Personally, for me, i almost gave up watching when first Adam, then Brown got those push over scores. But the ending was brilliant, because keeping down the scores for Vasiliejvs, Cha and Sato in favor of those two feds spots. yeah, the skaters had mistakes, but come on, we all know how it works with reviews, GoE and PCSs. And, sure, Brown landed two 3as and had a nice, clean skate, but, like, so did Hagara, but we ain't seeing Hagara in top 10, do we?
Anyway, all this--let's call it math--worked out to Shaidorov's silver, because they all expected he would fold and Kagiyama would sail ahead on PCS/GoE right into the lead, yup-yup!
But in hindsight, why? Kagiyama was always an unstable skater, since the juniors (falling 3 times in JWC when they were trying so hard to hand gold to him, and there was no Malinin to menace him there. He was a clear favorite) and without the clutch that Malinin has in spades. As a result, he didn't just loose to Malinin, but to Shaidorov coming out of the left field small fed, with a huge disadvantage compared to Kagiyama after the SP.
I don't know what Kagiyama's training environment is, but out of 3 dynastic skaters trained with participation of their fathers on this podium, he did the worst in terms of psychological stability over the years. Imo, the JFS imo should start investing more in Sato at this point because it's just silly that he is in the worlds for the first time.
People can fixated all they want on 2Lz for Malinin, but Malinin also immediately beefed up his other two combos after he'd already shows insane content and was entering second part of the program. People keep calling him a jumper to belittle him, but they don't give him enough credit for his intellectual quickness in leveraging his brilliant technical arsenal. They also do not credit the amount of work his teams and he puts into creating the aura and connection to the audience. Which, as Brown deminstrates is more important than anything for the scoreboard.
Those who berate Malinin for doing shows discount that the shows is how he trains that audience connection muscle (plus establishes his family in FS world which is long-term planning for success). His will to win and ability to deliver one time and when needed, on cue, is great. Also, he showed a lyrical skate in gala, showing his human side, emotions and versatility. It's time to stop treating him as that boy who had stollen 4A glory from divine, incomparable, ethereal Hanue, people.
Malinin is a 2x world champion and not by some fluke, but through hard work, incredible talent, and ability to use that talent.
The most humorous part of the men's event was Aymoz' performances vs scoring with those lopsided, tortured 4Ts that could make Aliev proud.