U.S. Men 2025-26 Discussion - Quad God and the Mere Mortals

I just looked up Ken Mikawa because I didn't recognize the name. I thought perhaps that he skated out of country under a different name (causing a broken SkatingScores.com history). But I looked up his IG and he says that he returned to competitive skating last year after a 10 year hiatus. He had last competed as an Intermediate in 2013. And he landed a clean 3A. That's wild, way to go!

Very cool! I enjoyed his 90s RD short :D and he showed nice diversity in the free. But the unexpected fall near the end might really be a shame unfortunately seeing how close his score was to Xie.

Would have liked to see Sedliss closer but it’s his first year in seniors, fingers crossed the jumps come.
 
In the short term, yes. But he's still young, let's give him a little time before writing him off. If he doesn't happen to get his quads, he could always take his refinement to the next level. I think it's a good idea for all skaters to try to get to Jason's level of refinement for a long career, because quads are pretty rough and hard to maintain.
Jason wasn`t someone who just practised hard. For whatever reason he can sence what looks good and prosesses uncanny flexibility for a man. Others can improve their artistry but Jason has been doing what others cannot for 10 years. A kind of prodigy.
 
Jason wasn`t someone who just practised hard. For whatever reason he can sence what looks good and prosesses uncanny flexibility for a man. Others can improve their artistry but Jason has been doing what others cannot for 10 years. A kind of prodigy.

Yes, he has a sensitivity to music that is innate. It can be sort of learned but you always know the real thing when you see it. Satoko Miyahara and Nicole Bobek are others that came to mind. Michelle Kwan had to really cultivate it but I think the seedling was always was there.
 
Yes, he has a sensitivity to music that is innate. It can be sort of learned but you always know the real thing when you see it. Satoko Miyahara and Nicole Bobek are others that came to mind. Michelle Kwan had to really cultivate it but I think the seedling was always was there.
And Sasha - she had that ability to know exactly how a move would look on her. Hence, they were all beautiful.
 
Re-posting here from Jason's fan thread... CBC Sports’ Anastasia Bucsis' in depth chat with him at the Cricket Club in early September (17 mins.): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zo_My0mbiyQ

From Joe Klein in August:
"... Thank you to everyone for the support, and I hope to start my season this Fall!"​
It's the closing thought of his update on overcoming some injury issues.​
Joseph Klein is recovered enough to be competing with his Northwestern University figure skating team now while studying for an environmental policy & political science double major - very good article published on October 16:
Unfortunately he will not be competing at Mids this week (not listed in the Senior Men SP starting order).
 
Jason wasn`t someone who just practised hard. For whatever reason he can sence what looks good and prosesses uncanny flexibility for a man. Others can improve their artistry but Jason has been doing what others cannot for 10 years. A kind of prodigy.
The flexibility wasn't something he was born with - he worked tremendously hard to get it and at 30 years old I can only imagine how hard he works to keep it.
 
The flexibility wasn't something he was born with - he worked tremendously hard to get it and at 30 years old I can only imagine how hard he works to keep it.
I think it has to be a little of both though. I could work on my flexibility forever and never get the way he is because my body is naturally just very tight/stiff. I took ballet for years and no amount of stretching was going to change that lol. So he must have the right body to be able to do it but also put in the work to improve it and keep it up.
 
Some US men news:

- Nathan teamed up with AirBnb and will host an Olympic watching experience in Milan.

- Camden has been back on ice (per his IGS) and started from single jumps. He looks happy to be back!

- You can still watch the IGS about the sweet message Jason sent to Daniel O'Shea after he won the US Novice Championship in 2008. I spoke with Danny back then and I remember how happy he and his father were. Seeing this message made me smile.
 
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And we have our fields for Nationals set!

