Ilia Malinin misses Olympic medal after falling in free skate, finishes 8th
- - Ilia Malinin misses Olympic medal after falling in free skate, finishes 8th
CBSNewsFebruary 14, 2026 at 2:11 AM
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In a shocking twist at the 2026 Winter Olympics, American figure skater Ilia Malinin didn't make it to the podium on Friday, failing to medal after falling twice during the free skate. Kazakhstan's Mikhail Shaidorov took home the gold.
Malinin, known as the "Quad God" for his talent at quadruple jumps, looked visibly emotional after his skate.
The 21-year-old, who led by a comfortable margin after the short program, merely had to deliver a mediocre performance to add individual gold to the gold medal he won in the team event. Instead, he was trying to fight back tears after one of the worst nights of his career, one that left a star-packed crowd inside Milano Ice Arena sitting in stunned silence.
Ilia Malinin of Team USA falls during the men's free skate competition at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 13, 2026 in Milan, Italy. / Credit: Jamie Squire / Getty Images (Ashley Landis / AP)
Shaidorov finished with a career-best 291.58 points to give his nation its first gold medal of the Winter Games, while Yuma Kagiyama earned his second consecutive Olympic silver medal and Japanese teammate Shun Sato took bronze.
Then there was Malinin, who fell all the way to eighth place. He finished with 264.49 points, ending a two-plus-year unbeaten streak that covered 14 full competitions, including the past two world championships that he won with ease.
"Honestly, yeah, I was not expecting that," he said. "I felt going into this competition I was so ready. I just felt ready going on that ice. I think maybe that might have been the reason, is I was too confident it was going to go well."
Team USA's Ilia Malinin reacts after competing in the figure skating men's singles free skating final at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milan on Feb. 13, 2026. / Credit: WANG Zhao /AFP via Getty Images
Much of Malinin's journey in Milan had felt a little bit off.
He was beaten by Kagiyama in the short program of the team event, later acknowledging that the pressure of competing in the Olympics had started to get to him. And he still wasn't quite his dominant self despite a head-to-head win against Sato in the team free skate, which clinched the second consecutive gold medal for the Americans in the event.
But by the time of his individual short program Tuesday night, Malinin's fearless swagger and unrivaled spunk was back. He took a five-point lead over Kagiyama and Adam Siao Him Fa of France that seemed insurmountable going into Friday night.
Malinin decided to practice early in the day at U.S. Figure Skating's alternate training base in Bergamo, just outside Milan, allowing him to escape the Olympic bubble and avoid having to sit in the arena all night. And he was the picture of calm throughout his warmup, never once falling in all of his practice jumps while wearing his glittering black and gold ensemble.
Then came a performance that might well haunt Malinin for the rest of his career.
He opened with a quad flip, one of a record-tying seven in his planned program, then appeared to be going after the quad axel only he has ever landed in competition, but had to bail out. He recovered to land a quad lutz — and then the problems really began.
Ilia Malinin falls during the men's free skate program. / Credit: Ashley Landis / AP
Malinin only did a double instead of a planned quad loop, throwing his timing off. He fell on a quad lutz, preventing him from doing the second half of the quad lutz-triple toe loop combination that would have earned him big points. And in his final jumping pass, which was supposed to be a high-scoring quad salchow-triple axel, Malinin only could muster a double salchow — and he fell on that.
By the time the music stopped, Malinin was left trying to mask the sorrow for a crowd that included Nathan Chen, the 2022 Olympic champion; seven-time Olympic gold medal gymnast Simone Biles, and actor Jeff Goldblum and his wife, Emilie.
Shaidorov was just as shocked as everyone as the realization hit that he had won the gold medal.
Mikhail Shaidorov of Kazakhstan reacts to his scores after competing during the men's free skate program and winning the gold. / Credit: Ashley Landis / AP
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