Figure skating: Triumph after tears as Nagasu makes skating history
Send a link to a friend
[February 12, 2018]
By Elaine Lies
GANGNEUNG, South Korea (Reuters) - Four
years ago, American figure skater Mirai Nagasu was heartbroken after
being left off the U.S. team for the Sochi Olympics in favor of a
woman who ranked lower than she had at a key qualifying event.
But on Monday, the woman whose Japanese immigrant parents run a
sushi restaurant and mother hand-sewed her costumes, made skating
history by becoming the first American woman - and only the third
woman overall - to land the fiendishly difficult triple Axel jump at
an Olympics.
Skating a stellar routine in the women's free skate portion of the
team competition, Nagasu began with a clean triple Axel and then
went on to nail eight other triple jumps, including a triple flip
and triple Salchow combination as she helped America claim bronze.
Clearly overjoyed, the 24-year-old Nagasu, who was skating at her
second Olympics, pumped her fists and grinned as she skated off the
ice.
"I feel really great," she said after her performance. "Going into
it, I was like a train, get on those tracks and get some speed. To
nail it the way I did - and even out of the corner of my eye, I
could see my team mates standing in excitement."
The only other women to land the jump in the Olympics were Japanese
skaters Midori Ito and Mao Asada, and Nagasu joked that perhaps her
ancestry had played a part.
"Maybe it's the Japanese genetics - but lucky for me I'm American,
so I'll be the first U.S. lady," she said after her performance.
She was snubbed for Sochi in 2014 despite finishing third in the
U.S. nationals as the selectors handed the Olympic berth to Ashley
Wagner, who finished fourth.
"Four years ago I was crying with Adam Rippon because we both didn't
make the team," she said, referring to the men's singles skater. "So
for both of us to be on the team... is super exciting."
Nagasu was born to Japanese immigrant parents who run a sushi
restaurant in California, where she grew up. Her first name means
'future' in Japanese and she reportedly speaks a mixture of Japanese
and English at home with her parents.
[to top of second column] |
Mirai Nagasu of the U.S. competes. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
She began skating at the age of five and idolized two-time Olympic
medalist and skater Michelle Kwan. As her career took off, she said
it was sometimes difficult to keep going on the income from a
restaurant.
HAND-SEWN COSTUMES
"My mom also made a lot of my skating costumes," Nagasu said on a
conference call in January. "She also, like Michelle's mom, sewed
sequins on one by one and I would complain that they were not as
shiny as the rocky crystals because we got ours at Target and
Michael's."
Nagasu says that while in general she turns to comedy and laughter
to reduce pressure at big events like the Olympics, overcoming the
heartbreak of missing the Sochi team was tough.
"I was very upset for a very long time. But I changed myself and
became a better skater," she told the conference call. "I honestly
don't think that I would have worked as hard on the triple Axel if I
didn't have that time to really contemplate."
Unfortunately, her parents weren't there to see her make history.
Nagasu has said that her sushi chef father rarely had the chance to
see her skate because he almost never closed his restaurant, and now
is no different.
"Three weeks is a long time, especially to leave work," she said.
"They're only coming for the last week but I'm sure they're home now
watching it. I can't wait to see them."
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; additional reporting by Gabrielle
Tetrault-Farber; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|