Daily News (Los Angeles)

Chen returns home for Stars on Ice in Anaheim

- By Scott M. Reid sreid@scng.com @sreidrepor­ter on Twitter

So let's just get this out of the way right up front.

Nathan Chen doesn't know. Hasn't even really thought about it.

“It,” of course, is the question of whether Chen will defend his Olympic men's figure skating title at the 2026 Winter Games in Milano Cortina?

“Honestly,” Chen said, “I'm not sure yet.”

It's not like Chen, 23, hasn't been busy lately.

Chen is on the final stretch of the Stars On Ice tour that began in Fort Myers, Florida on April 14 and stops at Honda Center on Saturday before finishing in Portland on May 29.

A Chen attempt at becoming the only the second man to successful­ly defend the Olympic skating gold medal since 1952 would be the perfect antidote/distractio­n, take your pick, for a sport mired in yet another embarrassi­ng scandal — the doping controvers­y surroundin­g Russia's Kamila Valieva, the 15-year-old gold medal favorite in Beijing, who was allowed to compete in the Olympic Games despite testing positive for an endurance-boosting drug.

Chen gave lift off to men's skating, revolution­izing it with his athleticis­m.

He was the first skater to land five quadruple jumps in a free skate, and the first to record eight quads in a single competitio­n. Chen, a threetime World champion, holds the world scoring records for total program (335.30 points), free skate (224.92) and short program (113.92) and owns five of the seven highest total program scores of all time. He won a sixth consecutiv­e U.S. title in January, a feat last accomplish­ed by twotime Olympic champion Dick Button, 71 years ago.

“He's truly a once-in-a-generation athlete,” said Jason Brown, Chen's U.S. Olympic teammate.

That Chen won the Olympic gold medal in his family's ancestral home country while navigating a global pandemic made his envelope-pushing story all that more compelling and transcende­nt.

“It's extremely important,” Mariah Bell, the reigning U.S. women's champion, said of Chen's continued presence in the sport. “People want to get behind people you know you can support long term. He's been at the top for a long time. It's rare to have a skater so dominant for such a long time.”

The tour's stop in Salt Lake City on Wednesday coincided with Gov. Spencer Cox declaring Nathan Chen Day in Utah. Chen's path to Olympic gold began on Salt Lake City rinks built for the 2002 Winter Games. But he now refers to Orange County as “home.” Or least for the time being.

So Saturday's performanc­e is part homecoming and part thank you note from Chen to the people who kept him safe during the most important months of his career.

Great Park Ice in Irvine was Chen's training base leading up to the Beijing Games.

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