Nathan Chen continues domination at World Team Trophy figure skating in Japan
3-time world champ hasn't lost a competition since 2018 Olympics
Three-time world champion Nathan Chen won the free skate at the figure skating World Team Trophy on Friday to continue his dominance of two-time Olympic gold medallist Yuzuru Hanyu.
First after the short program, Chen opened with a quadruple flip and landed a quad salchow in the first half of his routine set to a selection of music by Philip Glass.
Winner of the past five U.S. titles, Chen landed two more quadruple toeloops as part of combination jumps to score 203.24 points.
Hanyu, who was second after the short program, opened with a quad loop but could only manage a single salchow instead of a planned quad salchow on his second jump. He added two quad toeloops later in his program and finished with 193.76 points.
Russian skater Mikhail Kolyada was third with 180.72 points.
Chen became the first American since Scott Hamilton to win a third consecutive World Figure Skating Championships men's title in Stockholm, Sweden, last month where he also beat Hanyu.
Chen has not lost a competition since the 2018 Olympics.
Canada remains in 6th place
The biennial World Team Trophy features the six best figure skating teams from the 2020-21 season.
Teams from Japan, the United States, Canada, France, Russia and Italy are taking part.
Chen said he appreciated the rare opportunity to compete in a team format.
"I don't think I would have been able to perform as well as I have over the past few years had it not been for these guys pushing me forward so a lot of credit goes to them," Chen said.
Russia led the competition after the second day with 91 points, eight ahead of the United States. Japan was third with 78 points.
Team Canada is in sixth place with 42 points. In the men's free, Roman Sadovsky finished 10th with 134.80, and Nam Nguyen followed up in 11th with 133.04.
Russia finished first in the free dance to claim the ice dance gold.
Victoria Sinitsina and Nikita Katsalapov, first after the rhythm dance, received 130.15 points in the free dance. Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri of Italy were second with 124.75 followed by Americans Kaitlin Hawayek and Jean-Luc Baker with 110.16.
Canada's Carolane Soucisse and Shane Firus were sixth with 97.86.
Anastasia Mishina and Aleksandr Galliamov of Russia were first after the pairs short program with 73.77 points. Nicole Della Monica and Matteo Guarise of Italy were second with 66.09 points followed by Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara of Japan with 65.82.
Each country sends two men, two women, one pair and one ice-dancing entry. The points will be combined across the four disciplines with the highest point total winning.
The World Team Trophy was first held in 2009. Team USA has won four of the previous six competitions with the other two won by Japan. The U.S. is the defending champion.
A limited number of fans were allowed into Maruzen Intec Arena even though Osaka is experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases.
On Friday, Japan's second-largest city recorded more than 1,209 cases, its highest total since January.
With less than a year to go until the Beijing Olympics, many of the world's top skaters are in Osaka, eager to get in another competition after several International Skating Union events were cancelled this season due to the pandemic.
The competition concludes Saturday with the women's free skate and the pairs free skate.
After the women's short program, Alison Schumacher of Tecumseh, Ont., was in ninth place (59.19), and two-time national champion Gabrielle Daleman was in 10th (57.22).
Lori-Ann Matte and Thierry Ferland of Canada head into the pairs free skate in sixth (54.91.)
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With files from CBC Sports