Key events
The technical scores hold up, and Gogolev shatters his previous season best with a free skate of 186.37, nearly two points ahead of Gumennik. He’s in first so far with a total of 273.78.
Now it’s Shun Sato, who made Malinin work for the win in the team event. Time for some Stravinsky.
Gogolev is skating to some Rachmaninov. His quad salchow gets positive marks, as does a quad toeloop. Then it’s a quad-triple combination that’s not quite as positive as the first two but still OK.
Triple axel-euler-triple salchow – no problem. This is very good.
Can he land a planned triple flip-triple axel? Yes indeed. Base is 14.63, but his current mark is about two points ahead of that.
He nearly botches the landing on his last jump, a triple loop. He’ll be slightly downgraded for that. But his technical score is getting close to Gumennik’s (pending reviews, of course).
The crowd claps along with the music near the end as he gracefully changes directions about 300 times.
Technical score for now is 103.27, just behind Gummenik. We’ll see how much the reviews knock it down, but that was superb.
Marsak cuts a disconsolate figure as he finishes. His technical score is just 64.92. Final free skate score: 137.28. Total: 224.17. He drops to eighth, far behind a couple of skaters from the first group.
Next: Canada’s Stephen Gogolev, who had a fun free skate in the team event.
Kyrylo Marsak is representing Ukraine. He plans a quad lutz. It becomes a triple. Or is it? Weir says it was a double.
He falls on his quad salchow, but he’s smooth through a triple axel-double axel-double axel. Then a planned triple axel becomes a single.
The music is I’m Tired by Labrinth and Zendaya. It’s a nice program artistically, and he recovers on his last three jumping passes.
Gummenik’s season’s best in the free skate is 169.02. His technical score alone is near 115. This will be close to 200 – Malinin territory. Good thing Ilia has more than 20 points on him from the short program.
Reviews knock the technical score down to 111.83. Still extraordinary.
Until … they must have found something seriously wrong. Now it’s 107.96. Now 106.02. Is this the stock market or a figure skating score? Now 104.27??
Ah – the triple axel was apparently underrotated. Now 103.84 – he’s lost 11 points in reviews.
Finally, the adjustments stop there. Components are 80.65, and that’s 184.49 for the free skate and 271.21 overall, nearly 11 points ahead of Egadze.
Second half of Gummenik’s program, when they get bonuses for jumps. He has a quad-double axel-double axel planned.
And he makes it look simple. I look clumsier when I walk on a sidewalk.
Off we go … Petr Gumennik has a sharp light-gray vest with a turned-up collar like a villain from the Superman films.
Johnny Weir on NBC points out that this is the second most-difficult program planned, after Malinin’s. Five quads.
He gets the first. He gets the second. He gets the third. He just sails up into the air, looking more vertical than other skaters.
A quad-triple. Nails that one as well. How is this guy only in 12th after the short program?
Group 3:
Petr Gumennik (Individual Neutral)
Kyrylo Marsak (Ukraine) – interesting back-to-back entries here
Stephen Gogolev (Canada)
Shun Sato (Japan)
Andrew Torgashev (USA)
Kevin Aymoz (France)
Better news if you’re rooting for Great Britain’s drought to end – things are going well in skeleton. James Wallace is following that and everything else, including some commentators he calls the “inverse Statler and Waldorf.”
Was anyone else mildly disappointed in the rebooted Muppet Show? Statler and Waldorf were good, tough.
Meanwhile, in men’s snowboard halfpipe, no US rider will finish higher than eighth. The world has turned upside-down. We’re more of a curling country now.
Australia’s Scotty James is very much in contention.
Standings after Group 2
Twelve skaters to go. Halfway done.
260.27 Egadze (Georgia)
246.88 Miura (Japan)
246.64 Britschgi (Switzerland)
243.18 Rizzo (Italy)
236.82 Selevko (Estonia)
229.08 Jin (China)
226.46 Vasiljevs (Latvia)
223.36 Naumov (USA)
222.25 Samoilov (Poland)
219.06 Carrillo (Mexico)
214.33 Li (Chinese Taipei)
202.38 Hagara (Slovakia)
Maxim Naumov talks with NBC: “I was trying to stay calm the whole time. There were obviously some mistakes, but … I fought for every single thing from the beginning until the end. I’m proud of myself for that.”
