Connect with us

Sports

Alysa Liu wins women’s figure skating gold to cap glittering comeback story

Published

on

On a day which many expected to be dominated by one teenager, it was a different, former teen star with a very different story who took centre stage, winning Olympic gold with a dazzling performance at the Milano Ice Skating Arena.

Self-styled ‘alt girl’ Alysa Liu – a charismatic former teen star who retired from the sport after burning out before rediscovering her love of skating and returning to competition – set the stadium alight with her distinctive loose, free-flowing style and glitzy Donna Summer routine.

Team gold medallist Ilia Malinin, another to bear the weight of expectation, was among those to cheer on his fellow world champion, who jumped for joy and beamed as she left the ice.

The 20-year-old set a season’s best of 150.20 points – nearly four points clear of her previous best – to lay down a marker to the final two skaters to go.

Three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto of Japan missed a major combination, which cost her significant points in an otherwise powerful and elegant routine to an Edith Piaf medley.

Advertisement

The 25-year-old, competing in her final Olympics before retirement, waved to the crowd but was in tears as she entered the aptly named kiss and cry, knowing it wasn’t enough for gold.

Sakamoto finished just shy of two points behind Liu, while 17-year-old compatriot Ami Nakai, competing in her first Olympic Games, produced a peerless short programme and nearly matched that by finishing third overall on Thursday.

The teenager beamed as she took to the ice and the smile rarely left her face as she floated through a lyrical and beautifully executed programme – barring one underrotated jump – to take bronze.

She looked on the verge of tears of joy as Liu hugged her when her final score came in. “I love you both,” Liu said, the picture of happiness.

Advertisement

Liu has no triple axel and no quad jump in this routine, but her sheer vivacity and joy of skating shone through in a performance as glittering as her sparkling gold dress.

It was a far cry from the world of Russian teenager Adeliia Petrosian, who had been the one to dominate the build-up to this Olympic Games. But the 18-year-old finished well down in sixth overall.

Liu embraced bronze medallist Ami Nakai of Japan

Liu embraced bronze medallist Ami Nakai of Japan (Getty Images)

Petrosian’s very presence struck at the heart of a problem which has once again taken centre stage at the Olympic Games.

Advertisement

In four years’ time Petrosian may be able to compete under the Russian flag, without any pretence of representing nowhere in particular. The IOC has made noticeable overtures towards Russia in recent weeks; separately, the Paralympics have allowed Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete under their own flags in just a few weeks time, much to the disapproval of hosts Italy.

Petrosian was widely expected to be the first ‘neutral athlete’ to win a medal, although earlier on Thursday Nikita Filippov took that dubious honour with a silver in ski mountaineering. Petrosian winning another was not out of the question, despite a short programme many believed was over-marked.

The 18-year-old has largely been shielded from the world; the only notice many had of her potential was in the ‘Skate to Milano’ qualifying event she won prior to the Games.

How she is welcomed by the figure skating world may be telling in the ongoing saga of where Russia finds itself in international sport in the coming years.

Advertisement

Petrosian is coached by the highly controversial Eteri Tutberidze, who achieved notoriety for publicly berating 15-year-old Kamila Valieva after she fell several times in her free skate in Beijing four years ago, days after the news of her positive doping test came to light.

Japan's three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto took silver in her final Olympic Games

Japan’s three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto took silver in her final Olympic Games (Getty Images)

Tutberidze was found not guilty by Wada and avoided any sanction over the Valieva doping affair, and was granted accreditation for this Olympics as a coach of Georgian skater Nika Egadze.

Tutberidze is not officially registered as Petrosian’s coach – she would have had to go through the IOC’s vetting process, which she is believed to be likely to fail.

Advertisement

Wada president Witold Banka said earlier this month that Tutberidze’s presence made him “uncomfortable”, but the coach was approved nevertheless.

But she has been spotted at the 18-year-old’s practice sessions and has been loud about skirting around the regulations: she said in a documentary featuring pre-Olympics qualifying competitions: “I specifically moved away so that we wouldn’t cross paths anywhere, because they were really watching us.”

