- Joined
- Oct 9, 2011
He's not blaming Jason. He's blaming the USFS selection committee that picked Jason over him.So he's blaming Jason for his meltdown. Tacky and untrue. That negates his good sportsmanship because this ain't it.
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He's not blaming Jason. He's blaming the USFS selection committee that picked Jason over him.So he's blaming Jason for his meltdown. Tacky and untrue. That negates his good sportsmanship because this ain't it.
Yuma had lots of time to get used to the thought that silver is his ceiling. Misha and Shun didn't expect to medal at all and we all seen how Shun was after TE.I think Yuma was very disappointed with his program initally, but that was completely thrown out the window when he found out Shun medalled. The two of them are really great friends who grew up together in the Japanese skating world, and I think it really meant a lot to both of them. After that point, I think Yuma was relieved to have gotten silver and genuinely thrilled for Misha and Shun. I am happy that we had, at least, a happy podium. Yuma was cheerleading non-stop for the other two medallists, Shun was sobbing, Misha was sobbing, Shun's coach was the happiest person on the planet, and there were a lot of really adorable selfie moments.
He's not blaming Jason. He's blaming the USFS selection committee that picked Jason over him.
Probably being after Mikhail he thought he was bronze at the best. I think the meltdown shocked absolutely everyone.I think Yuma is one of the rare happy silver medalists?
I suspect he was aiming to be the next two-time OGM like his idol. Thing is, there's only been 4 multiple OGMs in the 118 years it's been going, and that is for good reason... and with the tech levels being what they are now, it's getting harder.To the person who said he wouldn’t be getting any younger at the next Olympics, HE’S ONLY 21!!!
It was a bad idea for sure, but I don't know if that caused the meltdown. His next jump was performed just fine. It just shows the need for the athletes to have the right mix of risk and security. If you try seven quads, land four and pop three, you are much worse off than a guy who lands the same four quads but then has three triple passes landed successfully.Was he really going for the 4A? If I were his coach, I would have NEVER let him go all out esp after the last few men had nervy skates. I think he could have won it if he continued to play it safe like in the team event. There was no need to do a 4A, so I hated how NBC kept hyping him as quad god and how he is capable of doing the 4A. He probably felt it would be disappointing if he didn’t at least attempt the 4A on Olympic ice. I guess now we know how it turned out. Sigh.
What did Torgashev say?this together with torgashevs comments does make you think about what the vibes at us nationals were then.
I imagine Kevin and Sasha Selevko watching the last group backstage and saying to each other: "Wait... we're the consistent ones all of a sudden?"
Some Great athletes win several worlds but not olympics.Don't forget that Kurt Browning never won an Olympic medal despite two tries and four World Championships.
Is this necessary?He should be blaming himself for not having minimums, not being able to spin, and barely being able to complete a step sequence.
Its kinda bullshit isn't it tho. Sometimes you only get one chance, like Zagitova Scherbakova Trusova Medvedeva and they all skated their best when it counted. Mental fortitude is part of being an athlete and some people are weaker than others.He's not blaming Jason. He's blaming the USFS selection committee that picked Jason over him.
thanks, I was wondering the same thing!What did Torgashev say?
While upset about Ilia, I was very happy with Kevin's skate. He turned one quad into a triple, and some of his landing were squirrelly, but he stayed on his blades, and given some of his past performances, this was a success for him!!
He was supposed to be the first man who perform 4A at Olympics, before TE the hype on 4A and even 4A in combo in short was unbelievable. He didn't do it in TE, not in SP, so he had to try now. Well, he didn't really had to but was expected to because his whole identity for last years was built on this one jump. Things like this really get to you and can mess things as it happened just now. He managed to regroup and jump some jumps but the skate was overall messy and there were too many pops. I guess USFS and ISU didn't do him favor hyping him like he was a superhuman.It was a bad idea for sure, but I don't know if that caused the meltdown. His next jump was performed just fine. It just shows the need for the athletes to have the right mix of risk and security. If you try seven quads, land four and pop three, you are much worse off than a guy who lands the same four quads but then has three triple passes landed successfully.
Is this necessary?