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The post-Olympics media/interview/appearance requests will likely make it difficult to keep up with a regular training schedule. That’s another reason skaters have skipped Worlds.
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Try and appreciate how truly brutal an Olympic year is on the mind and body, especially when everyone expects you to win. Ilia is already committed to SOI, and yes, he'll have a million other demands on his time and attention. He'll need to rest and recover especially because he's planning to continue another quad. Besides, if he is Olympic champion, another world medal would be more than a little anticlimactic.I know it's Olympic year but why the heck would Ilia not do Worlds? I can't believe anyone would suggest that. He is far from finished with his career and the only skaters that typically skip Worlds in an Olympic year are the ones fully retiring.
The post-Olympics media/interview/appearance requests will likely make it difficult to keep up with a regular training schedule. That’s another reason skaters have skipped Worlds.
That starts to get completed because it pushes into the show schedule in April. I think most competitive skaters would be happy to be finished at the end of March than have an extra couple weeks to continue training.Perhaps the ISU should take the hint and push Worlds back a few weeks in Olympic years.
Just about everyone has shot a basketball or kicked a soccer ball or hit a baseball, so we understand how much better the pros are. But how many of the people who tune into NBC every four years for figure skating can explain the difference between a Lutz and a loop, let alone execute either one? A backflip, though: “I’m sure they understand [it],” Malinin says. “But to do it on the ice, in skates, at the end of a program, after four minutes, when you’re so tired, exhausted—that’s something that they can relate to.”
“[With] that many quads, it’s hard to deliver the kind of program that looks like art,” says Malinin’s choreographer, Shae-Lynn Bourne. “The energy it takes to do those jumps is very different than someone, let’s say, that’s [doing] one quad and the rest are triples. You can really explore and push the [artistic] score, because you have the energy, but he’s really pushing himself to have both.”
Bourne can’t count the number of times she has arrived at the rink to find Malinin waiting for her, skates laced, beaming, ready to go.
“Even things that look life-threatening to me, that I wouldn’t even attempt, he’ll do,” says Bourne. “There’s no limit, really, with him.”
“When we’re making the program, it’s a blast, because we are enjoying it, and without the kind of monitoring of, Oh, it’s the Olympics,” says Bourne. “Will we impress this judge? No, we throw that away. Are we enjoying this? Is this what you want to say? Keeping it about what it should be about: his journey. It’s not anyone else’s.”
And in the end, she thinks that’s the secret to Malinin’s ability to manage the pressure.
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Do you have a source link for this? Art on Ice's website & Instagram account don't yet show this news. Malinin originally was scheduled to do Art on Ice's 5 Zurich shows, Feb. 26-March 1 (Aymoz was originally scheduled for the Fribourg & Davos shows only): https://www.fsuniverse.net/forum/th...er-shows-tours-in-europe.113424/#post-6853375Ilia cut arts on ice to only one show. Kevin Aymoz is goint to replace him on the other shows.
Brad Vigorito's 4th photo (https://www.instagram.com/p/DTbkdNtjBwB/?img_index=4) shows a smiling Grant Hochstein who accompanied 2 young skaters to the 2026 National High Performance Development Camp:Vincent Zhou is helping young skaters participating in the 2026 National Development Camp.
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Brad Vigorito Skating on Instagram: "Day 1 Honored to be part of the 2026 National Development Camp with US Figure Skating’s inaugural Accelerated Mentoring Program. What an incredible opportunity to learn, grow, and continue developing as a coach.
204 likes, 6 comments - bv_skating on January 12, 2026: "Day 1 Honored to be part of the 2026 National Development Camp with US Figure Skating’s inaugural Accelerated Mentoring Program. What an incredible opportunity to learn, grow, and continue developing as a coach. @usfigureskating...www.instagram.com
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Or not have one at all as many other sports currently do. Given we have Europeans and 4CCs now, there's not a huge reason t have one.Perhaps the ISU should take the hint and push Worlds back a few weeks in Olympic years.
Before the US Nationals, I had the opportunity to observe Ilia and Andrew's practice. The sheer volume and intensity of their training leading up to this competition was truly unbelievable. Working alongside Rafael, it was an absolute honor to witness these two athletes striving for this event on the same ice.