Her influence is all over Petrosian’s routines, from the non-traditional jumping technique, to the high-kicks and ragged transitions between sequences.

Liu's free-spirited performance wowed the crowd and the judges

Advertisement
Liu’s free-spirited performance wowed the crowd and the judges (Getty Images)

And likely in Petrosian’s expiry date: Tutberidze’s charges have largely burned bright for one Olympic cycle, before retiring early, dogged by injuries.

Petrosian’s free skate was an improvement on a somewhat spiky short programme, aside from a fall on an under-rotated quad loop – the only quad any skater has attempted in the competition.

She fell repeatedly on the quad in practice and if rumours of a groin injury are true, perhaps it would have been the correct call from her coaching team – whatever it may be officially or unofficially composed of – to suggest she avoid it.

So it was for the better, for reasons both political and psychological, that Petrosian failed to make the podium on Thursday night: a win for less damaging methods of coaching, and for wider sport.

Advertisement

US national champion Amber Glenn made up for a heavily penalised mistake in her short programme – a triple jump that was awarded zero points as it was downgraded to a double – with an excellent free programme, bar a hand down on a triple loop.

Petrosian did not react as her score came in

Petrosian did not react as her score came in (Getty Images)

Glenn stood up and applauded for several of the competitors to go after her; it was interesting that she only smiled and blinked knowingly at the camera as the camera panned to her after Petrosian’s skate. The teenager went into second, less than four-tenths behind Glenn, but remained stone-faced as the scores came in.

Glenn was to finish just off the podium in fifth, with her compatriot Liu winning an individual gold to go with the USA’s overall team gold from last week.

Advertisement

Liu is the reigning world champion and among ice skating’s biggest stars. She retired at 16 – a similar age to when many of Tutberidze’s stars retire – after falling out of love with the sport and the restrictive nature of her training.

But a few years later she returned, having taken time away to be a regular teenager, going on holiday, learning to drive, spending time with her friends. By the time she came back to the ice she had reclaimed her agency and taken control of her own skating, from the costumes she wore to the way she approached the sport. “I’m older and I’ve learned so many lessons. I’m so much better at protecting my peace and knowing why I do the things I do,” she said last autumn.

As Liu jumped around and celebrated in Milan on Thursday, it was hard to argue that this wasn’t a victory for skating as it should be.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Indian Super League: Mumbai City edge Chennaiyin to secure three points | Football News

Published

on


Mumbai City FC began their Indian Super League season on a winning note, edging past Chennaiyin FC 1-0 at the Mumbai Football Arena here on Thursday.


A tightly-contested encounter was decided by an own goal in the 48th minute by Pritam Kotal as the Islanders secured all three points.


Neither team could create much flow in the match as they cancelled each other out in the midfield. Chances were at a premium in the first half as the attackers found it difficult to break the opposition defence.


Jorge Pereyra Diaz forced a fine save out of Mohammad Nawaz after he was played through by Jorge Ortiz. Minutes later, Brandon Fernandes found Lallianzuala Chhangte at the far post. The forward laid the ball on the path of Ortiz but the Spaniard’s effort only found the goalkeeper.

Advertisement

 


Chennaiyin relied on long balls with Irfan Yadwad and new signing Inigo Martin as the target men, but they were well marked by the Mumbai City defence. The away side earned five corner kicks in the first half but did not trouble Phurba Lachenpa in the Mumbai goal.


The Chennaiyin wingers were sending in crosses which were a regularity throughout the match, but the opposition defence were alert to the danger with Valpuia making two crucial clearances at the back post. 


The Islanders started the second half with more intent, earning an early corner. The early pressure led to them taking the lead after four minutes of the restart. Joni Kauko’s attempted cross, which was aimed for Pereyra Diaz in the box, took a huge deflection off Pritam Kotal and found the target, wrong-footing Mohammad Nawaz in goal.

Advertisement


Chennaiyin kept possession after trailing in the match, but the pattern of their attack remained the same, using their wide players to whip in crosses into the box. Mumbai City’s defence maintained their shape and ensured the opposition forwards did not create any clear-cut chances.


