Women's skating favorites falter as Liu leads at worlds
Two-time U.S. champion Alysa Liu was the shock leader after stumbles by a trio of favorites in Wednesday's women's short program at the World Figure Skating Championships in Boston.
The 19-year-old American led 24 qualifiers for Friday's women's free dance final by winning the short program with 74.58 points, followed by Japan's Mone Chiba on 73.44 and U.S. teen Isabeau Levito on 73.33.
"Doesn't really change anything," Liu said. "My goals are still the same. I want to put out a really good performance for my free skate.
"The ideal one — that would be a dream."
Three-time defending champion Kaori Sakamoto of Japan, trying to become the first woman in 65 years to capture four consecutive world crowns, was a disappointing fifth on 71.03.
American Amber Glenn, a winner in all five of her starts this season, fell and stood ninth on 67.65.
South Korean teen Kim Chae-yeon, last month's Four Continents and Asian Winter Games champion, was 11th on 65.67.
Even Liu struggled to explain how she came out on top in the short program.
"It's so strange. I really don't know," Liu said.
"I would say it's definitely my mentality. It's hard to get in whatever state of mind I have but I really like it and everyone keeps telling me it seems to 'work' — I don't know what that means but I'll just keep skating."
Kaori Sakamoto placed a disappointing fifth in the women's short program at the World Figure Skating Championships on Wednesday. |
Imagn Images / via Reuters
Sakamoto, in the penultimate performance, landed a double flip instead of a triple in combination with a triple toe loop to set her score back, dimming the 24-year-old's chances to be the first to win four in a row since American Carol Heiss captured five in a row from 1956-1960.
Reigning U.S. champion Glenn, 25, skated fourth from the end and fell on her first jump, a triple axel.
"It just didn't lift like it does in practice," Glenn said. "There wasn't that efficiency that I usually have."
Kim, third at last year's worlds, was the final skater and touched her hands to the ice on an under-rotated landing of a triple toe loop to fall back.
Levito, last year's world runner-up, was nagged by a "terrifying" foot injury that kept her out for four months, but the 19-year-old was solid when it mattered.
"I had 1,000 thoughts from start to finish in that entire program. At times I was thinking about something not even related to skating," Levito said.
"I understand why I was nervous I would forget how to compete. It's a different kind of stress. But I'm glad to be back and I'm so happy."
In the pairs competition, Japan's Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara dominated, the 2023 world champions scoring 76.57 points to the strains of The Rolling Stones' "Paint it Black."
That placed them ahead of Italy's Sara Conti and Niccolo Macii (74.61 points) and Germany's Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nikita Volodin (73.59 points). The pairs free skate final takes place on Thursday.
Memories of tragedy
The world championships are being contested in the wake of a deadly January plane crash that rocked the figure skating world.
Among the 67 people who died when an American Airlines plane collided with a military helicopter in Washington on January 30 were 28 members of the skating community, many of them young U.S. skaters returning from a training camp in Kansas accompanied by parents or coaches.
An emotional memorial was held at the TD Garden on Wednesday as the world of figure skating paid tribute to the victims.
"Someone once told me time is a great healer, but for those who have experienced deep loss, we know that time does not simply erase pain," International Skating Union President Kim Jae-youl told the arena.
"For many of us it feels like we are frozen in time. Yet, in the spirit of unity and resilience, we stand together to support, to uplift and to remember."
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