Ilia Malinin completes redemption arc with third straight world figure skating championship

A picture


Ilia Malinin claimed a third straight world figure skating championship on Saturday afternoon, completing a swift redemption a month after his shock Olympic collapse with a commanding free skate.The 21-year-old American entered the final at Prague’s O2 Arena with a commanding lead after Thursday’s short program, where his personal-best 111.29 had put him more than nine points clear of the field.This time, there would be no unraveling.Skating last, Malinin produced a free program of 218.

11 to finish on 329,40 points, comfortably ahead of Japanese rivals Yumi Kagiyama (306,67) and Shun Sato (288,54),For Malinin, it was a performance as much about composure as content.

Known as the Quad God for his unprecedented jumping arsenal, he once again packed his program with difficulty, landing five quadruple jumps, including a quad toe-triple toe combination followed by a backflip late in the program, but it was the absence of the errors that defined his Olympic free skate that mattered most as he came in nearly 23 points ahead of the next best score.“I definitely felt very pushed and loved from the crowd,” Malinin said afterwards.“Every single element I did, they were all behind me and I felt that the whole way through my program.”A month ago in Milan, Malinin had arrived as the overwhelming favorite for gold, only to fall twice and tumble to eighth in one of the biggest upsets in Olympic figure skating history.In the aftermath, he admitted the pressure had consumed him, replaying mistakes “24/7” in the days that followed.

On Saturday, the tone was entirely different.That mindset had been evident from the start of the week.In the short program, Malinin attacked his opening quad flip and quad lutz–triple toe combination with conviction, drawing a roaring response from the crowd and signaling that the Olympic disappointment had not lingered.“My expectation was to leave the long program in one piece and I definitely think that happened,” Malinin quipped afterwards.Behind him Kagiyama, the Olympic silver medalist, surpassed his personal-best free skate score to a selection from Puccini’s Turandot only to finish second again, while Sato’s crowd-pleasing program to Stravinsky’s Firebird repeated his Milano Cortina bronze.

Canada’s Stephen Gogolev placed fourth (281.04) ahead of France’s Adam Siao Him Fa, who landed two quads but fell on a third and dropped out of the medals to fifth place (271.56).Estonia’s Aleksandr Selevko (270.42), in bronze position after the short, slipped down to sixth.

The Americans Andrew Torgashev and Jacob Sanchez placed 10th and 12th, respectively.The absence of Olympic champion Mikhail Shaidorov, who like Alysa Liu skipped worlds, left the spotlight squarely on Malinin – and this time the flaxen-haired American met it without hesitation.The Virginia-born skater became the first man to win three straight world titles since former US star Nathan Chen, who did it in 2018, 2019 and 2021 after the 2020 competition was canceled due to the pandemic.“It was really challenging and really hard,” Malinin said to the crowd afterwards.“But with you guys I was able to make it through.

businessSee all
A picture

Lloyds bank faces £66m court battle with car loan customers

Lloyds Banking Group is facing a court battle with 30,000 aggrieved car loan customers who are to abandon the City regulator’s official redress scheme amid fears it will shortchange consumers and favour lenders.The claims law firm Courmacs Legal is planning to file a £66m omnibus claim on behalf of borrowers who believe they were financially harmed by car loan contracts set up by Lloyds’ motor finance arm, Black Horse.The grievances are part of a much wider car loans commission scandal, in which drivers were overcharged for their loans due to unfair commission arrangements between lenders and car dealers.However, the omnibus case, which is expected to be filed in the coming weeks, means consumers are deciding to pre-emptively waive their rights to the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) estimated £11bn compensation scheme, even before the final details are due to be set out on Monday. That is despite claims law firms such as Courmacs taking a 28% cut of any potential payout

