News articles on Kao:
After SP: 4/15/2022
https://www.nikkansports.com/sports/news/202204150000010.html
Kao Miura, a favorite to win the championship, unexpectedly placed 20th in the SP "I just had a nightmare," he said. His jumps at the beginning and the end of the SP were out of control.
One of the favorites, Kao Miura (16=Oriental Bio/ Meguro Nichidai High School), who won the bronze medal at the Four Continents Championships this past January while competing against seniors, unexpectedly sank to 20th place.
He scored 60.03 points. He landed unsteadily on both the triple Lutz and the triple toeloop at the beginning of the competition. He landed the next triple flip, but fell so hard on the last triple Axel that it took him a moment to get back on his feet. Mistakes were also made in the steps that followed.
In the Kiss-and-Cry, where he was waiting for his score, he was devastated. His SP, which he had scored 88.37 at the Four Continents Championships and 92.81 at the All-Japan Championships last December, though not recognized by the International Skating Union (ISU), dropped to an unbelievable 60-point level.
Last month, he suffered a torn left quadriceps muscle. He withdrew from the World Championships in Montpellier, France, where he was selected for the first time as a substitute for Yuzuru Hanyu (27=ANA), who missed the competition due to the injury. Miura had been recuperating, and this was his debut World Junior Championships.
"Before the competition, I didn't feel any pain. After suffering from a pulled muscle and a fever, I only resumed full-scale training on Saturday and Sunday last weekend. I haven't had any pain since I came here, and I was skating better and better. I didn't feel any pain during the six-minute practice session (just before the competition)."
After the competition, he explained his disappointment, "But this is how it turned out...I really felt like I had a nightmare."
Ilia Malinin (18=USA), who showed his presence by placing 9th at the World Championships, where Miura was not able to compete, was in first place with 88.99 points. 28.93 points deficit was almost impossible to overcome, and he seemed to have put it behind him and move on.
"Next time, I will do what I have to do," he said. "I have nothing to lose, so I will give it my all."
The only thing left to do now is to take the plunge for the FS on the 15th.
Before FS: 4/15/2022
https://www.sanspo.com/article/20220415-T44AAJMKVBNA3OMJM3GZBWSYB4/
Kao Miura hurt his right instep in the official practice: "I will ice the injury once an hour and I will compete."
The second day of the World Junior Figure Skating Championships was held in Tallinn on March 15. Kao Miura (Oriental Bio, Meguro Nichidai High School), who finished 0th, fell hard on the triple axel in the official practice for the free practice on April 16. There was a time when he left the rink. According to him, he hurt his right instep.
When he left the venue, he looked concerned about his foot as he walked away, but he stressed, "I was told I could compete as long as it wasn't swollen, so I'll ice it once an hour and then compete.”
After FS: 4/17/2022
https://hochi.news/articles/20220417-OHT1T51002.html?page=1
Kao Miura: "I did the best I could do right now" Passionate "Poeta" totaling 197.59 points
In the Men's FS, Kao Miura, who finished 20th in the Short Program, placed 13th. He scored 137.56 points for a total of 197.59 points. He was proud of himself, saying, "I did the best I could do right now."
He landed a quadruple toeloop and two triple axels. He missed the World Championships in March due to a torn left quadriceps muscle. He is still not in good shape, but he skated with full of spirit until the end of the competition.
After arriving in Tallinn, the pain returned, but "it gradually went away while I was being treated, and from yesterday, I didn't feel it at all," he said, "My physical condition was not so bad, and my body didn't hurt, so I was able to skate as much as I wanted to."
He returned to the same rink where he won the bronze medal at the Four Continents Championships in January. "I have a strong emotional attachment to this rink, and I wanted to perform better in it," was his honest thought.
He said he had learned a lot in the process from his injury to this competition. ”I will never be in perfect physical condition for a competition in the future. Injuries are something that must be avoided, but I think there are many things that happen right before a competition. I think even other skaters would be depressed by that result after hitting rock bottom in the short program. For me, it was a new discovery to deal with things in this way and reset my mind for the next time." The 16-year-old will take all these experiences to the next season.