Vancouver Sun

Gogolev roars back from fall at worlds

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ZAGREB, CROATIA Toronto’s Stephen Gogolev recovered from a painful fall in his men’s free skate on Friday and soared from 10th to fifth overall in his debut at the world junior figure skating championsh­ips.

Tomoki Hiwatashi of the U.S. won the gold medal with 230.32 points, Roman Savosin of Russia was second at 229.28 and Daniel Grassl of Italy third at 224.67.

The 14-year-old Gogolev, the junior Grand Prix Final champion in December, climbed from 10th after Wednesday’s short program to fifth at 220.66. After singling his opening quad Lutz, he recovered brilliantl­y with a solid quad toe and quad Salchow-triple toe combo.

However, about two minutes into his routine, he fell on his triple Axel attempt and needed a few seconds to make sure his leg was flexible. He appeared to slam his right knee on the ice. He completed his program cleanly and capped it with a dizzying spin.

Joseph Phan of Laval, Que., made mistakes on his first two jump attempts and dropped from seventh to 12th overall.

“I’m disappoint­ed,” said the 17-year-old Phan, who finished fourth last year. “I took off too fast on my first jump and my feet didn’t follow. I’ve never made a mistake like that in my life in a competitio­n. My quad toe is usually more consistent, but I’m pleased with how I came back to land the triple Axel.”

Russia is 1-2 after the women’s short program led by Anna Shcherbako­va in first place.

Alison Schumacher of Tecumseh, Ont., is 16th.

Competitio­n ends today with the women’s free skate and free dance. Canada’s Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha were first after Thursday’s rhythm dance.

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