Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think that Adela skating to Michael Jackson’s They Don’t Care About Us is a statement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ilia’s arrogance did him in.
Wasn't he heard saying after his performance waiting for his results that only if they had let him go to Beijing in 2022, he would be on that podium?
Yes, you heard right.
And as he is local, let’s just say that my reference to his arrogance is from direct knowledge of who he is.
New poster.
One doesn’t need deep insight to notice that he is unfortunately full of himself, which is not the end of the world for a 21 yo but I am surprised his parents don’t keep him in check.
He invented his own nickname, put it on a t shirt and wears it. He skates to his own inspirational quotes.
It’s normal for a young person to feel that their thoughts and feelings are more significant and novel than they are, but there needs to be an adult to tell them it’s ridiculous.
At the same time, he was extremely gracious to the gold medal winner, going to him immediately and congratulating/embracing him, and in his interviews afterward.
I liked how someone joked it was because he himself really needed a hug. I find it believable
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think that Adela skating to Michael Jackson’s They Don’t Care About Us is a statement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ilia’s arrogance did him in.
Wasn't he heard saying after his performance waiting for his results that only if they had let him go to Beijing in 2022, he would be on that podium?
Yes, you heard right.
And as he is local, let’s just say that my reference to his arrogance is from direct knowledge of who he is.
New poster.
One doesn’t need deep insight to notice that he is unfortunately full of himself, which is not the end of the world for a 21 yo but I am surprised his parents don’t keep him in check.
He invented his own nickname, put it on a t shirt and wears it. He skates to his own inspirational quotes.
It’s normal for a young person to feel that their thoughts and feelings are more significant and novel than they are, but there needs to be an adult to tell them it’s ridiculous.
At the same time, he was extremely gracious to the gold medal winner, going to him immediately and congratulating/embracing him, and in his interviews afterward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm happy for the kid from Kazakhstan though!
Me too! He was so shocked - he had no expectation of winning gold!
Same! It reminded me a little of Lillehammer, when the favored veterans all stumbled (Browning, Boitano, and Petrenko) and Alexei Urmanov pulled off a stunning upset. The planets had to align just right.
And Alexei Urmanov is Mikhail Shaidorov‘s coach. He trains with him in Sochi.
Not a political post, but as someone who loves figure skating, the Russian influence on the sport was everywhere at the 2026 men's Olympic event, even with the ban. So many in men's singles had Russian roots or training:
Mikhail Shaidorov (Kazakhstan – 1st) – Trainsin Russia with Alexei Urmanov in Sochi and speaks Russian.
Stephen Gogolev (Canada – 5th) – Has dual Canadian and Russian citizenship, started skating in Russia as a kid before moving to Canada.
Petr Gumennik (Russia – 6th) – Russian competing as a neutral athlete.
Ilia Malinin (USA – 8th) – His parents Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov were Olympic figure skaters from Uzbekistan/former Soviet Union.
Andrew Torgashev (USA – 12th) – Parents were Russian figure skaters who toured with ice shows before settling in the US.
Maxim Naumov (USA – 20th) – His parents Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova were the 1994 World Champions in pairs for Russia.
Vladimir Samoylov (Poland – competed) – Born in Moscow, trained in the Russian system before switching to Poland.
I know many of these skaters have left Russia or represent other countries, but the technical foundation and coaching tradition of Russian figure skating still clearly influences the sport.
Also, even if Adeliia Petrosian lands a quad and triple axel in the women's event, will she podium, or will the judges give her a low enough component score to keep her out of the top 3? Her actual skating is much more entertaining than Kaori Sakamoto (I think she's so boring, personally, and prefer the other Japanese women to her).
And Adeliia Petrosian was robbed in the short program. I would have had her in 2nd. Unfortunately, she didn't do the triple axel, but her jumps, spins, skating, and artistry were otherwise the best, but they used the component score to keep her off the podium.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm happy for the kid from Kazakhstan though!
Me too! He was so shocked - he had no expectation of winning gold!
Same! It reminded me a little of Lillehammer, when the favored veterans all stumbled (Browning, Boitano, and Petrenko) and Alexei Urmanov pulled off a stunning upset. The planets had to align just right.
And Alexei Urmanov is Mikhail Shaidorov‘s coach. He trains with him in Sochi.
Not a political post, but as someone who loves figure skating, the Russian influence on the sport was everywhere at the 2026 men's Olympic event, even with the ban. So many in men's singles had Russian roots or training:
Mikhail Shaidorov (Kazakhstan – 1st) – Trainsin Russia with Alexei Urmanov in Sochi and speaks Russian.
