Patrick Chan stands third after short program at ISU Worlds
BOSTON – Canada’s Patrick Chan is in third place after the men’s short program on Wednesday at the ISU World Figure Skating Championships.
Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan neared his world record score totalling 110.56 points to give himself a 12-point cushion heading into the free skate. Defending champion Javier Fernandez of Spain is second at 98.52 and Chan follows at 94.84.
Chan, a three-time world champion from Toronto, opened with a perfect quad-triple toe combination but did fall on his triple Axel.
‘’I’m not disappointed at all,’’ said Chan, who sat out last season and hadn’t competed at the previous two worlds. ‘’It was a great achievement to do that quad-triple opening. I felt great going into the Axel but I just rushed it a little bit. I know what I did wrong.’’
@Pchiddy laid down a solid short program. He is in 3rd place! #Worlds2016 pic.twitter.com/5oyBiqZUN4
— Skate Canada (@SkateCanada) March 31, 2016
At the ISU Four Continents Championships last month, Chan roared from fifth after the short to the gold.
‘’Third is a great spot going into the long program,’’ he said. ‘’The Four Continents is a great example of not being on top after the short and focusing on the long.’’
Seventeen-year-old Nam Nguyen of Toronto was 27th and did not qualify for the free skate set for Friday.
Logjam at top of ice dance standings
In ice dancing, less than six points separate the top-six after the short dance.
Defending champions Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France lead at 76.29, Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani of the U.S. are second at 74.70 and their compatriots Madison Chock and Evan Bates are third at 72.46.
Grand Prix Final champions Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje of Waterloo, Ont., are fourth at 71.83 and Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier of Toronto fifth with a personal best 70.70.
@WeaverPoje wowed the crowd at TD Garden with their short dance! They are in 4th place after the short #Worlds2016 pic.twitter.com/zqUarSOQYg
— Skate Canada (@SkateCanada) March 30, 2016
“We skated really well it was one of our best short dances this season,” said Weaver. “Where the disconnect was between that and our score I am not sure. But that’s not under our control and we gave it everything we had.”
Poje says the result won’t alter their free dance on Friday.
“We have a game plan for these worlds and that’s going out there and doing two solid performances.”
Gilles and Poirier tinkered with their Beatles-themed music after their fifth place finish at the ISU Four Continents last month.
“That was a big risk,” said Poirier. “It only gave us three and half weeks to get this program together. The choices we made all paid off and we got straight level fours. It’s been a roller coaster season and we’ve shown a lot of resiliency.”
Gilles said the previous short dance wasn’t connecting with the judges.
“We weren’t getting the levels we wanted all season,” she said. “We kept getting different feedback so we went back to music that was more fluid. We really want to end this season on a happy note.”
Elisabeth Paradis of Loretteville, Que., and François Xavier-Ouellette of Mascouche, Que., were 23rd. The top-20 from the short dance advanced to the free skate.
Competition continues Thursday with the free dance and women’s short program.
Full results: ISU World Figure Skating Championships 2016
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