Mathman,
At the short program, he should still have been ahead of Nathan Chen, even with the missed combo. Even with the usual advantadge most judges give Natha Chen in their scoring.
This time they judged him even more harshly, while, as he had promised, he had worked extremely hard to get even more perfect transitions etc. Nearly every time I watch him I fell he surpasses my wildest imagination, here again.
And once again, but more than usual, furthermore in a final where one can expect more consistent judgment than in a CS Cup, he was not credited for his level of skating, either in GOEs or in components.
Just the sort of circumstance provoking burnouts, for your information.
The fact he chose a version of his free program of which he had had only one runthrough, and a mere sketch with little transitions, entries... if any, him so careful on perfection, and in spite of Ghislain Briand having joined him and probably tried to reason him away, shows how "out of himself" he was. I believe this skating will remain a piece of anthology for heart pain. But after all, though his level didn't pass, this time, that of Nathan Chen, as he had never been credited for its worth, why was he deducted there? And after all, he did five quads, and the program was not missing totally the axel element, as there was a single axel instead of the triple-triple combo.
After that, both him and Nathan Chen, who must be quite uneasy too because he is so honest, were as close as can ever be with polite words, from expressing how unfair the judges had been at this GPF. In fact, they do imply it in their statements, rather clearly.