The Oakland Press

Hanyu nearly lands quad axel in competitio­n

- By Dave Skretta

Two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu nearly became the first skater to land a quadruple axel while easily outpacing Shoma Uno and Yumi Kagayami to win the Japanese national championsh­ip on Sunday.

Hanyu tried the jump, which unlike other quads includes an additional half rotation, at the beginning of his free skate at Saitama Super Arena in Japan. He ultimately two-footed the landing and the jump was downgraded to a triple axel, but it still set the stage for a program that included three more quads and left him with 322.36 points.

“I’m honestly relieved,” Hanyu told Kyodo News. “I felt as though I was about to cry even before the six-minute warmup.”

Uno packed five quads into his free skate but barely hung onto his quad flip and quad toe and fell on another quad toe, leaving him with 295.82 points

and the silver medal. Kagiyami finished with 292.41 points.

The trio of Japanese skaters are expected to be the toughest competitio­n for

American star Nathan Chen at the Winter Olympics in Beijing, which is set to begin in just under six weeks. Chen competes at U.S. nationals in two weeks.

“It is good to be able to watch skating. Even if I wasn’t competing I would still want to watch,” Chen said last week, when asked about Hanyu’s return from an eight-month absence from competitio­n due largely to an ankle injury.

“It will be exciting to see how everyone is doing,” said Chen, who has beat Hanyu head-to-head four times since the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics. “Will that really impact how I plan? Probably not. But it is still useful, I think, to sort of have an understand­ing where everybody is at. But more than anything, skating is fun to watch.”

In another potential Olympic preview this weekend, Russian star Kamila Valieva drove home her status as the overwhelmi­ng favorite in Beijing with a record-setting performanc­e at her national championsh­ip.

The winner of Skate Canada and the Rostelecom Cup scored 193.10 points in her free skate, eclipsing her record 185.29 set earlier this year, and finished with an astounding 283.48 points. That put her far ahead of Alexandra Trusova, who finished with 248.65, and Anna Shcherbako­va, who claimed the bronze medal with 239.56 points.

Valieva had set the record for a Grand Prix event with her score of 272.71 points at the Rostelecom Cup.

Trusova and Shcherbako­va could be Valieva’s closest competitio­n at the Beijing Games. And if that’s the case, the trio could allow the Russian skaters to become the first to sweep the Olympic podium for a single nation.

In other results over the weekend, Kaori Sakamoto won the Japanese championsh­ip with a score of 234.06 points, making her one of few skaters in the world to post a score high enough to challenge the Russians.

Alexandra Stepanova and Ivan Bukin won the Russian ice dance title with a score of 223.37 points.

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Champion Yuzuru Hanyu reacts after the men’s victory ceremony of the Japan Figure Skating Championsh­ips Sunday during which he nearly landed a quadruple axel.
EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Champion Yuzuru Hanyu reacts after the men’s victory ceremony of the Japan Figure Skating Championsh­ips Sunday during which he nearly landed a quadruple axel.

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