Kim Yu-na cruises to the lead after women's short program
LONDON, Ontario (AP) -- With her trademark crowns twinkling in her ears, Kim Yu-na dazzled judges and fans alike.
Some things never change.
The Olympic champion made a triumphant return to the World Figure Skating Championships on Thursday, winning the short program. There were no signs of nerves and certainly no signs of rust in her first major competition since the 2011 worlds.
Just the hint of more gold in her future.
"Because I've skated for so long in the past, the skating itself is not that much different," Kim said through a translator. "However, how I think of skating in general, how I feel before a competition and how I worry about a competition is definitely different because I don't feel the pressure as much. After winning the Olympics, I felt I had accomplished it all. I had accomplished my dream."
"Now I don't focus on the results only. I really do enjoy skating itself," she added. "However, I'm a human being and I do want to still try my best. I can't help myself exceeding my own goals and getting good results."
With a score of 69.97, she's more than three points ahead of defending world champion Carolina Kostner (66.86) and Kanako Murakami of Japan (66.64) going into Saturday's free skate.
Longtime rival Mao Asada is almost eight points behind Kim. Though she landed her triple axel - judges gave it to her even though replays showed it clearly was two-footed - Asada is in sixth after botching her jump combination and popping her triple loop into a single. That leaves her one spot behind U.S. champion Ashley Wagner, who played it safe and didn't try her new triple-triple combination.
"Mr. Nicks told me if it doesn't feel right, don't risk it," Wagner said, referring to coach John Nicks. "I would rather play it safe than sorry. The landing on the flip wasn't exactly how I wanted it. At an event this huge and this important, my focus is to get the three spots back and I figured playing it safe with a triple-double of quality was the better way to go."
With Gracie Gold in ninth, the Americans are in good position to regain a third spot for next year's Sochi Olympics. Wagner and Gold need a combined final placement of 13 or better - fifth and eight, say - and there is room for both to move up in Saturday's free skate.
"Three spots, three spots, three spots. We're going to do whatever it takes to get there," said Wagner, who missed out on the Vancouver Olympics because the United States only had two spots, just the second time that has happened since World War II.
"It's almost a personal agenda," Wagner said. "I want that third spot back. We've been trying for too long to get it back."
No female skater has had a run quite like Kim from 2009 through the Vancouver Olympics. She won all but one competition, usually in breathtaking fashion. And she did it while carrying the hopes of an entire nation, too. South Korea had never won an Olympic medal, let alone gold, in a sport other than speedskating at the Winter Games, and "Queen Yu-na" was treated like royalty.
But she handled the expectations flawlessly, coming as close to perfection in Vancouver as anyone ever has. Not only do the records she set in the short program, free skate and overall score still stand, no one's even come close to touching them.
"After the Olympics, I felt empty because I had achieved my goal," Kim said.
After competing at the 2010 and 2011 world championships, where she was second both times, she decided to take a break. After spending most of the previous five years in Toronto and Los Angeles, she returned home. She skated in shows and helped Pyeongchang in its winning bid for the 2018 Winter Olympics. While she didn't rule out Sochi, it didn't seem likely, either.
Then, last summer, she announced her return.
Comebacks in figure skating are notoriously harsh, and not even an Olympic gold medal can protect against gravity, injuries and the pace of progress. For every Evgeni Plushenko or Gordeeva and Grinkov, there are dozens more failures.
"It's really hard to prepare your physical and mental status," Kim acknowledged. "It wasn't an easy to decision to make, but I made it and now I'm just focused to be back."
Actually, it was like old times.
What makes Kim so special is how smooth and effortless she makes everything look. Triple-triple jump combinations take so much strength and effort that you know when most women are going to do them because the lead-in is so lengthy. For Kim, her triple lutz-triple toe combo was simply another element, done as easily as another step or turn. She had an edge call on her triple flip, a minor flaw, but the jump itself was gorgeous as she floated in the air for the briefest of moments before starting to turn.
Even her landings were gorgeous. Rather than scratching the ice, she glided along like a pebble skipped across the water.
But just as it was in the old days, it was Kim's presentation that was particularly exquisite. She doesn't simply feel music, it's part of her soul. She acknowledged each nuance of music with every inch of her body: a soft tilt of her head, a brush of her fingertips and, of course, that penetrating gaze.
"Everything. Does that sound too broad?" Gold said when asked what she admired most about her idol's skating. "Her smoothness. ... That confidence. It just looks like she trusts herself so much, which is a lot (easier) said than done."
Her only "flaw" was with her spins. The first two got level threes, one below the maximum. Most skaters would have taken that gladly - she got positive grades of execution on both - but for Kim, perfection was, and still is, the norm.
"Other than that first spin, I felt great," Kim said. "Because I gave my best, I would give myself the full 100 percent."
The frenzy surrounding Kim isn't nearly as fevered as it was four years ago, though that could change if she wins a second world title here. But Kim is well aware of the expectations that remain, noting that her main goal at this world championships is to qualify additional skaters for Sochi.
"At the Vancouver Olympics, I had the pleasure of skating with my fellow skater," she said. "For the next Olympics, I really want my fellow Korean skaters to experience the same thing."
Though Kostner fell on the second jump of her triple toe-triple toe combination, the rest of her program was dazzling. She got the maximum level fours on her footwork and two of her three spins.
"I am a little bit angry with myself. I fell on the combination which upset me a little bit," Kostner said. "I cannot say what happened there, it goes so fast. Otherwise I had a wonderful skate."
Murakami's ethereal program was flawless, right down to her sparkly, petal pink dress with a touch of bluish-grey on the skirt. Everything was done with lightness and ease, masking the difficulty of the tricks she was doing. But the judges noticed, awarding her the highest technical mark of the day.
"I feel like it's a little bit like a miracle," Murakami said. "I don't really want to think about the placement."