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Yes, it was. Here is a video of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKaCISUpxH0
Well, at least he didn't have to prepare a tailcoat for the event
It would have been interesting to see though.
And thx for this video : http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1v08hr_2014-05-16-ゆづフィーバー_webcam
The 4t and 3a were just ... Hope it will be this show that shall broadcast in June !
I found this image in tumblr, Yuzuru, Mao, Dai, Machida and Akiko with a weird mascot girl.


it's kinda tellingHello Yuzusan
Here is part 3 of the translation of the video.
Part 3 of the interview between Arakawa Shizuka and Yuzuru Hanyu 2013 July
13mins 40secs ~ end
. Seriously, he obviously has great parents. I agree with echotpe that his mother seems like the "tiger mom" type in the sense of setting high standards for him and expecting him to live up to them. I'm sure he's even exceeding expectations!I swear this is the most random championship interview ever. With Nan Song and Yuzuru have no idea whats going on and need translator then Yuzuru's translator sit on the podium beside him looking at his prize.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpxZd44vMvU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_J46LUL_mD4

At the Emperor's spring garden party, he looked like the flower of Japanese youth, its best and brightest.
It would be nice if he could have tea with the emperor sometime when he's back in Japan. Also, maybe it's necessary to stay away from media for a while to focus on skating/university work.
So we made another full circle and came back to his costumes again? Since everyone loves him in his training outfits, maybe he should go for something like his 2009 SP costume again. I thought it looked really good on him and he looked extra tall and slim in it. It was pretty blinged out as well 
With Yuzuru and english either he is "very happy" or "sad" but will try to be "happy tomorrow"

Thank you~ He's so cute here and he looks like he got younger againAnother shot with a stewardess of Air Canada. It looked less tired than previous one.
http://instagram.com/p/oEa8ItopCO/

Well, Yuzu was asked to take a shot in the flight to Torodo.
http://instagram.com/p/oAOWbnRZ0E/
Another shot with a stewardess of Air Canada. It looked less tired than previous one.
http://instagram.com/p/oEa8ItopCO/
He is the real Benjamin Button!!!!!!And "angry"; "very angry"
Thank you~ He's so cute here and he looks like he got younger again![]()
Narrator: It is half a year until the Sochi Olympics, and just at the start of the Olympic season, Arakawa Shizuka’s Figure Skating TV show “Friends Plus” is back on the air.
Today’s Guest….She has known him since he was this small (pic of Yuzuru as a very young boy) the guest that is coming in today is from her hometown and is one of her junior skaters.
AS: I always had the image of him as a kindergartener, and somehow without really noticing he is now taller than me. Now as a skater and as a person he has really risen and is continuing to grow….
It’s kind of a strange feeling….To have known him as a person and as an athlete from about the age of 5 and to have watched his progress, it is actually something a bit unusual.
Because we are in the same group I have been able to observe him for so long. It really is a valuable thing for me.
N: From Sendai City in Miyagi Prefecture, Hanyu Yuzuru is 18 years old. He is the youngest of the all of the Japanese men’s figure skaters to have made it on to the World’s podium.
He converted the traumatic experience of the natural disaster (the 2011 earthquake) into strength and this ever improving youngster even moved his base to Canada to so that he could keep aiming high.
As one of the top skaters in Japan he is going to lead the new generation……… “YUZURU HANYU!!!!!”
Just before he begins his challenge in his first Olympic year he has a face to face meeting with the previous Olympic Gold Medalist.
Y: I have a lot of things to ask you.
AS: Really? You have lots of questions?
N: He wants to know about how Arakawa Shizuka got ready for her road to the Olympics.
AS: In my mind I knew I really wanted to win.
N: During this off-season we can enjoy this valuable chat between the two of them.
There is only half a year until the Sochi Olympics and this is the only place you will see Yuzuru Hanyu like this.
This program is presented to you by Awakawa Shizuka’s figure skating program “Friends Plus 2013
2mins 40secs
Y: Hello. Excuse me. I feel like I’m entering “Shi-chan’s” room.
AS: Of course you do!
N: The age difference between them is 13 years but these two were brought up in the same local area they have lots of shared memories and they have seen each other grow and change over the years.
AS: (Laughing off camera) You saw that didn’t you? I think of all of the guests I have talked to you are the quickest to have sat down.
Y: Really?
AS: Usually the guests stand around and talk a bit more than this.
Y: Well, I’m a bit nervous.
AS: That must be a lie! Are you really nervous?
Y: Yeah.
AS: You don’t get nervous.
Y: Yes, I do.
AS: I have always thought that you have a furry coat around your heart. More than just hair, it’s like a really thick fluffy coating.
