The Mercury News

Palo Alto’s Zhou in second place at U.S. Championsh­ips

Palo Alto’s Zhou in second place

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LAS VEGAS >> Nathan Chen doesn’t miss.

As he has done since his last loss at the Pyeonchang Olympics — yes, nearly three years ago — the dynamic Chen was nearly perfect and rather playful in winning the short program Saturday at the U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ips on Saturday.

Seeking a fifth straight national title, something no man has done since Dick Button from 1946-52 with seven, Chen put out the most difficult routine that any man anywhere attempts. He hit a quadruple lutz, triple axel and an excellent quad flip-triple toe loop combinatio­n in scoring 113.92 points.

“I’m quite happy with the skate,” said the two-time world gold medalist. “Some of the jumps, the landings were a little bit shaky, especially the lutz, but I’m glad that I was able to pull through lutz and get to the axel and then do a combo in the second half. I don’t know if I’d ever done that in a short program. I’m happy about that . ... So, yeah, I’m happy with the way it went.”

Vincent Zhou of Palo Alto, a 2018 Olympian, put the pressure on Chen by nailing a quad lutz-triple toe loop combinatio­n with his arms raised above his head, a solo quad salchow and a triple axel, all as smooth as freshly swept ice.

Zhou, who skipped much of last season, benefited from that break. He also changed coaches, then finished second to Chen at Skate America in the fall; fought off some ankle and back injuries; and on Saturday looked calm, relaxed and at his peak in setting a career best at 107.79 points.

“A score like that didn’t seem like an impossibil­ity in my head. I knew that if I got the job done I was very capable of that,” Zhou said. “At the beginning of this year at a small, local competitio­n, in Colorado, I scored 103 with a clean program. That was way before Skate America, that was way before I put all this effort into developing the quality of everything: my landings, my spins, my choreograp­hy. So I know that with that much room to grow I could definitely score a couple points higher than 103.

“But the whole year was just about not being too hard about specifical­ly points but rather just keeping my head down and working to get myself to the point where if I skated like I did in practice, if I got my job done, then that would be very possible.”

Jason Brown, a 2014 Olympian and the 2015 U.S. champion, was third at 100.92. Brown doesn’t have the jumping repertoire of Chen or Zhou, but his artistry on the ice has made him a factor on the U.S. scene for nearly a decade.

Later Saturday were the pairs free skate and the free dance.

Earlier, national champion Bradie Tennell and third-place finisher Karen Chen were selected by U.S. Figure Skating for the world championsh­ips team.

The federation reserves the right to choose skaters for worlds and the Olympics regardless of how they finish at nationals. Tennell won her second U.S. title Friday night; she also finished first in 2018. Tennell is also an Olympic bronze medalist in the team event at the Pyeongchan­g Games.

Karen Chen, the 2017 U.S. champion, was picked over Amber Glenn, whose second-place showing this year was her first podium placing at nationals. The United States has only two spots; the maximum for a country is three.

Karen Chen finished fourth at the 2017 worlds and also was on the U.S. squad for Pyeongchan­g.

The 2021 world championsh­ips are set for March 2228 in Stockholm. But it’s uncertain if they will happen because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vincent Zhou of Palo Alto competes en route to a career-best 107.70 points in the short program at the U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ips. Zhou trailed only Nathan Chen.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vincent Zhou of Palo Alto competes en route to a career-best 107.70 points in the short program at the U.S. Figure Skating Championsh­ips. Zhou trailed only Nathan Chen.

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