Or not have one at all as many other sports currently do. Given we have Europeans and 4CCs now, there's not a huge reason t have one.
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In person, he downplays his accomplishments with an easy charm—an endearing attribute for a man so young and so decorated. He’s still in college, taking classes online at George Mason University when he’s not training for the Olympics. At home he enjoys simple pleasures: gaming, sleeping, and time with his two cats, Mysti and Miu Miu. “Off the ice he is demure and shy and very humble, but he has an inner confidence that makes him magnetic,” says Weir. “He’s like everyone’s cool little brother. On the ice, he is a force.” But when asked during his VF photo shoot what music he prefers, he’s bashful. “You won’t like it,” he tells the room. “It’s a lot.” His protests are overcome, and we spend the next 30 minutes listening to Japanese kawaii metal band Babymetal. Unexpected music choices loom large in Malinin’s work. His programs, set to scores from hit shows like Euphoria and Succession, have gone viral. He hasn’t seen Succession but fell in love with Nicholas Britell’s celebrated theme when it was pitched by his choreographer. Skating to that song, he says, helped launch him to fame on social media.
Malinin’s parents, Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov, both gifted skaters who competed in the Olympics for Uzbekistan, discouraged him from toddling onto the ice as a boy. “I was always at the rink anyway. They had no other place to bring me.” By the age of six, he was demanding to get out on the ice. By 11, he had won his first national juvenile championship.
Perhaps due to his tender age and the steep incline of his ascent, Malinin says he only recently realized that figure skating would be his life’s work. “I didn’t expect that I would be really at the top until a few years ago,” he says. It may have been in 2022, in the run-up to the Olympics, when he put up a masterful performance and finished second at the US Figure Skating Championships. In a twist of fate he still regrets, he wasn’t selected for Team USA to compete in Beijing.
He sees a silver lining now: “If it wasn’t for that decision, I don’t think I would achieve or reach where I am right now. I think I would be closer to being done with skating, honestly. But I feel like now it’s just the beginning.”
With the Olympics rapidly approaching, Malinin is wary of making promises. Does he want to land a quintuple, the next frontier in his own figure skating space race, with a staggering five rotations? He’s landed a few in practice but demurs when asked if he wants to bring the unthinkable leap into competition. “Maybe,” he says. “Most likely. But as we’re in the middle of the season, that’s not really on my mind right now.”
“I would say my biggest competitor is myself,” Malinin says, flashing some rare immodesty he’ll quickly try to rein in. “That’s always the thing that I’ve always stuck with no matter what level I was at. I always did not worry about everyone else and how they skated. Of course, it was part of it. Will I have enough to beat them? How well do I need to skate to beat them?”
I ask if the expectations placed upon him now, this boyish 21-year-old expected to win gold at the Olympics while on leave from college, freak him out.
He shrugs. “Not necessarily. I’m already in my zone.”
As he tinkers with his free skate, there is one element Malinin always includes: a backflip. (The move was previously banned and only became legal in 2024.) He grew up preferring soccer to figure skating, even though his parents, Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov, both competed in the sport at the Olympic level for Uzbekistan. (Malinina and Skorniakov gave their son the masculine version of his mother’s surname because they feared his father’s was too difficult for Americans to pronounce; as it turns out, they struggle with MAL-uh-nin, too.) Just wait until he learns a triple jump, Malinina’s father, Russian figure skating coach Valery Malinin, told them. Then you won’t be able to tear him away. As expected, the boy found his way into the family business. But since he follows the rest of the sports world, he understands that one obstacle to his breakthrough among casual fans is that they have never tried to do what he does.
... But in fairness, even most other Olympic figure skaters cannot really relate to the level of difficulty Malinin embraces as a matter of course. Despite his bloodline, the 5' 9" Malinin doesn’t look as if he were built in a lab to excel at figure skating. His long limbs help him achieve incredible height on jumps, but that also means he has more mass to pull in and control to achieve a tight rotation. Indeed, Hanyu, who came closest to the quad Axel before Malinin pulled it off, had at 5' 8" almost the opposite physique: long torso, short legs. But Malinin combines power and stamina in a way no one else in the sport can reach. Each quad jump is impressive on its own—especially the Axel, whose forward takeoff means it really amounts to four and a half revolutions in less than a second—but what really astonishes the people around him is Malinin’s ability to stack them.
