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

A very interesting 1-hour documentary about the rivalry between Ilia Malinin and Yuma Kagiyama was aired on Feb.1 by NHK in Japan - titled "神のジャンプ”に挑む 〜氷上決戦 マリニンと鍵山 (Challenging the “God's Jump” ~ The Battle on Ice: Malinin and Kagiyama)

I hope @TheIliaSociety uploads the whole clip. NHK did an AI analysis showing the differences between Ilia's 4A and other 3As in terms of height, distance and rotational speed. It also shows the process he was practicing to master 4A (very interesting).


It also showed cute interactions among his family and cats.

@TheIliaSociety has been posting bits of clips from the documentary this post and above (they kindly have been adding English subtitles):
 
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CBS Sunday Morning extended interview with Ilia

 
Ilia's CBS Sunday Morning interview also is available in article format with both videos (what was aired + the extended version) embedded here:

Here's Alice Park's TIME article that was published on 1/30/26:
Excerpt:
To get to this point, Malinin spent time with reigning Olympic men’s champion Nathan Chen’s coach, Rafael Arutyunyan, in California, who provided tips on improving his toe loop and flip jumps, and perhaps most importantly, managing his energy during the program so he has the stamina to perform quadruple jump after quadruple jump, as he’s likely to do in Milan in his free program. Equally valuable to Malinin was observing and talking to Chen himself about what he did to get ready for the Beijing Olympics—“how he trained, how he prepared and how much time and effort he put into not only the jumps but everything you have to do in skating,” says Malinin. “It gave me an understanding of what I needed to do in my skating.”
While those jumps are certainly the big draw in watching Malinin, he also understands the importance of what comes between them. “I learned to find my own style, which I would explain as really a contemporary and effortless-looking style that makes things look easy, but at the same time, I want people to know that what any of us do is really hard,” he says. “It’s a judged sport, and not only is it super athletic and you have to have enough strength and energy to pull off these jumps and tricks, but you also have to make them look nice, clean, and effortless. That’s part of the competition.”
There's also an excellent article about Ilia, titled "The Man Who Broke Physics," by Sally Jenkins (formerly of the WaPo) in The Atlantic - it's paywalled but thanks to @BittyBug it can be read via a gift article link in Ilia's fan thread (post #777).
From Jackie Wong today (Ilia didn't jump in his first practice at the practice rink earlier today): "Malinin: marked runthrus, 2A, 3S, 3T, 3Lo(step), 3Lo, 3F, 3Lz(turn), 3Lz3T, 3Lz1Eu3F, 3T3T, 3S2A, 3A, 3S3A, 2S(step), 4S, 3T, 2T(step), 4Lo, 4Lo, 4F, 2Lz(turn), 4Lz, 4Lz3T, 4Lz1Eu3F, 4A, 4T(hangs on)2T(2ft), 4T(ftdwn)3T, 4S3A, 4T, 4T3T, 3T"

Zakarian's clip of Ilia's 4A in the main rink: https://x.com/TheIliaSociety/status/2018354003776782600
ETA:
 
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There's also an excellent article about Ilia, titled "The Man Who Broke Physics," by Sally Jenkins (formerly of the WaPo) in The Atlantic - it's paywalled but thanks to @BittyBug it can be read via a gift article link in Ilia's fan thread (post #777).
Here’s the link again:
 

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