On his journey overall: “What we’ve dreamed of since the very beginning, we were able to make a reality. … I couldn’t be more happy with the courage and strength to get to this moment, and I dedicate it all to them.”
Jin Boyang opens with a strong quad-double but steps out of the landing on a quad toeloop. He does much better with a triple axel and impresses with some graceful spins. The yellow “REVIEW” tag comes up on the spins, but maybe the judges just want to watch them again.
On a triple-triple, he stumbles a bit on the landing and fights to stay up, but he does finally hit the ice.
Still, not bad for an old guy. (He’s 28. Only in Olympic sports would that be considered anything but the prime of one’s youth.) Most of that routine was brilliant, and he looks like he’ll forget the errors.
Naumov gets a 137.71, 10th of the 11 skaters so far. Overall, he’s at 223.36.
He smiles and holds up the picture of himself, barely older than a toddler, taking the ice with his parents, and it’s very dusty in here all of a sudden.
The big screen over the ice has a message from Naumov saying, “Mom and Dad, this is for you.”
But his first jump ruins the script – a fall on a quad salchow attempt. He lands a triple axel but hits the ice again on a quad salchow. A triple axel-double axel is downgraded, and he just seems underconfident on most of his remaining jumps.
His technical score is nearly 30 points behind Egadze’s. And Egadze fell on his first jump.
It’s amazing, of course, that he made it to this stage after losing his parents as he did. And teddy bears fly from the stands as he finishes. He mentioned something about that in this entertaining figure skating explainer.
Egadze shakes his head as he finishes. He’s being too hard on himself. He’ll surely move into first among the skaters who’ve gone so far.
Seems like a long wait for this score. There it is – 175.16, the best free skate so far. He’s first with a total of 260.27.
Here comes Maxim Naumov.
Redemption time for Nika Egadze, but he falls right away off an underrotated quad lutz. He responds with three terrific jumping passes – quad toeloop, quad salchow-triple toeloop, triple axel. The scores on those are all solidly green, meaning he received more than the base value for that element.
He gets huge scores on a quad salchow-triple toeloop combination. Then it’s a triple flip-double axel-double axel … you get the idea. Since his fall, he has put together three minutes of stellar skating.
Pending reviews, his technical score is 99.42, way ahead of Miura’s 92.72. Imagine if he had landed the first jump.
Huge mistake to open Rizzo’s program, popping a quad toeloop to a double. That’s a lot of points already out the window. But his next elements are stronger. He smiles as he glides by the judges’ table. He looks OK on a triple axel – I thought the landing was a little dodgy, but the judges apparently don’t. A triple-triple goes well.
You could always wonder what the score would’ve been had he not had the mistake right off the bat, but he recovered beautifully. He once again comes up to the judges’ table before he finishes, and he gets a wonderful ovation.
There’s no exuberant celebration as in the team event, when he sealed bronze for Italy, but he seems happy with that.
As am I, because now I never again have to hear a piece of music that is such a downer when you have to play it for four middle-school classes in one day. I should change my side gigs.
It’s a 158.88, nearly 10 points off his best, and he slides into third with a 243.18 overall.
It’s a 144.02 in the free and a 226.46 total for Vasiljevs.
The crowd roars, which can only mean one thing … here comes Matteo Rizzo.
Deniss Vasiljevs warmed up with some boxing. Again – no quads planned. He opens with a strong triple axel-double toeloop, then another triple axel that’s under review. He fumbles the landing on what was supposed to be a triple-triple but became a triple-double.
He seems to be changing his program on the fly, surely intentional in some places but not in others, dropping one planned element to a relatively simple double salchow just past the halfway point. He gets through a triple lutz-double axel-double axel sequence but loses a bit in his execution marks, as he does on a triple flip.
The music is fun, but his technical scores are more than eight points behind Selevko’s. Even with high component scores, he’ll drop a few places.
