The Mercury News

Chen dazzles, wins U.S. title

- Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Karen Chen of Fremont probably didn’t see Ashley Wagner giving her a curt nod from the ice, not with her face buried in her hands after another memorable performanc­e at the U.S. figure skating championsh­ips.

The three-time champion was focused on warming up for her own performanc­e in the free skate, yet Wagner couldn’t help but acknowledg­e near-per-

fection — and the standard she now faced.

Wagner proceeded to lay down her own dramatic program, but it wasn’t enough to overtake the 17year-old Chen. Her elegant short program performed to “On Golden Pond” was followed by a darker, more emotional free skate set to “Jealousy Tango” that made her a surprising firsttime national champion.

“I skated such a great short and I was definitely thrilled with it,” Chen said, “so I definitely had some pressure going into the long, thinking I really had a chance at this.”

The bronze medalist two years ago, Chen’s free skate score of 141.40 gave her a 214.22 total, which stood up when Wagner under-rotated a combinatio­n and had a final combinatio­n spin reduced to a Level 2 in her own program. That left the world silver medalist with a score of 140.84 and a 211.78 composite.

“Karen has deserved the placement she’s gotten so far. That’s awesome for figure skating,” Wagner said. “I think we’re going to be seeing a very strong world team.

Chen will head to the World Championsh­ips, March 29-April 2, in Helsinki.

Chen, who is not related to men’s star Nathan Chen, is the first Bay Area woman to win the senior title since Kristi Yamaguchi in 1992 and the first local to win since Rudy Galindo in 1996.

Mariah Bell earned bronze with a free skate set to music from “East of Eden,” the silver medalist from Skate America overcoming a shaky beginning with a strong finish.

Earlier in the day, Maia and Alex Shibutani weathered a nervous few minutes watching Madison Chock and Evan Bates before winning their second consecutiv­e ice dance gold, while Haven Denney and Brandon Frazier made a triumphant return from injury to win the pairs competitio­n.

“We’re very pleased with the progressio­n that both programs have made over the course of the last several months,” Alex Shibutani said.

Defending champion Gracie Gold, whose season has been such a disappoint­ment, continued to struggle in the ladies’ free skate. She had a two-foot landing on a triple loop early in the program, then singled a double axel, and never was able to get back on track.

She almost looked defeated as she skated off the ice, hugging a stuffed animal tightly.

“I’m just not processing any emotions yet,” Gold said. “I’m just choosing not to process any because it’s just, again more, kind of bad feelings — changes I need. Improvemen­ts I need.”

Chen followed her record-breaking short program, choreograp­hed by herself, with another dazzling performanc­e to cap the penultimat­e night of nationals. She landed six triples, her spin positions were sublime, and she even managed to flash a big grin after landing a triple lutz.

When her score was revealed, she buried her face in her hands, almost in disbelief.

“There was definitely a lot of pressure, knowing that I skated the short of my dreams,” she said. “I wanted to follow it up with a close-to-perfect long.”

After giving the leader a curt nod, Wagner proceeded to give her program everything she had. She landed seven triples with the hallmark showmanshi­p that has served her so well on the national stage, and even earned a standing ovation for the performanc­e.

She didn’t earn the score she needed, though. Not quite.

“I know you always you want to come away from this with a win. But my goal from the start of this has been to get through nationals,” Wagner said, “especially coming off a difficult Grand Prix season.”

Chen, 17, showed potential two years ago when finishing third at the U.S. championsh­ips by edging San Jose Olympian Polina Edmunds, who was fourth. But Chen was too young to qualify for the senior World Championsh­ips then.

The 4-foot-11 skater became an afterthoug­ht the next season because of injuries and skating boot issues.

Chen finished eighth at the national championsh­ips after trying 14 pairs of boots before the start of the 2015-16 season.

Chen began skating at age 4 at Sharks Ice Fremont when Hsiu-Hui Tseng and husband Chih-Hsiu Chen took their daughter to the rink for fun.

The girl mastered triple jumps by age 11 and caught the attention of Olympic champion Yamaguchi.

In 2013, Chen began training under Tammy Gambill in Riverside. Tseng relocated to Southern California with her two children while Chih-Hsiu Chen has continued working as an engineer in the Bay Area.

Chen’s younger brother, Jeffrey, also is a budding skating star. He finished second with partner Layla Karnes this week in the intermedia­te dance competitio­n.

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Karen Chen put together a stirring performanc­e to win the gold medal at the U.S. championsh­ips.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES Karen Chen put together a stirring performanc­e to win the gold medal at the U.S. championsh­ips.
 ??  ?? WORLDS ARE NEXT Chen qualifies for Worlds in March
WORLDS ARE NEXT Chen qualifies for Worlds in March

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