Chennaiyin earned a total of 15 corner kicks, including four back-to-back but were not able to capitalise. The closest they came to scoring was when Mandar Rao Dessai could not get a proper connection after an initial corner kick was recycled into the box during the dying stages of the match.


In the end, Mumbai City held on to their slender lead to secure all three points.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Two years of Sir Jim Ratcliffe at Man United: Blunders, protests, cuts and expensive mistakes

Published

on

It is two years since Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s investment into Man Utd was given the green light. It has been an interesting couple of years.

When Sir Jim Ratcliffe sat down with Sky News in Antwerp last week, there was one particular comment that dominated headlines and would set the agenda for days, if not weeks, to come. Not just around Manchester United, but also politically.

Advertisement

It’s not every day the co-owner of one of the world’s biggest football clubs is told to apologise by the Prime Minister, but Ratcliffe’s comments on immigration drew condemnation and even prompted a public response from the club he owns.

But as we reflect on the second anniversary of Ineos’ investment into United being confirmed in February 2024, there was another line in that interview that caught the attention, albeit one that was never going to get the same scrutiny or coverage.

Ratcliffe was talking about the need for a leader, in this case a Prime Minister, to make difficult and unpopular decisions for the greater good when he drew a comparison with his own situation at United.

“Well, I’ve been very unpopular at Manchester United because we’ve made lots of changes,” he said. “But for the better, in my view.

Advertisement

“And I think we’re beginning to see some evidence in the football club that that’s beginning to pay off.”

FOLLOW OUR MAN UNITED FACEBOOK PAGE! Latest news and analysis via the MEN’s Manchester United Facebook page

Two years in, is Ratcliffe right that the decisions he has made are beginning to deliver results? Have United won four of their last five games because they stumbled upon an excellent coach, or is it because Ratcliffe has wasted millions on Erik ten Hag, Dan Ashworth and Ruben Amorim, made a third of the workforce redundant, stripped back bonuses for the staff that remain, done away with free lunches and made going to the game more difficult than ever?

It felt like a stretch. United are in a good moment and have momentum, but they have a coach under contract until the end of the season who got the job because Ratcliffe appointed a coach from Portugal, despite the director of football that he was desperate to recruit telling him it would be a mistake.

Advertisement

“I saw that comment and I thought he was trying to get a bit of glory from a few good results,” said Chris Rumfitt of the Manchester United Supporters’ Trust (MUST).

“I fail to see how sacking so many staff and getting rid of food at the training ground has led in any way to those results. It’s probably hindered rather than helped, I’m not buying that one.”

Two years into the Ineos era, Rumfitt described it as a “mixed picture”. One thing you can say for Ratcliffe is that he has packed a lot into those 731 days.

Advertisement

On the football ledger, he blundered by keeping Ten Hag, handing him a new contract and sacking him three months later. He then spent £27million on hiring and firing Amorim and £4.1million to do the same with Ashworth. When you compare that with the cost of scrapping lunch for staff, it is a drop in the ocean.

Although the executives Ratcliffe has placed in charge of football operations are now facing scrutiny, chief executive Omar Berrada and director of football Jason Wilcox look to have delivered an upgrade in recruitment. United spent more than £215million in the summer, and it looks like the best window they have had in years.

Judging Ratcliffe purely by what has happened on the pitch is impossible, however. From the redundancies to the lunches to the stripping away of cup final perks, from £66 tickets and no concessions to what supporter groups describe as an attack on fan culture.

Then there’s the interviews. Last week’s claim that the United Kingdom is being “colonised” by immigrants is the most egregious example, but Ratcliffe’s attempts to front up have too often been disastrous.

Advertisement

His claim that United’s ticket prices should be no different to Fulham’s showed he had lost all touch with reality back in the city he once called home, and publicly citing some players as “not good enough” and “overpaid” went down badly in the dressing room.

There have been protests again recently and although the positive results under Carrick reduced the scale of them, those who go to Old Trafford regularly feel like they are under attack.

“It’s a real issue, every season ticket holder will tell you they feel like the club are going out of their way to make being a season ticket holder more difficult,” said Rumfitt.