Aleksandr Selevko has an entertaining program, capturing the emotional peaks of the music. He blasts out of the gate with a quad-triple and a quad, then a triple axel-double and a triple axel. But he botches the landing of a triple lutz and pops one triple into a double. That’s a 154.80 for the free skate, 236.82 total. He drops behind Miura and Britschgi, the standouts of Group 1.
Group 2 start list
Aleksander Selevko (Estonia) will open with a quad lutz and a quad-triple, but it’s calmer after that. Music is Adagio for Strings and Storm. Must be tough to conduct that storm.
Deniss Vasiljevs (Latvia – yes, “Deniss”) is skating to some Khachaturian. Nice. He’s been around a while and was sixth in the world championships eight years ago. He has no quads planned.
Matteo Rizzo (Italy) would love to recapture some of the magic from the team event. He has one quad and a couple of triple axels, one in combination. Music is … oh, right … Interstellar. Maybe I can mute? Yes, sure, it’s Hans Zimmer, it’s brilliant, but it’s dreary even by figure skating classical standards.
Nika Egadze (Georgia) will hoping to forget the team event. He has four quads planned, three of them right at the start and two of them in combination. Music is “Sailing, Verve, Sail.” Yacht rock?
Maxim Naumov (USA) will be skating to honor his parents, who died in the plane crash over the Potomac a little more than a year ago. He’ll open with a quad-double and will have another quad. Music is In This Shirt by the Irrepressibles.
Jin Boyang (China) has twice taken bronze in the world championships – 2016 and 2017. He’s skating to Perfect Symphony and has two quads, one in combination.
Standings after Group 1
Oh my, Britschgi was close. Eighteen skaters to go.
246.88 Miura (Japan)
246.64 Britschgi (Switzerland)
222.25 Samoilov (Poland)
219.06 Carrillo (Mexico)
214.33 Li (Chinese Taipei)
202.38 Hagara (Slovakia)
Coming up in Group 2 after a long break for resurfacing – Italian team event hero Matteo Rizzo and the USA’s Maxim Naumov.
Switzerland’s Lukas Britschgi flexed his muscles and the arms fell off his shirt.
OK, it’s an old joke, but he is indeed wearing a sort of tank top with frills.
He was 19th after the short program but may very well move up a few places if he can keep up the momentum from the first half of this routine. He nails a good quad-triple and another quad. A triple axel-double axel-double axel gets good scores. It’s a fun program to watch.
But he falters about two-thirds of the way through with a shaky landing on a triple lutz, and he drops a triple-triple to a double-double. That may keep him from matching Miura’s 170.11 free / 246.88 total.
Hagara’s scores aren’t good – 122.08 for the free skate, 202.38 total. Barring a catastrophe for one of the skaters still to perform, he’ll end up in 24th place.
Slovakia’s Adam Hagara attempts a quad toeloop, but it’s obvious as he takes off that he won’t be able to land it. He rebounds with a triple axel-double toeloop, but he falls on a triple axel.
Can he land a planned triple-double axel-double axel? Indeed he can. It doesn’t seem too fluid but gets a positive grade of execution, as does a triple flip. But he drops a triple loop to a double loop.
Full credit for continuing through the rest of the program with a bit of swagger, as if nothing has gone wrong. He immediately shakes his head after it ends, though.
The music was supposed to be James Bond-related, but I heard nothing like that.
The “human” at the end of the title on Vladimir Samoilov’s music is actually a remix of Human by Rag’n’Bone Man. Unfortunately, he has a bad tumble on a quad lutz and has to put a hand down on a quad salchow, forcing him to call off the second half of the combination. He later does a double-double instead of a triple-triple. He manages one solid triple-triple toward the end, and he has some nice artistic flourishes.
He adds a cartwheel before finishing just in front of the judges’ table with a smile.
That’s the kind of program you’d enjoy in an exhibition. Pity about the errors here, but no one in this group is going to make it into the top 10, anyway. He’ll surely drop behind Miura – and indeed he does, with a 144.68 free skate and 222.25 total.
Kao Miura had a disappointing short program, and it’s clear early on that the free skate won’t be much better. His opening quad is strong, but he falls on a quad salchow. His quad-triple combination is downgraded, as are several of his spins.
