Impressions from the arena:
Vincent Zhou: I was fine when he was left off the 2017 Worlds team. I see his weaknesses as others do. But in that arena, in an pressure-packed situation, many other skaters crumbled and Vincent did not and he earned my respect with those quad attempts. He was extremely gutsy and he accomplished a great thing under immense pressure, URs and all, and the audience recognized it. The program is not bad (too much Moulin Rouge tonight, sigh). Yes, he needs vast improvement in the components. But I would be comfortable with him on the Olympic team because he went for it under pressure and didn't crumble. I would perhaps feel differently if the skaters with stronger components but without the quads hadn't crumbled, but they did and he did not.
Sadly, I missed the first half of Ross's performance due to an upset stomach that sent me to the bathroom at an inconvenient time. :noshake: I re-watched it at home online and loved it. I've always loved Ross's skating. Saw him at 2012 and 2014 Nationals and he has wonderful skating skills and performance ability. For me, he was second only to Jeremy Abbott in skating skills, and I'd put him ahead of all the other current US men as well.
Grant, Adam, and Jason's performances were tragic. The problems weren't just limited to their pops. But you could just feel all the air sucked out of the arena when they made those costly errors. Yes, they all tried to pull through and finish strong but it just wasn't enough. Jason's performance was pretty messy throughout. Adam's was strange -- given that the fall on the opening quad was pretty much expected, it seemed at first like he was going to be just fine the rest of the way. But I've seen performances where a skater had one fall and they didn't let it affect the rest of the performance. This wasn't that type of performance. Those last two pops didn't feel like he just lost focus -- it felt like he had lost steam and was giving up.
Nathan Chen's performance was workmanlike but at the same time, I was impressed that he came into the competition as the defending champion and with all the buzz about being an Olympic medal contender, he managed to control his nerves and skate relatively cleanly though not perfectly. He had a smart strategy and did what he had to do to defend his title. Even though his mind was somewhat elsewhere, Nathan does have presence and charisma, and I think he has all the talent to create a special Olympic moment.