To Alysa Liu, competing and comforting "just another day"

To Alysa Liu, competing and  comforting "just another day"

Amber Glenn always wears her heart on her sleeve, her joy or dismay clear for the world to see.

“It’s what makes me relatable, but it also makes it hard to hide,” Glenn said after her Wednesday practice at the Milano Ice Skating Arena.

Some 18 hours earlier, her face had displayed increasing levels of devastation, reflecting a heart crushed by the mistake on her favorite jump in the short program. It was an error so costly it left the three-time U.S. champion in 13th place, slightly more than nine points from 3rd, her hopes to contend for a medal probably gone.

Glenn looked inconsolable.

Reigning world champion Alysa Liu saw that. And when she might have been celebrating the strong skate that put her third, just 2.12 points from short program winner Ami Nakai of Japan heading into Thursday’s free skate final, Liu was more concerned about helping her teammate.

To Glenn, that ability to sense the heart of the matter is what has brought Liu to where she is today, delighting in skating for its essence rather than for where she winds up in the standings.

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Despite twists and turns, U.S. ice dancers Zingas and Kolesnik stay in fast lane

Despite twists and turns, U.S. ice dancers Zingas and Kolesnik stay in fast lane

There are a lot of unexpected plot twists in the story of how Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik got here.

Not the least of those surprises simply is what “here” means to them this week.

The U.S. ice dancers are in Helsinki, Finland, where they will compete beginning Friday in the Finlandia Trophy event on the Grand Prix circuit, with a chance to make the Grand Prix Final and/or simply build their case for getting one the three U.S. ice dance spots at the 2026 Winter Olympics. 

Who would have imagined a convert from singles skating in 2022 and an ice dancer from a war-ravaged city in Ukraine could be a team in this position so quickly?

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By the numbers, Russia's Petrosian looks golden at 2026 Olympics. Will pressure and her coach's past factor in?

By the numbers, Russia's Petrosian looks golden at 2026 Olympics.  Will pressure and her coach's past factor in?

Figure skating has become more and more of a math exercise since the sport began using its new scoring and judging system in the 2004-05 season.

If it were only a numbers game, you could securely place a bet on 17-year-old Russian Adeliia Petrosian becoming Olympic women’s singles champion next February because she has mastered high-scoring jumps none of the other contenders are likely to try.

But human behavior factors into the final score, so placing that bet involves more of a gamble than it might seem.

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A season of tragedy and triumph for U.S. figure skaters

A season of tragedy and triumph for U.S. figure skaters

The figure skating season that ended nine days ago at the World Team Trophy in Japan was one of overwhelming tragedy and historic triumph for Team USA.

The tragedy happened Jan. 27, when 28 members of the U.S. figure skating family were among the 67 people who died in a crash between their plane and a military helicopter near Washington, D.C.

Among the 28 with ties to the skating community were 11 young skaters, plus some of their parents and coaches, all returning from a development camp following the U.S. Championships in Wichita, Kansas.

At that point, with a pall hanging over them and hearts heavy with pain, the top U.S. skaters still had nearly three months left in the season, with three championship events left:  Four Continents, World Championships and World Team Trophy.

For nearly all of them, going back to practice was both incredibly difficult and necessary, as the U.S. elite sought ways to honor the memories of those who had died by honoring the sport they all loved with their best efforts.

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Changes in skating rules to limit jumps may make Malinin's record literally one for the ages

Changes in skating rules to limit jumps may make Malinin's record literally one for the ages

There is an old saying in sports that goes, “Records are made to be broken.”

That may not apply to the world record men’s free skate score Ilia Malinin posted in winning the 2024 World Championships – as well as to several women’s world records – if the International Skating Union passes proposals limiting jumps at its biennial Congress this June in Las Vegas.

Should that happen, everyone should have their asterisks ready, as the ISU once again will have to create yet another chronological subdivision on its already confusing record lists.

While the formal agenda for the ISU Congress will not be made public until next week, the preliminary agenda includes the following changes to singles free skate programs recommended by the singles and pairs technical committee:

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