Lorenzo Elano (240.44) and Daniel Martynov (235.03) secured the 2 spots out of Midwesterns. The next two best scores from Sectionals were Kai Kovar (219.02 - Mids) and Michael Xie (186.65 - Pac Coasts). First alternate, should anyone withdraw is Ken Mikawa (184.30 - Eastern) followed by Taira Shinohara (183.49 - Mids) and Antonio Monaco (179.57 - Mids).

Senior Men -
Will Annis (E2)
Jason Brown (B)
Lorenzo Elano (M1)
Goku Endo (P1)
Tomoki Hiwatashi (B)
Liam Kapeikis (B)
Lucius Kazanecki (B)
Kai Kovar (At-Large 1)
Jimmy Ma (B)
Ilia Malinin (B)
Daniel Martynov (M2)
Samuel Mindra (P2)
Maxim Naumov (B)
Camden Pulkinen (B)
Jacob Sanchez (B)
Emmanuel Savary (E1)
Andrew Torgashev (B)
Michael Xie (At-Large 2)

Junior Men -
Ryan William Azadpour (P2)
Patrick Blackwell (E1)
Nicholas Brooks (P1)
Thomas Chen (M3)
Zenith Chen (Nov-M1)
Caleb Farrington (E2)
Aleksandr Fegan (E3)
Kirk Haugeto (P3)
Michael Jin (Nov-P1)
Michael Khavin (Nov-E2)
Zachary LoPinto (E4)
Louis Mallane (M1)
Ryden Rudedenman (P4)
Joshua Snyder (M4)
Alek Tankovic (M2)
Hitonari Tani (Nov-E1)
Mike Weng (Nov-M2)
Jesse Zhong (Nov-P2)
 
Ken Mikawa, the kid young man who 2 years ago started a comeback from a 10 year hiatus from Intermediate-level competition, came up just 2.36 points shy of making it to senior nats as the second wildcard (the goal he publicly set for himself on IG). I was really rooting for him. 😭

I was thinking that Ken might still make it if Camden doesn't bother coming back for nats before presumably retiring... but I saw that he just posted the other day that he's back on the ice. Oh well, those are the breaks. Better luck next year Ken (I draw the line at actively rooting for someone else to drop out).
 
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Here's a longer version with more words & numbers ;):

Byes to 2026 U.S. Nationals (10): Malinin, Torgashev, Pulkinen, Naumov, Ma, Brown, Sanchez, Hiwatashi, Kazanecki, Kapeikis

8 more qualify via Sectionals:

M1 Lorenzo Elano, Skokie Valley SC 82.66 (2) 157.78 (1) 240.44 - landed three 3A for the first time in competition! :)
M2 Daniel Martynov, Great Lakes FSC 83.17 (1) 151.86 (2) 235.03
M3 Kai Kovar, Broadmoor SC 79.59 (3) 139.43 (3) 219.02 (gets the 1st of 2 available "next highest total scores" spots)
E1 Emmanuel Savary, University of Delaware FSC 74.89 (1) 140.88 (1) 215.77
PC1 Goku Endo, Los Angeles FSC 269.41 (2) 137.35 (1) 206.76
PC2 Samuel Mindra, Carousel FSC 68.81 (3) 134.66 (2) 203.47
E3 Will Annis, SC of Boston 64.06 (2) 128.51 (3) 192.57
PC3 Michael Xie, SC of San Francisco 72.96 (1) 113.69 (3) 186.65 (gets the 2nd of 2 available "next highest total scores" spots)

[E2 Lucius Kazanecki, Washington FSC 61.43 (3) 137.78 (2) 199.21 (already had a bye due to JGPF)]

E4 Ken Mikawa, Richmond FSC 61.28 (4) 123.02 (4) 184.30 (1st alternate) - I'm told he intends to keep training, just in case
M4 Taira Shinohara, Chicago FSC 61.87 (5) 121.62 (4) 183.49 (2nd alternate)
M5 Antonio Monaco, Skokie Valley SC 66.47 (4) 113.10 (5) 179.57 (3rd alternate)


