MILAN — Ilia Malinin playfully threw a couple of jabs at a TV camera while skating off the ice Tuesday night, the pressure of his first Olympics having seemingly vanished following a team gold medal and a near-perfect short program to begin the men's competition.
The American wunderkind didn't exactly deliver a knockout blow to the rest of the field.
He came close, though.
The self-styled ''Quad God'' landed a pair of quadruple jumps, another jaw-dropping backflip and his signature ''raspberry twist,'' piling up 108.16 points and taking a five-point lead over Yuma Kagiyama of Japan into the decisive free skate Friday night.
''In the team event, I think I had too much, I'll call it, ‘Olympic excitement.' It really just felt like there was so much pressure,'' Malinin said. ''I was so hyped up, so excited to skate out there and it really came back and beat me.''
In fact, Kagiyama beat Malinin in the short program during the team competition last weekend, leaving many to wonder whether the overwhelming favorite for Olympic gold was letting the pressure get to him. But he bounced back in the free skate to beat Japan's Shun Sato in a head-to-head battle, clinching a second straight gold for the U.S. and giving him a boost of momentum.
''So coming to this short program,'' Malinin said, ''in an individual event, I wanted to take things a little more slowly, a little more calm, and honestly just push the auto-pilot button and see what happens.''
Kagiyama scored 103.07 points while Adam Siao Him Fa of France, the last skater to beat Malinin more than two years ago, was third with 102.55. But both face a herculean task in catching him, given Malinin's huge technical advantage over a longer program.