Nam Nguyen can't capitalize on personal best at Skate America

dimanche 23 octobre 2016

Canadian figure skater Nam Nguyen finished sixth in the men's event at the Skate America Grand Prix in Chicago. The 18-year-old Torontonian earned 159.64 points in Sunday's free program event, scoring 159.64 overall.

Japan's Shoma Uno landed three quadruple jumps en route to the men's title. Americans Jason Brown and Adam Rippon placed second and third in the first event of the Grand Prix season.

"I felt a little bit nervous heading into my free skate after a great short program yesterday," said Nguyen. "But I was still able to do my job. There's still so much to work on and today was a good step towards my goals this season."

Nguyen, fourth after Friday's short program, opened with a quad Salchow and also landed two triple axels including one in combination in his free skate to George Gershwin's "An American in Paris."

Canada earned one medal here this weekend. On Saturday, Julianne Seguin of Longueuil, Que., and Charlie Bilodeau of Trois-Pistoles, Que., won the gold in pairs. Gabrielle Daleman of Newmarket, Ont., was fourth in women's competition.

Quads aplenty in Chicago

Uno, skating to an intense tango, moved seamlessly through his demanding program, but fell late in the routine on a triple axel combination. He finished with 279.34 points.

"The first half of my program was great," Uno, 17, said through a translator. "Unfortunately, I missed a three-jump combination toward the end and I feel regrettable about that. My six-minute warmup didn't feel so good, but I was still able to pull out what I felt today, and I'm satisfied in that sense."

Brown, from the Chicago area and the 2015 U.S. champion, landed his opening quad for the first time this season, although it was scored as under-rotated. He scored 268.38 points.

The accomplishment didn't go unnoticed by skating fans online:




Rippon, meanwhile, fell on his opening quad. The reigning U.S. champion had 261.43 points.

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Nam Nguyen can't capitalize on personal best at Skate America

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