"Eteri Tutberidze's coach, Daniil Gleikhengauz, believes that Petr Gumennik should have won a prize in the individual competition at the 2026 Olympics.
Gumennik performed five quadruple jumps in his routine. The Russian finished sixth overall, with a score of 271.21 points for both routines. He earned 184.49 points for his free routine.
The victory was won by Kazakhstani Mikhail Shaidorov (291.58 points).
"I promised myself I wouldn't say anything, but I can't. My personal opinion: given Petya's situation, without a rating, without anything, he should have finished third today. Given his rating, and if we hadn't been suspended, he should have finished second at the very least.
What we see in his printout doesn't correspond to reality. I can say that for sure. We looked at all the participants. The number of "q's" and "checks" he got, we forgave the others.
Plus, he received 80 component scores for a flawless performance. He had no deductions or step-outs—he received 80 component scores. Great athletes Ilya Malinin and Adam Xiao Him Fa received higher component scores than Petya for their completely disrupted free skates. This isn't entirely accurate.
"It shouldn't work like this. It's a shame. For me, Petya at least deserves a medal," Gleikhengauz said on Okko."
Amen to that.