Y: But, I’m actually a nervous type of person.
AS: You do get nervous but you are able to have a good relationship with your nerves.
Y: I guess so. I have had lots of experiences where I have been able to overcome my nervousness.
AS: Yes, it is impossible not to feel nervous so having the ability to get over your feelings of nerves is a really great thing.
Y: Thanks for saying so.
AS: Well, I have known you since you were just this tall…
Y: Yes.
AS: Its strange.
Y: Yes, a bit weird.
AS: I didn’t know you were as strong as you are.
Y: Even from years ago I hated to lose. This is my own way of thinking about it but I always had the image that if I got nervous I was losing against myself and I never wanted to lose to that version of me.
So, even when I did feel nervous I would always try to get over those nerves so that I could give a good performance. It was a mental wall that I always tried to climb over.
AS: You like to have people watching you, don’t you?
Y: Yes. Even when I was very small I only really loved the competitions like the local public competitions.
AS: I feel nostalgic about the competitions you are talking about….
AS: The competitions that decide the number of Olympic athletes are something that I didn’t try to focus on but I found once the competition actually started that was somehow always in the back of my mind.
You have had your first experience of that now.
Y: Yes.
AS: How was it for you? Were you nervous?
Y: Yes. I was really nervous.
AS: How was your experience at this year’s World Championships?
Y: At this year’s Worlds I personally took on too much of a burden. I felt that as I had won the Japanese Nationals I felt a lot of pressure from myself to be on the top of the podium at Worlds, too.
I felt a lot of responsibility.
AS: As careers grow and develop the end result rather than the taking part becomes ever more important when that starts to happen, if you have developed strength from participating in big events then you are able to shine and have confidence.
Which of the two (participating or the final results) is easier for you to handle?
Y: I don’t think I have had enough experience in big events to have learned enough, when I was in the Novice category I did have some experience of that though and because of that experience I am able to pick up on the things I still need to work on.
I try to focus on the areas that need to be brushed up.
Before a competition begins I often think that I need to beat this athlete or that athlete but when the competition actually starts I usually think I just need to win over myself and that tends to draw all of my focus and I just do my best for that.
AS: As an outside observer only, it always looks like you are always competing with yourself but I have never really had the chance to ask you about how you really feel.
Y: I have participated in quite a few competitions when I was injured, and this caused the people around me some trouble. This was quite a regular pattern.
Even from when I was a junior, before the World Championships I would get a sore back, or sprain my ankle or things like that but I wouldn’t really tell the people around me how I was feeling.
But sometime even when I didn’t say anything I wouldn’t be able to stand it any longer, especially if the injury was going on for a long time.
But basically, somebody would notice that something was wrong with me…
AS: Was it your coach who noticed?
Y: It was usually my parent(s) that noticed first, people in my family.
AS: Well I guess the people you are living with would notice.
Y: Then the coach would notice and ask me why I didn’t say anything and I would be scolded and because of my poor behaviour I would always thing I need to do better.
AS: Are the injuries caused by over training?
Y: Over training is probably the main reason. Before a competition, I would watch the video footage of the previous competition for image training but if I had lost in the previous competition I would feel that I have to do better and try harder in the next competition.
Even if I won the competition, I would always feel that there was something that needed to be worked on and it would spur me on to try my best on a daily basis.
So pretty much I would over train before every competition.
7mins 40secs
As: At the end of last season you sustained some injuries but you battled through.
Y: Yes. The year before too, at the World Championships I injured my right ankle but at that time I was helped and supported by so many people and that turned out to be a very emotional competition.
This year too, also turned out to be an emotional World Championships and I realised that I get a lot of power from the people around me.
While I was skating I didn’t have the feeling I was skating under my own power.
During the competition I never felt that my leg was sore or that I was in pain…
AS: You felt that that you were being supported and held up by the people around you?
Y: Very much so. Truthfully, it felt really good and I was able to do my best right up until the end of the competition.
8mins 31secs
Narrator: “JOY” At the age of 12 he experienced for the first time the feeling of “Joy” as a skater.
Y: I wasn’t able to go the rink (as it had closed down) and thanks to the efforts of Awakawa Shizuka the rink was reopened. At that time I was truly happy.
I remember thinking how happy I was that I was able to train again at that rink.
N: His first experience of living abroad was in Toronto in Canada.
AS: Now, you have chosen Canada as the environment in which you are doing your training and you are also working with a new coach. This has been ongoing now for a while.
Y: This is my second season there.
AS: Your second season…Since going overseas to Canada, what would you say has most influenced your skating style?