“All the rules around passing on tickets, how you have to do it, who you can pass them on to, deadlines for selling tickets back to the club, it feels like everything they’re doing is to make the life of a season ticket holder more difficult.

“Cynically, one suspects they would rather we had fewer season ticket holders because of the pricing model they’ve now got. It means season ticket holders are paying so much less per game than match-by-match fans, and we don’t go to the megastore.”

It’s certainly not been two years of plain sailing. Two years ago tomorrow, Ratcliffe sat down with journalists in Ineos’ Knightbridge offices for a rare interview that didn’t cause controversy.

Ensure our latest sport headlines always appear at the top of your Google Search by making us a Preferred Source. Click here to activate or add us as a Preferred Source in your Google search settings

Advertisement

He said it would take “two or three” seasons to make United a force again, but that looks like an underestimation. United are in a good moment under Michael Carrick, but there is clearly more work to be done.

So, looking ahead to the next two years, what advice would Rumfitt offer Ratcliffe as he finally looks to deliver on that promise?

“In his very first meeting with fans, I was in a couple of them, he said we are going to be absolutely laser focused on results on the pitch, turning it round on the pitch and fixing everything else almost secondarily, because without the results on the pitch, almost nothing else matters at a football club,” he said.

“I think that’s right, and I think he needs to return to that mission. Leave the fans alone, but also put an end to the cost-cutting. It’s not that cost-cutting isn’t a legitimate thing to do in a business, but the money you’re saving is so trivial compared to the amount you’re wasting by making bad decisions with respect to on-pitch matters.

Advertisement

“Our focus would be to stick to that original thing you said, which is to focus on getting us winning on the pitch and loosen up a bit about fan issues.

“And one last thing: keep your views on politics to yourself, we don’t want to hear them.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Kim Mulkey says this coaching decision allowed LSU to rally v Ole Miss

Published

on

The decision that Kim Mulkey felt ultimately won LSU women’s basketball the game over Ole Miss, she initially thought it may have been too late.

Ole Miss led the Tigers, 69-59, with 6:24 remaining. The shift to a bigger lineup that featured senior Amiya Joyner and sophomore Kate Koval inside coupled with throwing different defenders and looks at Rebels’ leading scorer Cotie McMahon sparked the comeback. LSU went on a 19-1 run to close out the game and survive, 78-70, inside Sandy and John Black Pavilion Thursday night.

Advertisement

With the victory, LSU (23-4, 9-4) has grabbed sole possession of fourth place in the Southeastern Conference standings, meaning it’s in the driver’s seat for the double bye at the conference tournament in a couple of weeks.

Advertisement

MORE LSU WBB COVERAGE LSU women’s basketball storms back, escapes Ole Miss – Game Highlights

Junior star guard MiLaysia Fulwiley turned in a career high 26 points, scoring 22 in the second half to help will the Tigers to the rally over Ole Miss (21-7, 8-5).

Kim Mulkey on the coaching decision that allowed LSU women’s basketball to rally vs Ole Miss

“I think a decision we made as a staff to go big was very effective. I just thought there were taking my two young freshmen off the drive and that’s why I didn’t go big thinking that, you know, they could move laterally a little bit better. What was killing us was second, third shots and I thought Kate and (Joyner) were just solid together. That was a big decision and I’m not sure I ever thought I would do that in this game tonight. But I did and it worked.”

Advertisement

Advertisement

Kim Mulkey on what LSU did differently defensively on Cotie McMahon

“We mixed it up. We went to that 3-2 zone. Might have stayed in it a little too long. They hit some three’s when we were in it and then we went back man, just trying to mix it up a little bit. Keep her off balanced. She’s so explosive and so powerful and with that, she just is just so quick. We threw different people at her. (Fulwiley) was on her one minute and got a couple of steals, then Jada (Richard) and Bella (Hines), Mikaylah (Williams), anybody we could. Giving her different bodies to look at. You’re not going to guard her 1-on-1. We made sure when she turned a corner, somebody else is there to help.”

Kim Mulkey on MiLaysia Fulwiley’s career night vs Ole Miss

“God bless this child with speed. I wouldn’t want to be on the floor with her because when she takes off, you better put it in high gear. She’ll find you and a lot of times, honestly, she looks to pass too much. She needs to get to the rim and finish and draw fouls.”

Advertisement

Cory Diaz covers the LSU Tigers for The Daily Advertiser as part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow his Tigers coverage on Twitter: @ByCoryDiaz. Got questions regarding LSU athletics? Send them to Cory Diaz at bdiaz@gannett.com.

Advertisement

This article originally appeared on Lafayette Daily Advertiser: Kim Mulkey details LSU women’s basketball comeback win over Ole Miss

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Keely Hodgkinson sets new world 800m indoor record

Published

on

Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson set a new world 800m indoor record time of one minute 54.87 seconds in Lievin, beating the near 24-year-old standard set on the day she was born.

Hodgkinson, who stormed to 800m gold at the Paris 2024 Olympics, shaved nearly a second off the previous best, 1min 55.82secs, achieved by Jolanda Ceplak at the European Championships in Vienna on March 3, 2002.

The 23-year-old was primarily relieved she had backed up her words from earlier in the week, when she confidently told a press conference the record was hers to take.

“Thank God!” she declared in a trackside interview with World Athletics.

“No, that was really fun. I’ve been really looking forward to this for a good few weeks, so thank you for the amazing crowd.

Advertisement

“I wasn’t running alone, I had lots of help over here.”

Hodgkinson opened her season at the UK indoor championships, running 1:56.33 without pacemakers or wavelights to move third on the all–time list, before turning her focus to Thursday night in France.

Speaking trackside at that event in Birmingham, the Atherton athlete mused that she “accidentally ran quite fast” without help.

Thursday night’s feat was no happy accident. All the tools were in place in Lievin, where the wavelights were set at 55.8s at the halfway point and 1:53.80 overall.

Advertisement

Hodgkinson followed designated pacemaker Anna Gryc of Poland through 200m in 26.47s and 55.56s at the 400m mark before striking out solo, clocking 1:25.06 three quarters of the way through.

She clapped her hands after crossing the line, where she accepted congratulations from her fellow competitors before splaying out like a starfish on the track to soak in the rousing appreciation from the crowd.

Hodgkinson was also congratulated by her coaches, Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, as well as training partner Georgia Hunter-Bell – the Olympic 1,500m bronze and world silver medallist who had clinched her own victory earlier in the evening.

The new world-record holder, still full of energy, then made a beeline for her family, taking a selfie to cement the milestone in memory.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Why J.J. Spaun had to decline this USGA request

Published

on

Really, can you blame J.J. Spaun? Probably not due to the special place in his heart this particular piece of equipment might hold.

At the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles on Wednesday, the 2025 U.S. Open champ was asked if the USGA — the organization that runs the U.S. Open — ever asked him for a meaningful club from his victory to keep for its archives.

Yes, Spaun said — but he didn’t let them have it.

“I said, ‘Unfortunately, I can’t,’” Spaun said. “That thing is not ready to be retired, especially after that putt.”

Advertisement

That putt, you might remember, is the 64-footer he used to win the 125th U.S. Open in walk-off fashion at Oakmont Country Club last June.

“Viktor [Hovland], we kind of got a good line, a good read on the speed,” Spaun said after his win at Oakmont, when he drained the birdie try to secure his first major title. “I was more focused on how hard he was hitting it. I kind of knew the line already, but it looked like he gave it a pretty good whack because it started raining there for the last 10, 15 minutes. I just tried to pick my line and put a good stroke on it. I knew it was going to be a little slow. About 8 feet out, I kind of went up to the high side to see if it had a chance of going in, and it was like going right in. I was just in shock, disbelief that it went in and it was over. Yeah, here we are.”

So you can understand why Spaun didn’t want to part with his L.A.B. Golf DF3. So, he went with the next-best thing.

“The second probably most valuable club, I think, was my driver, and I actually had switched to a more new head, meaning, like, it was probably getting close to its limit,” Spaun said Wednesday. “It ended up being kind of unusable anyway, so I donated that, and I think they were pretty happy.”