Stephen Gogolev (Canada – 5th) – Has dual Canadian and Russian citizenship, started skating in Russia as a kid before moving to Canada.
Petr Gumennik (Russia – 6th) – Russian competing as a neutral athlete.
Ilia Malinin (USA – 8th) – His parents Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov were Olympic figure skaters from Uzbekistan/former Soviet Union.
Andrew Torgashev (USA – 12th) – Parents were Russian figure skaters who toured with ice shows before settling in the US.
Maxim Naumov (USA – 20th) – His parents Vadim Naumov and Evgenia Shishkova were the 1994 World Champions in pairs for Russia.
Vladimir Samoylov (Poland – competed) – Born in Moscow, trained in the Russian system before switching to Poland.
I know many of these skaters have left Russia or represent other countries, but the technical foundation and coaching tradition of Russian figure skating still clearly influences the sport.
Also, even if Adeliia Petrosian lands a quad and triple axel in the women's event, will she podium, or will the judges give her a low enough component score to keep her out of the top 3? Her actual skating is much more entertaining than Kaori Sakamoto (I think she's so boring, personally, and prefer the other Japanese women to her).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ilia’s arrogance did him in.
Wasn't he heard saying after his performance waiting for his results that only if they had let him go to Beijing in 2022, he would be on that podium?
How so?
NP. Because, theoretically, he would have gotten his nerves and Olympic inexperience over with, and then his second games would have been fruitful. See also: Nathan Chen Olympics 1 vs. Nathan Chen Olympics 2.
It was a controversial decision at the time in 2022 to send Jason Brown instead of Ilia. That said, Jason Brown performed well and was decently ranked. It’s impossible to say what could have or would have happened. I love Jason Brown and was glad he was on the team in 2022; Ilia did not perform well at that Worlds just a few weeks later.
Anyway, I wish Ilia all the best and hope he continues to mature, as a person and as an athlete. I feel for him, to have skated so well to help USA win team gold and then to fall so short in the individual event.
They underutilized him last Olympics and overextended him this time. As a result, he was instrumental in securing gold for the team and was left with nothing in individual event.
They had absolutely no business putting their A team into the team event. He burned it all there and there was nothing left for the individual event. They should either hold the team event after the individual meet or explicitly slot a different set of skaters into the team event. You cannot expect top level runthroughs of the same program so frequently.
He’s an overhyped bum
Anonymous wrote:This Japanese guy bawling his eyes out is giving me life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chloe Kim what a crash out
I would not say that. She still did very well and the girl she mentored and asked to come to the US to train with her won the gold.
I read an interview with her recently and she said she's already got a retirement date in mind. She's been doing this literally her whole life--the article talked about how she slept for 2-3 nights at a time in the airport when she was a little kid to go to competitions, and was homeschooled from middle school onward, all with the goal of making her star. She qualified for the Olympics at age 13 (but was too young to go according the rules) and was financially responsible for supporting her family as a teenager.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ilia’s arrogance did him in.
Wasn't he heard saying after his performance waiting for his results that only if they had let him go to Beijing in 2022, he would be on that podium?
Yes, you heard right.
And as he is local, let’s just say that my reference to his arrogance is from direct knowledge of who he is.
New poster.
One doesn’t need deep insight to notice that he is unfortunately full of himself, which is not the end of the world for a 21 yo but I am surprised his parents don’t keep him in check.
He invented his own nickname, put it on a t shirt and wears it. He skates to his own inspirational quotes.
It’s normal for a young person to feel that their thoughts and feelings are more significant and novel than they are, but there needs to be an adult to tell them it’s ridiculous.
At the same time, he was extremely gracious to the gold medal winner, going to him immediately and congratulating/embracing him, and in his interviews afterward.
+1 He's full of himself and overconfident, yes. But he's also kind and self-aware. He never says anything rude or unkind about his competition. After he lost, he said in interviews immediately after that I had been a mental problem, he had been on overwhelmed by the Olympic atmosphere, and that he had been too confident.
The only petty thing he said was the comment about "them" not sending him to Beijing in the kiss & cry, but I think it is reasonable, in recognizing how the mental side impacted him, to wish he'd had the trial run on another olympics. Sports structured around Olympic cycles can be brutal -- you look at the calendar and realize you are at the mercy of your physical peak coinciding with an event that occurs only once every 4 years.
Chock & Bates were asked about coming back for the next olympics to see if they can get an individual gold. Bates was kind of sarcastic in his response -- why not aim for Salt Lake in 8 years of we're hoping for things? They are 32 and 36.
Ilia is not in that position yet but with his quads -- who knows how 4 or 8 years will impact his skill set. This was his year, and he blew it with nerves. And he knows it.