Whining but not winning
Led by petulant Nagasu, American women can’t compete but can complain
“I’m ready to go home,” she said.
That’s not the kind of rhetoric expected of an Olympic champion. Which is, well, why she isn’t an Olympic champion.
Nagasu, 24, was the senior member of the three-woman U.S. contingent here, and it’s little wonder the Americans had their worst showing in the modern era of the Olympics.
Nagasu piled up excuses the way Russian gold medalist Alina Zagitova did combination jumps.
She was emotionally drained after winning a bronze medal in the team competition. She traveled four hours last week to attend a lunar new year party. She was denied hot water in the shower.
But, hey, she wasn’t the only one who choked Friday at the Gangneung Ice Arena.
“I’d like to point out that Gabrielle Daleman, who is an Olympic gold medalist (for Canada in the team event), also didn’t have a strong outing here in the individual,” Nagasu said.
By the way, if ABC is looking for a contestant for the next season of “Dancing With the Stars,” she is available.
“I would like to be on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ because I want to be a star,” Nagasu said.
Of course, she could have become a star if hadn’t mentally checked out of this event.
The decline of the once-dominant U.S. in women’s figure skating has become a major talking point at these Games, with explanations ranging from the reluctance of Americans to take the kinds of risks rewarded by a new scoring system to how the absence of a transcendent figure such as Michelle Kwan has affected the sport’s popularity at home.
What the skaters said after the competition pointed to another problem: a lack of mental and emotional fortitude.
National champion Bradie Tennell was the top U.S. finisher at ninth. Nagasu was 10th and Karen Chen 11th.
Until Friday, an American woman had finished sixth or higher at every Olympics since World War II.
The Russians reaffirmed their dominance in this discipline, with 15-year-old Zagitova and 18-year-old Evgenia Medvedeva outclassing the field by a significant margin. Tennell finished more than 35 points behind Medvedeva, the silver medalist.
“The rest of the world just has to catch up,” Tennell said.
Tennell never gave herself a chance to compete, as she was 11th after the short program. To her credit, the 20-year-old responded with America’s best performance in the free skate.
She stumbled on a double axel-triple toe loop combination, and her left hand touched the ice on a triple lutz. She salvaged the program by following up with a successful a triple loop-double-toe loop-double loop combination.
“It wasn’t that perfect Olympic program, but I’m really happy for getting out there and pulling myself together,” she said.
Tennell pledged to be part of a U.S. resurgence.
“I can’t speak for everybody, but for me, I’m sticking around and I’m going to work as hard as I possibly can to bring us up in the rankings,” she said.
Chen, 18, dropped from 10th to 11th after the free skate. She fell on a triple loop and landed clumsily on a triple salchow.
“What I can say is that there is a lot of pressure,” Chen said. “Bradie and I, this is our first time at the Olympics.
“To be honest, when I first came here I didn’t know what to expect. I knew it was going to be big, it was going to be grand, but that was about it. I didn’t know what the media was going to be like, I didn’t know what the ice was going to be like, I didn’t have an idea of what the village was going to be like, so it was all so brand new and all so different.”
Nagasu said she was satisfied with the bronze medal she won in the team event. In that competition, she became the first American woman, and only the third woman from any country, to land a triple axel at the Olympics.
Nagasu failed to land the jump in the short program and failed to land it again Friday, popping it.
“I’ve been crying every day since the team event because I was so happy, but then we had to keep training and training and training,” Nagasu said.
You know who else skated in the team event? The three skaters who won medals, including Kaetlyn Osmond, the bronze medalist from Canada.
“Maybe it won’t be enough for another person, or maybe someone else could have done a better job,” Nagasu said. “But I didn’t back down.”
Actually, that’s exactly what she did.