JUNIOR MEN (top 4 from each Sectional):
E1 Patrick Blackwell, SC of Boston 80.90 (1) 141.70 (2) 222.60
E2 Caleb Farrington, IceWorks SC 73.06 (2) 142.78 (1) 215.84
P1 Nicholas Brooks, All Year FSC 68.56 (1) 126.90 (3) 195.46
P2 Ryan William Azadpour, Carousel FSC 65.92 (2) 128.13 (2) 194.05
E3 Aleksandr Fegan, SC of New York 66.45 (3) 126.56 (3) 193.01
M1 Louis Mallane, Broadmoor SC 66.33 (1) 123.73 (1) 190.06
P3 Kirk Haugeto, All Year FSC 54.36 (4) 130.12 (1) 184.48
P4 Ryedin Rudedenman, Glacier Falls FSC 59.16 (3) 119.99 (4) 179.15
E4 Zachary LoPinto, SC of Boston 63.27 (4) 115.61 (5) 178.88
M2 Alek Tankovic, Broadmoor SC 60.95 (4) 116.82 (3) 177.77
M3 Thomas Chen, St. Paul FSC 58.88 (5) 116.82 (2) 175.70
M4 Joshua Snyder, Onyx-Suburban Skating Academy 61.10 (3) 113.96 (4) 175.06

NOVICE MEN (top 2 in each Sectional qualify to compete in Junior at Nationals):
E1 Hitonari Tani, SC of Boston 51.30 (2) 98.07 (1) 149.37
P1 Jesse Zhong, Glacier Falls FSC 48.30 (1) 91.01 (1) 139.31
P2 Michael Jin, All Year FSC 41.76 (4) 89.64 (2) 131.40
M1 Mike Weng, SC of Houston 44.43 (1) 84.77 (1) 129.20
E2 Michael Khavin, Hudson Valley FSC 44.71 (4) 83.54 (3) 128.25
M2 Zenith Chen, DuPage FSC 43.85 (2) 81.72 (2) 125.57
 
Can someone help me with understanding the time violation deduction? Daniel Martynov stopped skating well after his music. I thought the time violation was tied to skating and music, but is it just the going outside the +/10 seconds (or taking more than 30s from being announced)?
 
Can someone help me with understanding the time violation deduction? Daniel Martynov stopped skating well after his music. I thought the time violation was tied to skating and music, but is it just the going outside the +/10 seconds (or taking more than 30s from being announced)?
it's the time, clocks starts when they start moving and stops when they come to a complete stop at the end.
 
Can someone help me with understanding the time violation deduction? Daniel Martynov stopped skating well after his music. I thought the time violation was tied to skating and music, but is it just the going outside the +/10 seconds (or taking more than 30s from being announced)?

it's the time, clocks starts when they start moving and stops when they come to a complete stop at the end.


Yes, this.
From first movement (after the music starts) to last movement.

If the music is cut several seconds shorter than the maximum time allowance, it's possible that the skater could still be moving after the music has ended but fully stop within the allowed time, in which case no deduction.

There is also a relatively new GOE reduction for judges to take: "Element executed fully or partly when music is not playing -1 to -4" which would really only be applied if the last element is completed (or begun) after the music has ended.
That would only apply to elements, not to choreography/movement after the last element is over.

The "Late start – for not taking starting position within 30 seconds after name is announced" deduction is separate from the timing deduction for the length of the program.
 
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A kind of late response...
Ken Mikawa, the kid young man who 2 years ago started a comeback from a 10 year hiatus from Intermediate-level competition, came up just 2.36 points shy of making it to senior nats as the second wildcard (the goal he publicly set for himself on IG).

I met Ken and his mom at the Potomac Open this summer and talked with them about how he rekindled his love for the sport and decided to pursue his personal goal, even though it is quite demanding, financially and time-wise, as it is for anyone in this sport. He has a really nice 3A, which is impressive considering his 10-year absence from the sport.
 
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