free hit counter “THEY SAID IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE.” — ILIA MALININ TEASES NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN JUMP THAT COULD REWRITE FIGURE SKATING HISTORY Shockwaves are spreading through the figure skating world after Olympic star Ilia Malinin hinted that he may unveil a completely new jump — a move once believed to be physically impossible — as he prepares to defend his world champion title in Prague. Already famous for pushing the limits of the sport with gravity-defying quads, Malinin is now suggesting he’s working on something even more extreme, a technical leap that could shatter long-standing assumptions about what the human body can do on ice. Skaters and coaches are already whispering about the possibility that the young champion may once again redefine the boundaries of physics inside a skating rink. If the jump appears in competition, it could instantly become one of the most revolutionary moments the sport has ever seen, transforming Malinin from a record-breaker into something even bigger — the skater who forced the entire sport to rethink its limits. - FRESH

“THEY SAID IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE.” — ILIA MALININ TEASES NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN JUMP THAT COULD REWRITE FIGURE SKATING HISTORY Shockwaves are spreading through the figure skating world after Olympic star Ilia Malinin hinted that he may unveil a completely new jump — a move once believed to be physically impossible — as he prepares to defend his world champion title in Prague. Already famous for pushing the limits of the sport with gravity-defying quads, Malinin is now suggesting he’s working on something even more extreme, a technical leap that could shatter long-standing assumptions about what the human body can do on ice. Skaters and coaches are already whispering about the possibility that the young champion may once again redefine the boundaries of physics inside a skating rink. If the jump appears in competition, it could instantly become one of the most revolutionary moments the sport has ever seen, transforming Malinin from a record-breaker into something even bigger — the skater who forced the entire sport to rethink its limits.

Ilia Malinin Hints at a Wild New Jump That Could Push the Limits of Figure Skating

Throughout the most recent Winter Olympic Games, Ilia Malinin was repeatedly asked when he would land the first-ever quadruple axel in the Games’ long history.

The only person to ever land the fabled move in competition, the 21-year-old American had the pressure of the world on his shoulders with each skate, as fans, pundits, and even competitors waited to see if he would unleash his ultimate maneuver.

But it never came.

While he landed it flawlessly multiple times in practice and in warm-ups, Malinin never sprang the move in official competition. When he tried to go for it in his final competitive skate of the Olympics to clinch the men’s individual competition gold medal, Malinin hesitated.

Will US 'Quad God' Ilia Malinin try hardest jump of all in his final  Olympic skate? - oregonlive.com

The small hesitation forced him into a single spin, which would have been OK if he had skated clean the rest of the routine. But that small hesitation cascaded into a series of tumbles, misteps, and mistakes, which hurled Malinin down the leaderboard and off the podium.

Ilia Malinin, the 'Quad God,' leaves an ace up his sleeve. - The New York  Times

While that would scar most athletes and force them inward, not wanting to take that kind of risk again, it’s only motivated the back-to-back world champion.

He isn’t only thinking about landing a quadruple axel. He’s thinking bigger. Malinin is confident he can land a move in competition that was once thought to be impossible: the quintuple jump.

Before the Olympics, Malinin joked in a media appearance that he had landed a quintuple jump before, but off camera with his parents, who are also his coaches.

Following the Olympics, in a recent interview, Malinin was again asked about the never-before-seen jump that would take him from physics-bender to logic destroyer.

Malinin, casual as always, gave a confident answer.

“What quints can you already do?” the reporter inquired.

“We’ll leave that until the season is finished,” Malinin replied with a wink.

 

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