The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Japan’s Hanyu defends Olympic gold

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GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Yuzuru Hanyu was introduced as the Olympic gold medalist, skated over to the podium and jumped high onto it. With a perfect landing, naturally.

He also leaped into the figure skating history books Saturday, becoming the first man to repeat as Olympic champion since Dick Button in 1952.

“Just happy. I can’t say anymore, just happy,” Hanyu said through his everpresen­t smile. “I just did my best today. I don’t know if this is the best of my skating life, but I can say from my heart that I skated my best today.”

He held off countryman Shoma Uno and Spain’s Javier Fernandez in the free skate.

Coach Brian Orser met Hanyu as he left the ice after his strong but slightly flawed performanc­e. Then Orser, a two-time Olympic silver medalist who also coaches Fernandez, rushed back to behind the sideboards to help encourage the Spaniard.

Fernandez couldn’t match Hanyu.

Hanyu later congratula­ted Fernandez and told him he wished both of them could have won.

“I told him, `Yes, Yuzu, but only one can be champion. Only one can have the gold medal,“’ Fernandez said.

Uno moved from third Friday to second, loading a high-scoring quad and three triples into the final minute of his routine.

“I knew which level of performanc­e I performed,” he said through a translator. “I did what I intended to do.”

American Nathan Chen surged from a fiasco of a short program, when he was 17th, by winning the free skate to wind up fifth. He did it with an historic routine featuring six quads.

As always, Hanyu skated to raucous support from the crowd , with thousands of Japanese flags filling the stands. He was terrific, though not perfect, particular­ly messing up a combinatio­n jump.

As always, he left the ice to a swarm of cascading Winnie The Pooh dolls flooding the ice.

Uno might have won the gold if not for his magnificen­t countryman. His energy throughout, particular­ly in the back end of his routine to “Turandot,” permeated the arena, and he pumped his arms wildly when he finished.

Fernandez, skating to “Man of La Mancha,” was a worthy medalist, finishing just 1.66 points behind Uno.

“It means a lot for my country,” Fernandez said. “We’ve never had a figure skating Olympic medal. We have such few Winter Olympic medals in any sports, so I hope it means a lot to everyone back home.”

The 18-year-old Chen had succumbed to the pressure and massive expectatio­ns in the short program, a day earlier . On Saturday, he nailed virtually every element. He even did the sixth quad, a loop, getting full credit for the four rotations though he put his hands down on the ice on it.

 ?? Javier Soriano / Getty Images ?? Gold medalist Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan poses on the podium for the figure skating men's singles event on Saturday.
Javier Soriano / Getty Images Gold medalist Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan poses on the podium for the figure skating men's singles event on Saturday.

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