Edmonton Journal

Patrick Chan struggles after disappoint­ment in Sochi

- GREGORY STRONG

TORONTO — Patrick Chan still hasn’t watched the tape of his performanc­e at the Sochi Olympics. He’s not planning to any time soon either.

Chan had a glorious opportunit­y to become Canada’s first Olympic men’s figure skating champion last February, but struggled in his free skate and settled for silver behind Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu.

“It took me some time at the Games to get over the disappoint­ment of being so close, yet so far,” Chan said. “I had a couple reminders when I was on tour in Japan skating with Yuzuru in the shows. That didn’t help either. So I think the last thing I want do is look back at the programs even though some things were great.”

Chan, who also helped Canada finish second in the inaugural team event, did not try to win a fourth straight world title this year. He skipped the event in Japan and Hanyu took gold there as well.

The Toronto figure skater’s future remains unclear.

He has yet to decide whether he’s up for another four-year cycle a head of the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics. Chan does plan to skip a few competitio­ns next season and will wait until the fall before making a decision on the nationals and world championsh­ips.

Chan, looking relaxed and happy at a promotiona­l event Thursday in his hometown, enjoyed some vacation time after the season ended. He’s looking forward to playing some golf over the next few months and taking part in activities that he normally doesn’t get to do because of his training schedule.

The 23-year-old will continue to skate through the summer, just not at his usual high intensity. If he decides to return for the Canadian championsh­ips, he estimates that he’d need about two months to get back to top form.

“That’s another thing to consider,” he said. “It’s not something I can just show up at in January and hope that I skate well and win another title. It’s something that I have to really prepare and I’d want to prepare properly so I’d have to take time out of the fall to start training for that.”

The nationals will be held Jan. 17-25 in Kingston, Ont. Shanghai will host the March 23-29 world championsh­ip.

By Chan’s timeline, he would need to make a choice by mid-November. It’s a decision that he’s comfortabl­e putting off until the fall.

“I’ll just start stressing a lot more on it so I try to not even think about it for the moment,” he said. “If I’m committing the next four years to the next Games, then I want to take at least one year for myself to not stress, and just take a breath and really plan my life just by what I want to do, not what people tell me to do.”

Chan finished fifth in his Olympic debut in Vancouver in 2010. After settling for silver four years later, he found that watching other athletes succeed at the Games lifted his spirits. When he returned to Canada, he had a hard time getting a good night’s sleep for the first week he was back. He would often replay parts of the performanc­e in his mind.

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Patrick Chan

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