Y: I have to do a lot more basic skating practice. That skating practice also includes parts that will improve my muscles as well as being a practice schedule that is designed for me and that can be adjusted to include the skating skills that I need to work on, things that will make my skating better.
This was something I had never done before in my training.
AS: Are you enjoying your life there now?
Y: I am really enjoying it but in some respects it is hard, too.
AS: It the training tough?
Y: Until now, I have just thought about my programs in terms of having to do the jumps. In that practice I would fall a lot of times while practicing the jumps.
Rather that working on my skating skills I would always think “I need to concentrate on my jumps”. I now realise that it wasn’t an integrated approach and that skating skills should also be taken care of.
I also have the feeling that the jumps are improving as they are coming out of my improvement in the skating skills department and that is a really fun thing for me.
AS: If you are able to notice and improve your skating skills then you have more ease, especially towards the end of a program and it also has a good influence on a skater’s ability to jump.
When it come to skating skills, as we become more mature and more adult we come to realise how important that part of training is.
If you can notice that now, even if it is tough maybe you will start to notice all kinds of things to work on.
Y: Basic skating skills often look easy but to do it properly you really need to concentrate on what you are doing. And because that is difficult it is a really enjoyable challenge.
I keep thinking to myself, “If I can just get over this tough bit then things will be much easier”. It is a series of small steps, just like the small steps we take to build physical strength and that kind of thing helps to keep me motivated.
AS: In Canada, you have met a lot of people, coaches for example. Who is the most interesting person you have met?
Y: When you say interesting…. I have to say David.
AS: I thought you would say that.
Y: The world interesting matches him well. I never know what is going to come out of him.
He is extremely good at creating programs that match the music. He is always thinking about which step goes where and is very aware of the levels.
He is moving and creating in his own way but he is always making calculations about what needs to be included. In addition, as a person he is a really interesting guy with an interesting personality.
AS: It seems like he is the kind of person you can trust to create a good program for you.
Y: Yes, that’s right. If David is there I feel in safe hands. We can call on help from a spin coach or from a step specialist, but if David is there then I can trust him to help me with those things.
AS: While you are in Canada, what do you like to do to relax?
Y: I play games.
AS: Do you like games?
Y: I love them a lot. The place where I am living now is really high and that region is pretty flat?
As: Do you mean high as in high above the ground or high as in an expensive place? (The Japanese word “takai” 高いcan express both of those meanings so it is slightly ambiguous.)
Y: I mean that I am living on a high floor in the building, so when I look out I can see really far into the distance.
When I am tired from studying or tired from skating I like to listen to music and look out at the view. I find this is a good way for me to relax.
AS: Now that you are living and training in this new environment, have you found anything that you want to try or anything that you feel you need?
Y: I feel that I need to put all of my energy into completing my new program. Every season, one of my programs, either the short or the free, I don’t perform as well as the other.
As a skater, even though it is very difficult I want to be able to perform the both with the same “good” quality. So this season I, I will try not to miss anything out.
With the Olympics as my final goal, I want to go into each competition with the view that I will find something to work on and improve on.
13mins 50secs
Narrator: Six months before the Torino Olympics Arakawa Shizuka states:
AS: I had just finished the choreography on the music that had been decided for the Olympic season. That was the stage that I was at the six months out mark.
All I had to do was focus and begin practice and preparation. I wasn’t yet fully into “Olympic Mode” rather than that I was just at the end of the “off season” which is quite a tough time as it is when you do some soul searching before that start of the season.
While practicing on the ice, it is a time to really focus, but when you step off the ice you need to kind of switch off. If you don’t do that then you will be in “on mode” for too long.
It was the time I was trying to find the balance between being “on” and “off”.
Friends on Ice 2011 footage ~ 15 min to 17mins 53 sec
Narrator: April… Just before the start of the academic year Hanyu selected the same university as Arakawa Shizuka; Waseda University.
AS: You have entered Waseda University.
Y: Yes.
AS: What did you choose to enter Waseda University?
Y: Well, the fact that you chose to study there was a big thing for me.
AS: Why?
Y: Your way of thinking… Your way of approaching our sport, from all of the times we have talked together, it is something I can have the utmost respect for and something that I have admired, so I kind of wanted to follow in your footsteps.
AS: Thank you very much. Did all of the cameras broadcasting to the world get that comment on film?
Y: I really wanted to follow the path you had opened. You got the Torino Olympic gold medal and Olympic gold is something I am aiming for so I want to do my best, just the way you did.
We both went to Tohoko High School and that school really focuses on sports but is also a place that makes you study hard.
So our life wasn’t just skating. For example, if we got seriously injured that could be the end of our career or even as a professional skater the length of the career is limited so for those reasons we also need to study to have something to fall back on.
