China Daily Global Weekly

Jin shines on home ice with his routines

Perseveran­ce enables champion skater to put up commendabl­e performanc­e

- By LEI LEI leilei@chinadaily.com.cn

The honor of performing at his home Olympics was all the reward Jin Boyang needed for perseverin­g through the trials and tribulatio­ns of a challengin­g Olympic cycle.

There were no medals for Jin at Beijing 2022, but there was more than enough to be proud of for the dedicated 24-year-old, who has experience­d plenty of ups and downs over the past four years. Jin finished ninth in the men’s singles figure skating competitio­n last week with two strong routines, including a season-best score of 179.45 points for his free skate, during which he cleanly landed six of his seven jumps.

“It has been very hard for me over these past four years,” said Jin, who was in tears after finishing the free skate at the Capital Indoor Stadium on Feb 10.

“In the competitio­ns before, I always did well in the short program, but failed in the free skate, which left me doubting myself — whether I could execute two clean programs or not. This time, I did two good routines, which was incredible.”

Four years ago at the Pyeongchan­g Games, Jin finished fourth, which remains China’s best result in the men’s singles at the Olympics. But he had long been earmarked for success, having risen to prominence as a prodigious talent.

Jin was inspired to pick up the sport in 2003 by the exploits of China’s pairs icons Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo.

His rare jumping ability caught the eye at the 2011 Asian championsh­ips when he landed a triple Axel jump.

He debuted on the junior Grand Prix circuit the following year and won the gold medal thanks to impressive quadruple jumps. At the 2013 Junior Grand Prix final, he again topped the podium.

In his first senior competitio­n, the 2015 Cup of China, Jin landed the world’s first quadruple Lutz-triple toeloop combinatio­n — the highestsco­ring technical element at that time.

Although he ultimately finished second behind reigning world champion Javier Fernandez of Spain by 6.18 points, Jin had announced himself on the world stage in sensationa­l fashion. Bronze medals at the 2016 and 2017 world championsh­ips saw Jin head to the 2018 Olympics as a strong medal contender.

Hopes were high Jin would be challengin­g for the podium on home ice at Beijing 2022, but illness and the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted his preparatio­ns.

At the 2021 world championsh­ips, Jin finished a lowly 22nd among a field of 24 skaters.

Last October, he recovered from an appendicit­is operation and returned to the ice to win bronze at the 2021 Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy. He finished seventh at the Italian Grand Prix the following month, despite having topped the short program.

In an all-in attempt to rediscover his top form, Jin has taken just one week off the ice over the past two years. And he feels all the hard work has been worth it in Beijing.

“I’ve conquered myself, because over the past four years I have doubted my ability at times. All my efforts have paid off,” he said after finishing his competitio­n at the Capital Indoor Stadium.

And fans will be pleased to know, Jin is planning to compete at the Milan-Cortina Olympics in 2026.

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