Congratulations
@Meoima. You must be so happy for your fave Hanyu and his deserved victory. There's really no need for you to be so oversensitive in this or in any other thread is there? I have not gone on for 'pages to pages' about Hanyu having it 'very easy thanks to his injury.'

It's always mind-boggling seeing these OTT exaggerations. I said that Hanyu had the opportunity to slow down and not over-exert himself trying to perfect a quad-lutz. No one wants to be injured, and it's not easy coming back from injuries. But I suspect from all evidence that the time recuperating allowed Hanyu to refocus on his ultimate goal, to rest his mind and body, and to strategize. Orser has said the rehab time was in part used to help Hanyu with mental preparation.
Even Nathan has spoken about how his injury and surgery after 2016 U.S. Nationals was perhaps a blessing in disguise, despite it preventing him from competing at Worlds and Jr Worlds that season. But it was better for the injury to have happened when it did, and for Nathan to not go to those competitions and end up with worse physical issues. During his therapy in Colorado, Nathan learned better training and physical preparation strategies, which strengthened his body and his mental focus for being able to come back and challenge himself to go for more quads in unheard of fashion.
I'm not sure why you are offended at my use of 'well-rested.' If you don't feel that's the right phrasing, fine. Hanyu certainly looked strong and in good shape. Everyone marveled over the ease with which he performed. If he's on painkillers and still not recovered, I'm sorry to hear that. You are exaggerating once again though if you feel that I said what Hanyu accomplished with the help of Orser has been easy.
It's obvious that Orser and his champion pupils were worried about Nathan's multiple quads, and so when Nathan struggled in the team event and then in the individual event sp to the point where he landed in 17th place, that took some pressure off of all the top contenders. I don't see how anyone can believe otherwise. It doesn't mean anything was easy because they all still had to perform. But with Nathan in 17th place, the top guys did not have to worry about the points Nathan could and ultimately did rack up in the fp. I think Hanyu was already in a good winning mindset coming into the games no matter what, so clearly even had Nathan not run into problems, Hanyu was ready to do battle. And Hanyu also had the wisdom gained from his prior Olympic experience.
I have not commented on the topic of Hanyu's burden of fame in his home country one way or the other. He's a champion and he's dealt with the enormous attention gracefully. Orser has mentioned in interviews that he agrees it has benefited Hanyu to be able to train in Canada, which gives him some measure of relief from the rock star attention that follows him everywhere, and certainly more intensely in Japan.