AS: When I started organising my shows I realised I had learned a lot of things but that there were still things I needed to know.
So what I learned before is helping me now but there are still many of the things l learned in the past are connected to the new world I have stepped into.
Y: Did you have the regular schooling classes in university?
AS: They didn’t have other types of courses then (there were no online courses) I went to university regularly every day.
Until high school I knew I was on the sports track with skating but after that in order to get myself ready for the regular world I decided that I needed some time to prepare and so I didn’t choose the sports track in university.
That’s why I chose Waseda University.
Y: When I hear that I realise how great you are.
AS: In that way, I was able to remove myself a little from the sport and have time for other things. It was kind of taking the long way round I guess.
Rather than being on a very singular sports track like some of the other students, on that “long way round” I was able to pick up various things that are really valuable to me now.
There wasn’t a single wasted minute on that journey; everything can be a valuable life experience. In that I way I want to be able to support you in all of the challenges you have ahead. I really mean that.
21mins00secs.
Narrator: When Yuzuru Hanyu gets ANGRY.
Y: I often argue with my parents. I tend to become quite, I stop talking. I don’t really do anything but I show it in my general demeanour and attitude. I kind of let everyone know that I’m angry with my attitude.
AS: When you just started skating, who were the skaters that you admired?
Y: I admired Evegheny Plushenko.
Narrator: From his elementary school days his hero was the Russian skater Evegheny Plushenko.
AS: How was it when you skated with the skater you admired for the first time?
Y: I was able to have the opportunity to skate with him at a number of ice shows. At that time I was still only a junior high school student…
AS: Did you feel his aura?
Y: Totally. It was amazing. I actually told Plushenko that he was my hero. I felt that everything he said when he talked was just so cool.
AS: You thought he was cool? Hahahahah..
Y: Is there anything from Plushenko that has inspired your skating style?
Y: He always seemed to have the feeling of delivering his programs. Under the old 6.0 scoring system for the jumps etc. in his programs he was always able to tell a story and at that time skaters could do it more freely.
Nowadays, the program component scores have become more important, the step sequence is really important, the spins have become important but even within those parameters the ability to tell a story that connects with the music and incorporates all of the elements is something that I learned from Plushenko.
AS: The winner of the Salt Lack City Olympics was Alexi Yagudin but even so you were a fan of Plushenko. What was the biggest reason you were his fan?
Y: I think it was because I probably only saw competitions that Plushenko won. At that time, I now know that they were great rivals and that the both wanted to be Olympic champions and that Yagudin won the Olympics.
I have now seem them perform many times as part of my own sporting life and I think they are both amazing, but at that time when I was a boy I only had eyes for Plushenko.
AS: Have you ever competed against him?
Y: I haven’t. If I’m lucky enough to be chosen to compete in Sochi I am wondering what it will be like. I’m a bit nervous about that actually.
AS: But are you looking forward to it, too?
Y: I am totally looking forward to it.
AS: As a skater, when you start to compete in a lot of big competitions you get to meet a lot of different kinds of athletes…
Are there any skaters that you have encountered that you think are great, not counting Plushenko?
Y: I have to say that now I really admire Daisuke Takahashi. Even from the most basic level he has been pulling Japanese skating forward.
As a sportsman also I admire him. His passion for skating even after he was seriously injured is admirable due to the fact he was mentally strong enough to overcome such difficult things.
That is something that I truly admire in him.
Narrator: Suddenly at the age of 18, Hanyu has really become big in our eyes…but he is still only 18…
AS: What are you most interested in now? It is ok to mention skating things, or things outside of skating, too.
Y: I like earphones.
AS: You like earphones?
Y: Yes. I really like them. There are different kinds…
AS: Are you an earphone collector?
Y: Maybe I’m a collector.
AS: That’s a bit unusual..
Y: Takahito Mura also likes earphones.
AS: Does he?
Y: Yes.
AS: Are earphones in fashion now?
Y: I can’t really say that they are in fashion but I do know a lot about them.
AS: You mean like, earphones for listening to music?
Y: Yes.
AS: Which type are the best for listening?
Y: It is impossible to say which one is best. It is a little bit deeper than that.
AS: You really know a lot about them, then?
Y: Well, hahahahaha. Yes.
AS: Do things sound really different depending on the type of earphone you use?
Y: Yes, completely different.
AS: Is that so?
Y: Yes. After, I will teach you about them.
AS: You really seem to be deeply involved in that world.
Y: I also really like electrical appliances, too.
AS: What have you gotten recently that you really love?
Y: Something I have now….I would have to say earphones. Hahahahahah. Friends Plus.
End of the video.
