Asada, who had been expected to be a top prospect for gold at
Sochi, tumbled to 16th in the short program after falling and an
overall lackluster performance.
She finished sixth after a strong free skate that left her in tears
at the conclusion of her competition.
Russia's Adelina Sotnikova took gold, and longtime rival Kim Yuna of
South Korea won silver.
"I was really depressed, my feelings were as low as they could go
after the short program, but after that I still had to skate the
free," Asada told a news conference in Tokyo on Tuesday after
returning from Sochi.
"Of course I was anxious and scared, but I was able to overcome that
to give my best performance ever ... I felt so good I should have
been smiling, but some of the previous day's feelings lingered, so I
wept."
Asada, who won silver at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics and rebuilt her
skating from scratch over the last four years in order to challenge
South Korea's Kim for gold, said last year she would retire from
competition after Sochi.
On Tuesday, though, she said she was taking part in the Figure
Skating World Cup next month in Japan to try to atone for Sochi and
to express her gratitude to the nation.
"After that, I want to take time out to think about my future," the
23-year-old said. When pressed, she said chances of her retiring
were "half and half."
Known as the only woman to land three of the complicated triple Axel
jumps in competition, Asada had struggled with the move this season,
prompting some commentators to say she should omit it for the
Olympics.
[to top of second column] |
She fell while attempting it in the short program but landed it the
next day.
"Achieving the jump in competition always gave me a huge sense of
satisfaction," she said.
"But there wasn't really any choice — it was already in my program,
and I feel it is one of the things I can give audiences."
Though the Olympics overall were bittersweet, Asada added that she
had learned valuable lessons.
"I had those results in the short program and I was really sad. But
I didn't give up and went on to achieve what I wanted," she said.
"I think this will be a good experience for the rest of my life."
Asada sidestepped a direct answer when asked how she felt about
comments by former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, who heads the Tokyo
2020 Olympics organizing committee and sparked outrage last week
when he said that she had a habit of "always falling at the most
critical time" in a competition.
Mori later said his remarks were misunderstood.
"Humans fail. Of course it's not acceptable and nobody who fails
wants to," she said.
"I think maybe he regrets his comments a bit."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|