For as intense as his programs are, Malinin remains loose. While other skaters lock in at events, pretending other skaters do not exist, refusing casual conversation, he makes small talk and cheers for his opponents. [...]
“When we’re making the program, it’s a blast, because we are enjoying it, and without the kind of monitoring of, Oh, it’s the Olympics,” says Bourne. “Will we impress this judge? No, we throw that away. Are we enjoying this? Is this what you want to say? Keeping it about what it should be about: his journey. It’s not anyone else’s.”
And in the end, she thinks that’s the secret to Malinin’s ability to manage the pressure. It’s not just about his technical ability or his artistic work or even his unshakable confidence. It’s both more and less complicated than that. The downside of being so far ahead of your opponents is that you’re not really competing with anyone else. The upside is that you’re only competing with yourself.
Worlds: Jason, Ilia, Andrew. Ordered alternates: Maxim, Tomoki, Jacob
4CC: Jason, Tomoki, Jacob. Ordered alternates: Liam, Jimmy, Daniel
WJC: Jacob, Lucius. Ordered alternates: Patrick, Caleb, Lorenzo
Oh sorry I ment one city not one show. It was on Art on Ice insta somewhere they promoted Zürich as the only event to see IliaDo you have a source link for this? Art on Ice's website & Instagram account don't yet show this news. Malinin originally was scheduled to do Art on Ice's 5 Zurich shows, Feb. 26-March 1 (Aymoz was originally scheduled for the Fribourg & Davos shows only): https://www.fsuniverse.net/forum/th...er-shows-tours-in-europe.113424/#post-6853375
Just checked Ilia's official website and Art on Ice in Zurich is not listed at this time (nor is Worlds): https://iliamalininqg.com/schedule/
His rope jumping skills are INSANEMaxim Naumov's post just now: https://www.instagram.com/p/DTj8nOtDr7T/
"Mom and Dad, we did it together"
I like this line from the George Mason University article linked from Ilia's website:Do you have a source link for this? Art on Ice's website & Instagram account don't yet show this news. Malinin originally was scheduled to do Art on Ice's 5 Zurich shows, Feb. 26-March 1 (Aymoz was originally scheduled for the Fribourg & Davos shows only): https://www.fsuniverse.net/forum/th...er-shows-tours-in-europe.113424/#post-6853375
Just checked Ilia's official website and Art on Ice in Zurich is not listed at this time (nor is Worlds): https://iliamalininqg.com/schedule/
I looked all over Max's Insta trying to see those mad jump rope skills but couldn't find a vid!His rope jumping skills are INSANE
Clip is #13 in his post.I looked all over Max's Insta trying to see those mad jump rope skills but couldn't find a vid!
Thank you!Clip is #13 in his post.
ETA that I've updated the Cheer threads for both Naumov & Torgashev.
I've never seen Caleb Farrington skate before- I just watched his short program and he has just gorgeous lines and positions coupled with good flow. If he can get a 3a and a couple quads solid <snip to avoid jinxing him>
Belatedly, here's my clip of Caleb landing 3A+3T in his 1/4/26 Nationals practice: https://x.com/SylviaUnseen/status/2013703708488483150Congratulations to the 2026 U.S. Junior Men's medalists!GOLD Patrick Blackwell, SILVER Caleb Farrington, BRONZE Louis Mallane and PEWTER Nicholas Brooks.
In the FS on Monday night, Patrick landed 4T, 4S (his 1st attempt in competition, IIRC), 3A+3Aq, 2T+1Eu+3S, 3Lz+3T, 3F & 3Lo and the audience gave him a standing O afterwards.
Caleb fell on his 3A (1st attempt in competition, IIRC) and [edited to correct] a 4Tq attempt in his FS, respectively, but I was excited to see him successfully landing 4T & 3A in practices.![]()

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