MILAN — Madison Chock and Evan Bates set the tone for the powerful U.S. Figure Skating team at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Friday with a rocking, high-energy rhythm dance set to music by Lenny Kravitz to open the team figure skating competition.
Alysa Liu made sure the defending champion Americans would maintain their lead going into Day 2 of the event.
Chock and Bates scored a world-leading 91.06 points to open the three-day competition, where the U.S. is the defending champ, before a packed crowd at the Milano Ice Skating Arena that included U.S. Vice President JD Vance, his family and other dignitaries.
Pairs skaters Ellie Kam and Danny O'Shea finished solidly in the middle of the pack in their short program for the U.S., while Liu was second to Japan's Kaori Sakamoto in the women's short program, leaving the Americans with 25 points.
Japan was second with 23 and host-nation Italy third with 22 going into the men's short program Saturday. After that, the competition is whittled from 10 teams to the top five, with those five also performing their free dance later in the day.
The men's, women's and pairs free skates will ultimately decide the medals Sunday.
''We definitely skated great and we're very happy, as you saw when we finished. I think we both felt the excitement of just getting these Olympics underway,'' said Bates, who along with Chock were part of the gold medal-winning team at the 2022 Winter Games.
Yet Chock and Bates, the three-time world ice dance champions, never received their medals in Beijing, thanks to an investigation into Russian doping. In fact, Chock and Bates wouldn't get them until two years later at the Summer Olympics in Paris.