I second Blades of Passion's respect for Yuzuru Hanyu, though with some caveats. The guy absolutely has world class speed and flow, with really intricate skating moves. He moves like he was born to the COP, with its emphasis on transitions and difficult jump entries, which he actually is. He is expressive, charismatic, and he has largely fixed his stamina problems. To wit, this year his FS is pretty backloaded on the jumps. And he has successfully executed all those second half jumps in a few competitions now... except for that pesky final triple salchow (which he has yet to land after completing a full program). That is not to say his stamina problems couldn't be better. Having seen him do his final footwork sequence fresh, and having seen him do it after slogging through his whole FS, the difference is pretty stark.
I can totally see the criticism of him rushing moves and elements. He doesn't take the time and care to let a lot of his moves sit, to hold the tension like a note on a violin and let it thrum. Hopefully that part of being a showman and artist will come with time. And I really don't like how his free leg springs back into place after his Biellmann, with such speed one'd think it's coming off. Yuzuru's posture could also use some huge improvement. He can be quite hunched and neck-forward at almost all times.
Does he have enough to land bronze this year at worlds? Absolutely. But I do think that if it were close between him and Javier Fernandez, the judges would give it to Javier. The same is true of Hanyu against the likes of Kozuka, Gachinski, Abbott, Verner and Brezina. He is going to have to skate that much better than all of them to get on the podium. He could, but I am not going to bet on it.