By Associated Press - Saturday, November 16, 2024

HELSINKI — Yuma Kagiyama skated what he thought might be his “worst program” of the season and still won the Finlandia Trophy on Saturday, securing his place at next month’s Grand Prix Final.

The Olympic silver medalist from Japan had a big lead from Friday’s short program. He needed it. Kagiyama bailed out of his opening quadruple flip and had to put a foot down to steady himself on the landing of his second quad jump.

Kagiyama credited the crowd with helping him stabilize the skate, landing two more quads and finishing with a points total of 263.09 to win by less than four points from France’s Kevin Aymoz, who had been nearly 19 adrift following the short program.

“More than the feeling of being happy, I have regrets of how I skated in the free skate and I think it may have been the worst program that I’ve done this season,” Kagiyama said through an interpreter. “I regret not having been able to bring my best to you all here today.”

Kagiyama joins Ilia Malinin of the United States on two Grand Prix wins. Kagiyama won his titles back-to-back on opposite sides of the world after victory at the NHK Trophy in Japan last week.

Aymoz picked up his fourth career Grand Prix silver medal and second of the season - he has yet to win a gold in the series - after some problems of his own. Aymoz fell on his opening quad toeloop but recovered for a total 259.15, narrowly beating Italy’s Daniel Grassl on 258.55.


PHOTOS: Kagiyama and Yoshida win despite errors at Finlandia Trophy


Grassl was sixth in the short program and rose to a podium place in the free skate for the second week running after improving from fifth to second at the NHK Trophy.

The 2023 world championship silver medalist Cha Jun-hwan of South Korea withdrew from the event overnight with an unspecified injury after placing seventh in the short program.

Hana Yoshida shrugged off a fall on her opening triple axel to become the third Japanese skater to win a women’s Grand Prix this season. She won by the tightest of margins.

Yoshida’s score of 199.46 was ahead of fellow Japanese skater Rino Matsuike on 199.20 only because Matsuike was given a one-point deduction for a time violation.

“I’m really happy that I got to win a gold medal but I wanted to land the triple axel, so I think I could do better,” Yoshida said. “But I’m happy because I didn’t give up until the last second.”

The field for the competition was depleted by the withdrawals last week of world silver medalist Isabeau Levito of the United States and European champion Loena Hendrickx of Belgium.

Italy’s Lara Naki Gutmann wasn’t even meant to be in the competition, but those withdrawals handed her a spot and she turned it into her first career Grand Prix medal with bronze on 198.49, denying American skater Sarah Everhardt a podium spot.

Gutmann is the only skater not from the U.S. or Japan to win a women’s medal in a Grand Prix this season.

Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier of Canada took the lead in ice dance with a score of 84.65 in the rhythm dance, ahead of Britain’s Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson on 82.03 and Finland’s Juulia Turkkila and Matthias Versluis on 78.31.

The ice dance and pairs competitions conclude on Sunday.

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