A picture

UK government borrowing costs hit 5% as Iran war fuels bond market sell-off

UK government borrowing costs have risen above 5% amid an intensifying global bond market sell-off fuelled by the Iran war.The yield – or interest rate – on 10-year debt hit its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis, rising 13 basis points to 5.081%, as investors acted on concerns about the economic fallout from the conflict.Borrowing costs also rose for the US and eurozone governments, underscoring growing turbulence in the global financial system after Donald Trump’s extension of a deadline for a peace deal failed to soothe jittery investors.Financial markets worldwide slumped on Friday, extending falls seen since the outbreak of the war, with losses in London and across major US and EU trading hubs

A picture

Italy investigates beauty brands over concerns about young girls’ mental health

Italian regulators are investigating Sephora and Benefit Cosmetics over the apparent use of “covert marketing strategies” to sell beauty products to young girls that might be fuelling an unhealthy skincare obsession known as “cosmeticorexia”.The Italian Competition Authority said it was looking into promotions for skincare products such as face masks, serums and anti-ageing creams that in some cases appeared to target girls under 10.“These practices are linked to the broader issue of ‘cosmeticorexia’ – an obsession with skincare among minors,” the authority said.The cosmetics brands, which are both owned by the French luxury group LVMH, appeared to have adopted a “particularly insidious marketing strategy”, it said. This involved using “very young micro-influencers who encourage the compulsive purchase of cosmetics among young people, a particularly vulnerable group”

A picture

Ministers should ‘start doing stuff’ to help farmers and cut fuel costs, says Asda boss

Asda’s executive chair has called on the government to “stand up and start doing stuff” to support farmers and ease the price of fuel as he warned that food prices would inevitably rise as a result of the conflict in the Middle East.Allan Leighton said farmers were under pressure but the supermarket chain had so far received “a trickle of requests not an avalanche” of cost price increases from its suppliers, as they were under pressure from higher fertiliser, energy and fuel costs.“I do believe it will create inflation,” he said, adding that the pace of cost increases was volatile and quite different across the various commodities.Leighton also warned of “temporary shortages’” at petrol stations, as supplies are squeezed by the conflict in the Middle East, with the RAC reporting on Friday that the average price of unleaded petrol in the UK had risen to 150p a litre.Leighton accused the government of benefiting from £3bn of income from fuel duties as prices rose and said it should ease these duties or support farmers on energy or other costs

A picture

‘It’s fired people up’: support grows, including within Labor, for new gas tax to curb wartime profits

The gas industry is mobilising in opposition to a potential new tax on the sector as political momentum builds – including among Labor MPs – for the government to use the May budget to prevent producers profiting from the Middle East war.The Australian Energy Producers (AEP) chief executive, Samantha McCulloch, claimed a new tax would punish the same Asian trading partners Australia was leaning on to supply more fuel amid the global energy crisis.The gas sector was blind-sided by revelations the Treasury was modelling options for a new levy to capture windfall profits from gas and thermal coal companies, as well as potential changes to the Petroleum Resources Rent Tax (PRRT) and corporate tax.Government, industry and opposition sources believe the public mood on taxing the resources giants has shifted, giving the Albanese government cover to pursue changes it might have considered too politically risky a few months ago.The sources point to a campaign spearheaded by independent senator David Pocock, social media influencer Konrad Benjamin of Punter’s Politics fame and progressive thinktank the Australia Institute, which has highlighted how much tax gas companies pay

A picture

Blink and miss: Trump’s tactic of threats first and U-turn later is proving stale in Iran war

President’s move, dubbed Trump Always Chickens Out, appears to have soured as he loses hold on situation in IranMiddle East crisis – live updatesFrom Wall Street to the White House, the dish everyone’s talking about this week is the Persian Taco. It’s what’s served when Trump chickens out in Iran.In the early hours of Monday morning, witnessing oil prices surge, stock futures plummet and bond yields climb due to his threat to pummel Iran’s civilian power infrastructure, the president hurriedly walked it back, announcing he would put off the bombing because talks with Iran were actually going great. After the bombast and bloodshed, it was time for Taco (Trump Always Chickens Out), a move he first put on display during the tariffs crisis last year.Bonds snapped back in instants and the price of Brent crude recoiled to below $100 a barrel from more than $112 seconds earlier