Just caught up on the men and...
Ilia was off the charts. No, his edges are no match for Yuma, but to say he has no choreography until the steps is also, in my opinion, a falsehood. He has incredibly difficult entrances into some of his jumps and spins, and those transitions into elements meld well with the music. Go back a full Olympic cycle and see how he has improved his presentation. The whole audience was with him during that skate and not just because of the jumps.
Yuma is, by far, the best at effortless looking glide and superior edges. Technique to die for! But as I've said since it's summer debut and again throughout the GP, this FP music arrangement swallows him whole. And superb skating skills are not the same as superb presentation skills. At Worlds in Boston last year, I was struck by how his presentation wasn't as impactful sitting higher up for competition than it was sitting a bit lower for practices.
I'm hoping the blind eye of the tech panel with Grassl isn't a preview of Milano Cortina. I guess we'll see in the team event.
Sato was really at this best in his FS. Despite not being as smooth in skills as Yuma, I think he's in it to win Japanese nationals this year.
I don't care that Shaidorov has wanted to skate to the "Diva Dance" for the last 5 years, someone on his team should have had the rough love to say, "Absolutely not." But I guess after last year's success with that nonsensical free mix, Righini and Urmanov didn't care... or are deaf in both ears.
Alas, Adam fell apart after his sad costume reveal (not as sad as Daniel's, but still pretty bad). I'll continue to hope he skates a blinder in Italy, but I won't bet money on it. Sigh.