Meryl Davis and Charlie White of the United States wrap up the gold in ice dancing.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSCOW — Miki Ando of Japan won the world figure skating championships after overcoming Olympic gold medalist Kim Yu-na in a duel of exceptional elegance on Saturday.
Alissa Czisny, the U.S. champion from Bowling Green, finished in fifth place.
The victory by the Japanese skater, who also won at the 2007 worlds, was fitting in a competition that was originally scheduled in her homeland before it was hit by an earthquake and tsunami in March.
“I was skating for Japan, and I never cared about the result. I’m really happy to have a gold medal,” Ando said. “I worked hard, and I’ve become a little bit of a stronger skater than a year ago.”
In ice dance, Americans Meryl Davis and Charlie White won the first world gold for their country in the discipline, outpointing 2010 champions Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada. The American sister-brother team of Maia and Alex Shibutani won bronze.
The free programs of Ando and Kim contained languid moves interspersed with moments of power and steely control. They were within less than half a point of each other going into the free skate.
Ando, skating to Grieg’s “Piano Concerto in A Minor,” in the final group of six, opened with a triple lutz-double toe loop. She didn’t falter until the middle of the program, when she stepped out of a double axel and reduced the planned combination triple toe to a double.
But she regained her poise, had three more solid triples and a double axel-double loop-double loop cascade so surprising that it drew gasps from the crowd.
Kim made her season debut after firing coach Brian Orser and moving her training base from Toronto to Los Angeles in the past year. She started even more boldly with a triple lutz-triple toe. Her program — “Homage to Korea” — set to a haunting collection of traditional Korean music and choreographed by Canadian David Wilson, was a crowd-pleaser at Megasport Arena.
But she quickly ran into trouble, singling two of her next three jumps. She also featured a cascade starting with a double axel, but one of the jumps was a toe loop instead of a loop, giving the element slightly less value.
“I’m just so glad that the competition is over,” said Kim, who cried on the podium. “After the Olympics, I was thinking: ‘Am I going to come back to competition or not?’ ... Mentally I couldn’t stop thinking: ‘Why do I have to do this?’ I think that was the hardest thing. But then I felt ready to go, and I thought: ‘I can do this.’?”