Figure skating-American Malinin rises to pressure of Team USA's golden hopes
MILAN, Feb 8 : Ilia Malinin stepped onto the ice knowing figure skating's Olympic team event hinged on him — and then delivered just enough to haul the United States past Japan and onto the top step of the podium at the Milano Cortina Games.
Italy, feeding off a roaring home crowd, claimed a hard‑earned bronze.
The U.S. and Japan were deadlocked heading into the men's free skate on Sunday night, leaving the 21-year-old double world champion shouldering the Americans' golden hopes.
A day earlier, he had stumbled to a surprise second place in the short programme.
"Being a tie, I was like, okay, I'm the deciding factor," Malinin said. "I need to just do what I need to do, go out there, but also test the ice again, just to see how it feels, to really prepare myself for my individual event," he said.
"But it really came down to the energy, the support, the passion for my whole team. Without them, I don't think we would have gotten this medal."
As the first skater ever to land seven quadruple jumps in a programme, many at the Milano Ice Skating Arena anticipated a repeat performance on Sunday.
Instead, the self-named "Quad God" looked unusually mortal.
He landed four of his seven planned quad jumps cleanly. He turned two - including the quadruple Axel, a jump only he has ever landed in competition - into triples, and bobbled the landing on another in a programme that looked, for a moment, as though it might unravel.
His 200.03 points were nearly 40 off his best, yet still untouchable for Japan's Shun Sato, who scored 194.86.
His unique free programme had the crowd roaring. Entitled "A Voice," it features his own voice playing over the soundtrack, with philosophical lines such as "The only true wisdom is in knowing you know


