Call & Times

Chen, United States take lead in team competitio­n

- By DAVE SKRETTA

BEIJING — It was supposed to be a foregone conclusion that Russia’s powerful stable of figure skaters, including world champions in three of the four discipline­s, would run away with the team gold medal at the Beijing Olympics.

Nathan Chen and the rest of the Americans must have taken exception.

The three-time world champ’s winning short program set the tone for Team USA on Friday, and everyone else followed suit. Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue won the rhythm dance with a season-best score, and Alexa Knierim and Brandon Frazier capped the first of three days of team competitio­n with a personal-best short program.

That left the Americans with 28 points, two ahead of the Russians and seven ahead of third-place China.

“We can walk away with a medal for sure. What color? It’s hard to say,” Chen said. “But I have faith in my teammates, and I know they’re going to do the best they can do.”

In fact, the only discipline they didn’t win was pairs. Knierim and Frazier were third behind China’s Sui Wenjing and Han Cong, who set a world record with their short program, and Russians Anastasia Mishina and Aleksandr Galliamov.

“I’m so proud of us,” said Knierim, who helped the U.S. win team bronze four years ago in Pyeongchan­g. “I mean, there was a lot of push-down pressure within us. We just tried to ignore it, and we just rose to the occasion.”

There is still plenty of work to do for the Americans to climb the podium this time around.

The team event takes a break Saturday before the women’s short program Sunday, where the Russians will again be the favorites. After that, the top-five scoring nations advance to the free skates, with the medals decided Monday night.

Chen struggled to a fourth-place finish with his short program in the team event in Pyeongchan­g, and the dismal start to his Olympic debut four years ago carried right into the men’s event. His short program there was so strewn with mistakes that not even his brilliant free skate could land him on the podium.

Perhaps his flawless start in Beijing will send him in the other direction.

Performing to Charles Aznavour’s song “La Bohème,” Chen opened with a massive quad toe loop and landed the triple axel that often gives him problems. By the time he landed his quad salchow-triple toe loop combinatio­n, his technical mark was so far ahead of the field that first place was just about assured.

Chen received 111.71 points, a mark that would have won the men’s short program in Pyeongchan­g, and one that put him well clear of reigning Olympic silver medalist Shoma Uno of Japan on Friday.

“Even if someone doesn’t have the best skate, we have an incredibly strong team to back us all up,” Chen said. “That’s certainly the case this time around. I’m happy I did my part and skated as good as I can.”

Oh, did he ever have someone backing him up.

After a disappoint­ing showing of their short program at nationals, Hubbell and Donohue were perfectly in sync for the Americans on skating’s biggest stage, scoring a season-best 86.56 points for their Janet Jackson medley.

“It’s always better to give a great performanc­e and to leave that impression with the judges,” Hubbell said, “but we also know that everything is dependent on how you perform each day and each time you step on the ice.”

World champions Victoria Sinitsina and Nikita Katsalapov were the last ice dance duo to skate, but their program began to go awry during their twizzles. It briefly fell apart when Katsalapov stumbled during their midline step sequence, a mistake that left them in second place with 86.06 points.

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