But he lands a triple axel-euler-triple flip combination to show his considerable skill level. The next triple axel has a wobbly landing.
He’s definitely the best dressed so far, with a sharp-looking vest and pocket square.
His season best is 175.14, far ahead of the skaters who’ve gone before him here. He only needs a 142.30 to finish ahead of them, and he gets 92.65 on technical elements alone even with the fall and the downgrades. The component scores are generous, and he gets a 170.11 (total 246.88).
Donovan Carrillo is indeed skating to Elvis music, but the arrangement emphasizes the piano over Presley’s voice through most of it. Toward the end, the big voice boomed through the arena, followed by the upbeat A Little Less Conversation that featured in some legendary soccer ads with Eric Cantona many years ago.
He runs into some issues. His first two quads get negative grades of execution. A triple axel is deemed underrotated, as is the second triple in a triple-triple combo. A complex triple-double axel-double axel is solid, but he pops out of a triple lutz and only lands a single.
Still, it’s a season best 143.50 for a total of 219.06, and he kisses the ice after he’s done.
As I feared, that was a cover version of Eleanor Rigby. No McCartney tonight.
It’s a clean program for Li Yu-Hsiang, but the jumps certainly aren’t at the level of the other skaters’ routines. The most dazzling part of his routine is a closing spin in which he changes position several times and seems to hang on forever. He finishes with a smile, then lies down on the ice as if making a snow angel.
But it’s nearly five points off his season best – 141.92, for a total of 214.33. Malinin will be hoping to score somewhere in that vicinity in his free skate alone.
Li is due to start at 19:08 local time, which … would be now.
Malinin is due to start at 22:48.
Get comfortable.
Li’s on the ice now …
Group 1 start list
The 24 skaters in this competition will go in groups of six and in reverse order from where they were ranked after the short program.
So who will you see, what will they attempt, and what will you hear musically? (Please, no more from the Interstellar soundtrack. I’m trying to be in a happy place today.)
The first group, ranked 24th through 19th after the short program …
Li Yu-Hsiang (Chinese Taipei): Already improved from 30th in last year’s world championships, he’s only attempting one quad and a couple of combinations. Music is Eleanor Rigby – the start list says it’ll be from The Beatles, but we so often hear such music reimagined for these competitions because we can’t have nice things.
Donovan Carrillo (Mexico): His best finish in the world championships is 15th in 2024. He’ll come out swinging with two quads, a combo starting with a triple axel and another triple axel. Two more combos in the back half: triple-triple and triple flip-double axel-double axel. Music is given as “Elvis Presley selection.” That narrows it down.
Kao Miura (Japan): The winner of last month’s Four Continents Championship will be disappointed to be in this position today, but he plans to rally by starting with a quad loop, quad salchow, and a quad-triple combo. He’ll add have two triple axels, one leading into a combo. Music is Les Parapluies de Cherbourg. That’s probably not a Ramones track.
Vladimir Samoilov (Poland): After going 10th in the team event short program, he’ll do his first Olympic free skate with a quad lutz, quad-triple and a triple axel. He’s got two triple-triples. The music is something called Lay My Body Down, Really Slow Motion Human. That surely can’t be translated correctly.
Adam Hagara (Slovakia): One quad, two triple axels (one leading into a triple-double combo), a triple-triple, and a triple-double axel-double axel. Music is called “James Bond 007.” Sounds like fun.
Lukas Britschgi (Switzerland): The 2025 European champion will open with a quad-triple, then a quad, then a triple axel-double axel-double axel. A triple-triple comes up later. Music is “Journey Through the Orient.”
Risk and reward
Malinin can surely win with a solid program that doesn’t include the quadruple axel.
If you were Malinin, would you attempt it?
Me, no – I can’t even skate backwards. But it’s not just a function of physical ability here. It’s a question of what you can handle mentally or emotionally, and it’s a question of what you want to accomplish.
If we’re all guessing, we’d have to say Malinin will go for it because he doesn’t just want gold. He wants to make history. He wants to skate over to the kiss and cry this evening knowing that he has just done things no one has seen in the Olympics.
Years of training that come down a moment. But would he want to walk away wondering “What if?”
