If there is a seeming lock for a skating gold medal at the Beijing Olympics, it’s 15-year-old Kamila Valieva of Russia, who has become the European champion and world-record holder in points accumulated in a competition during her first year on the senior skating circuit. She is developing maturity and an ease to her skating as she seems to nonchalantly land triple axels and quadruple jumps, often holding her arms above her head to add difficulty to her routines and to straighten her body, making her position in the air more consistent.
Live Updates: Beijing Olympics
- Russian athletes again make an appearance as R.O.C.
- NBC is opening its Olympics coverage with ‘the worst hand imaginable.’
- Skating’s team event offers a preview for fans and a gold medal.
Russian teenagers are favored to sweep the medal podium, with Valieva’s 17-year-old training partners, Anna Shcherbakova, the reigning world champion, and Alexandra Trusova, expected to challenge for silver and bronze. All three are coached by Eteri Tutberidze, who has built the equivalent of a skating factory in Moscow. Another Tutberidze-coached skater, Alina Zagitova, won the gold medal in 2018.
Russia is seeking to win the women’s competition for a third consecutive Olympics. Adelina Sotnikova took the women’s title in 2014.
Short program: Tuesday, Feb. 15 (evening in Beijing; early morning in U.S.)
Free skate: Thursday, Feb. 17 (evening in Beijing; early morning in U.S.)
Pairs