Beijing 2022: Japan's 'Ice Prince' perplexed by rare lapse
Yuzuru Hanyu, widely regarded as one of the best male figure skaters of all time, found himself wondering if he had fallen out of favour with the ice after a rare mistake.
Far from the dazzling performances that won him gold at the last two Olympics, the Japanese "Ice Prince" landed eighth in the men's short programme at the Beijing Games after a missed opening quadruple Salchow jump cost him precious points.
"To be honest, I'm wondering, did I do something wrong? Is it because I did something bad that it turned out like this?" he said, blaming a divot in the ice for making him skip the jump.
Hanyu told reporters he had gone into the Games comfortable with his level of concentration as well as his much-talked-about decision to arrive in Beijing just two days before competition.
"That's especially why ... I can't come to terms with it," he said.
"Nothing was wrong with my skating, so I'm thinking maybe the ice doesn't like me anymore," he said, forcing a laugh.
He will go into the final free skate on Thursday 18.82 points behind American Nathan Chen, who finished top of the table by beating Hanyu's world record with 113.97 points.
At the last Olympics in Pyeongchang, Chen - also a gold-medal contender then - missed the podium after a disastrous 17th-place finish in the short programme.
Hanyu may yet find redemption on Thursday, when he is looking to become the first skater ever to land the quadruple Axel, a 4-1/2-rotation jump considered impossible by most.
With his unrivalled stardom, the 27-year-old has set up the free skate event as one of the Games' highlights with buzz building around the quad Axel or "4A" attempt in his performance to "Ten to Chi to" or "Heaven and Earth".
He confessed a day earlier that he had yet to land it