Advertisement

Just last week we found out Rory McIlroy lost one of his important clubs via donation as well. McIlroy’s most memorable shot from his 2025 Masters win was the 7-iron he hit into the par-5 15th green on Sunday, setting up an easy two-putt birdie.

“I didn’t realize this, but I flew back the day after on the Monday and I basically didn’t see my golf clubs since like post the playoff, and I saw that my 7-iron was missing,” McIlroy said last week at Pebble Beach. “I was like, that’s a pretty important club. Sean [O’Flaherty, my business manager] had already given it to the club, he just didn’t tell me. That’s fine, I’ll get a new 7-iron. If there was one I was going to give the club, it was probably going to be that one.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Today’s Strands Hints and Clues for “True grit”

Published

on

Strands Answers and Hints (February 20, 2026): Looking for hints? Find today’s Strands answers and helpful tips here!

Strands offers a fresh challenge in the NYT’s lineup of daily games, inviting players to uncover hidden words within a 6×8 letter grid. Each day brings a unique theme and grid, making it a great test of vocabulary and pattern recognition, but it can get tough at times.

Stuck on the spangram or today’s theme? We’ve got all the hints and clues you need to solve today’s Strands puzzle with confidence.

WARNING: Spoilers ahead! Only read on if you want to know today’s Strands answers.


Today’s Strands Theme

To begin, let’s see what theme has been shared for today’s puzzle on the site.

Today’s theme is: TRUE GRIT

Advertisement

Is it very vague? I’ll explain the theme a bit more so you know what to look for:

  • This theme encompasses textures and qualities that can create discomfort or irritation. Often associated with surfaces or materials that lack smoothness or gentleness, it evokes sensations that are abrasive or unrefined. The theme suggests a rugged nature, highlighting elements that can provoke a more intense tactile experience.

Today’s NYT Strands Hints

Still puzzled by today’s game? Here are some helpful hints to assist you:

Strands Hint 1: What are the starting letters of today’s words?

There are 7 words including the spangram.

Below are the starting letters & lengths for each of the theme words:

  • Starts with “A” and has 8 letters.
  • Starts with “C” and has 6 letters.
  • Starts with “H” and has 5 letters.
  • Starts with “P” and has 7 letters.
  • Starts with “R” and has 5 letters.
  • Starts with “S” and has 8 letters.

And today’s spangram starts with “S”.

Strands Hint 2: Where are today’s words located on today’s strands grid?

Here are some clues about their starting positions. For all words except the spangram:

Advertisement
  • 1 word starts from the top row
  • 1 word starts from the bottom row
  • 1 word starts from the left edge of the grid
  • 1 word starts from the right edge of the grid
  • 2 words start from the middle of the grid

Today’s NYT Strands Clue Words

Still puzzled by today’s game? Here are some helpful hints to assist you:

  • LIVRE
  • SIRE
  • RESAT
  • CLYPEI
  • SAIRER
  • COVE

In the next section, you’ll see today’s Strands answers! Hold up if you’d like to keep puzzling.


Today’s NYT Strands Spangram

Now for the exciting part! Here’s today’s Strands spangram:

SANDPAPER


Today’s NYT Strands Answers

These are the rest of today’s Strands answers to help you complete the game:

  • ABRASIVE
  • COARSE
  • HARSH
  • PRICKLY
  • ROUGH
  • SCRATCHY

Yesterday’s NYT Strands Answer (19 February 2026)

Still attempting to crack yesterday’s Strands (Thursday, 19 February 2026)? Or checking in from a different timezone? No worries—we’ve got you covered with the answers!

Find yesterday’s Strands answers, hints and spangram here.

Advertisement

Yesterday’s Strands theme was:

HERE’S A THOUGHT

Yesterday’s Spangram was:

EUREKA

Advertisement

Yesterday’s Strands Answers were:

  • CONCEPT
  • HYPOTHESIS
  • IDEA
  • NOTION
  • POSTULATE
  • THEORY

This wraps up our coverage of today’s Strands answers, hints, and spangram. If you enjoy word games, we offer answers and solvers for many NYT games. Check out: