and pressed on. She nailed a triple flip-triple toe combinatio­n along with a triple loop, and her strong spins and step sequence finished out the program.

“I think about last year when I wasn’t going for triple axel and how much easier the program was, but you still have to rack up the points somehow. You have to play the game,” she said.

Chen did not participat­e in theteam event, when the U.S. won the bronze medal, so her short program was her Olympic debut. Her bobble on her opening combinatio­n forced her to ditch the second jump, then add it on the fly later in the program. “I’ve been nailing that every day in practice and I expected myself to, and to not be able to do that was a huge disappoint­ment ,” she said.

 ?? Chang W. Lee/The New York Times ?? Mirai Nagasu, a distant ninth, is the top American skater entering Thursday’s free program.
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Mirai Nagasu, a distant ninth, is the top American skater entering Thursday’s free program.

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