And he might even throw a backflip for good measure – legal but not something isn’t even graded as a technical element.
So you want to be a heavily favored Olympian …
I have to start today by confessing two biases …
First, Ilia Malinin isn’t just from my home country (USA). Not just my home region (metro area: Washington, DC). He’s from my hometown (Vienna, Va.). You could run a 5k road race from my home to his high school. I know people who’ve taught him. I know people who’ve skated with him. I could easily bump into him on a fast-food run this summer if his dietary choices are as bad as mine.
Second, I’ve long thought that one of the saddest things that can happen in the Olympics is to see someone who has dominated for three years somehow lose it on the sport’s biggest stage – and in the case of far too many people, the only stage on which they’re seen at all.
The risk of such a loss in worse in some sports than in others. When Usain Bolt was at the starting line for a race, he knew that he was simply faster than everyone else there, and nothing could stop him getting gold aside from a catastrophic problem getting out of the starting blocks. Michael Phelps and Katie Ledecky were never going to leave the Olympics empty-handed, in part because they had several individual races to attempt.
And in a lot of sports, athletes can afford one or two errors. Rachel Homan’s Canadian curling team had an uncharacteristic bushel of inaccurate shots in a loss to the USA today, but that’s just one game in the round robin. The Soviet Union hockey team didn’t lose to the USA in 1980 because of one play; the USA had to generate offense through about three-fourths of the game and then hold on as the Soviets fired away at Jim Craig’s goal. (And the USA still almost handed back the advantage, trailing in their last game before rallying.)
Also, the outcome may sometimes be out of the athletes’ hands. No one will ever offer an air-tight defense of the decision to give Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron the ice dancing gold medal, and all Madison Chock and Evan Bates can do is walk away knowing that they skated as well as they could possibly skate. (Yes, in case you don’t follow US media and have been wondering – people in this country are not very happy about that decision.)
But sometimes, injuries can strike at the wrong time, as they did to Lindsey Vonn multiple times. Or a skate edge can lose the millimeter of grip it has on the ice. Or a turn of the skis can be an inch away from where it needs to be. In the worst case, consider Mikaela Shiffrin, who overcompensated for her DNFs in Beijing by going out too slowly in the team event here, and all but the most hard-hearted people will be holding their breaths when the GOAT next races.
Malinin has done incomprehensible things in the sport. He’s the only person to land a quadruple axel in competition, and he’s done it more than a dozen times. But does he have that elusive mix of confidence and calmness to do it when the whole world is watching?
The conventional wisdom before the Olympics was that he could afford a couple of bobbles and still win because the jumps that he attempts are on a different plane from most skaters. But he was beaten in the team event short program, and his margin in the team event long program and the individual event’s short program has been considerably closer than most people figured. He’ll be under immense pressure today from Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama.
So join us as we watch 24 outstanding skaters trying to show their best when we’re all watching. And for the last of them, Malinin, hold your breath with everyone else.
Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s how the team event went:
The United States held off a late charge from Japan to retain the Olympic team figure skating title on Sunday, with Ilia Malinin delivering in the men’s free skate to secure gold after three days of competition. Japan finished with silver, while host nation Italy claimed bronze.
The United States survived a final-day surge from Japan to retain the Olympic team figure skating title on Sunday night, with Ilia Malinin delivering under intense pressure in the men’s free skate to secure gold at the Milano Cortina Games. Japan finished one point behind in silver, while host nation Italy claimed bronze after three days of tightly contested competition.
The final standings – 69 points for the United States, 68 for Japan and 60 for Italy – reflected just how narrow the margin was in one of the most dramatic Olympic team events since the format was introduced in 2014. What had begun as a comfortable American lead after two days turned into a head-to-head showdown in the final session, ultimately decided by the sport’s most technically ambitious skater.
American hopes had rested heavily on Malinin, the 21-year-old two-time world champion who has gone more than two years without losing a competition. But he entered the decisive free skate carrying unusual pressure after a below-par short program on Saturday left the defending champions vulnerable. When Japan erased the remaining US cushion earlier Sunday, the outcome effectively came down to Malinin versus Japan’s Shun Sato in the final discipline.
You can read the full report below:






