Satoko Miyahara performs her free skate at the 2018 Winter Olympics (Getty Images/Kyodo News)
Satoko Miyahara performs her free skate at the 2018 Winter Olympics (x)
Satoko Miyahara in the K&C after her free skate (AFP)
Satoko Miyahara performs her short program at the 2018 Winter Olympics (x)
Satoko Miyahara performs her short program at the 2018 Winter Olympics (Getty Images)
Anna Cappellini & Luca Lanotte (ITA) compete at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, finishing 6th in the ice dance individual event with 184.91 points. (Getty Images)
Adam Rippon in the K&C after his SP (x)
Dmitri Aliev (OAR) lands a quad lutz-triple toeloop combination and a quad toeloop in his short program at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, earning a personal best 98.98 points in the segment. He is the first skater to land two clean quads with positive GOE in a short program at the Olympics.
"At the start of the competition we were very nervous. But as we heard the crowd cheering we were very happy and the hardship just melted away and I felt better," said Ryom.
Kim said, "When we heard the crowd cheering we were very excited. We would like to send our thanks to the South Koreans and our fellow Koreans for cheering us on. We were happy to perform here. It was very good for us."
[...]
"Our goal is to continue and try more and to break the records that we set today. We are satisfied with today's performance," said Kim.
"There are still a lot of things left for us to do. We feel somewhat disappointed because in our training we did a whole lot better than the results we got here."
"We will try our best to improve our score in our next performance. We want to break our record step by step and hope to get better and better."
Tae Ok Ryom & Ju Sik Kim (PRK), 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics (x)
Team USA: 2018 Olympic Team Event Bronze Medalists
One of the first openly gay American athletes to reach to these Olympics (and arguably the most high-profile one at these Winter Games), Rippon has not shrunk from the importance of his platform. He is, as he said, "here to do a job," but he recognizes that, like most people who don't traffic in athletes clichés, there is nothing physically crippling about both possessing an opinion and then sharing it.
And despite what players or coaches like, say, New England Patriots bench boss Bill Belichick might have you believe, original thoughts do not lead directly to the failure of a person's otherwise impressive athletic gifts.
"I think my voice has given my skating more importance," Rippon said. "It gives my skating a greater purpose."
Why shouldn't it? The standard position in sports is so often to shunt aside anything unrelated to the obvious pursuit of victory that a perspective like Rippon's can be disquieting. To that end, some television coverage of Rippon sometimes glosses over (or skips entirely) how his sexual identity fits into his personal narrative, and the official transcripts of Rippon's interview on Monday that were provided by Olympic officials did not include any responses that weren't of the stock sports variety.
But that is what makes Rippon's willingness to engage -- to be, well, a person -- significant. When he was asked earlier this year about his thoughts on Vice President Mike Pence leading the American delegation here, he did not fall back on the chestnut of wanting to avoid "distractions." He said what he felt (which was "Mike Pence doesn't stand for anything I really believe in") and did not back off it when there was the inevitable pushback.
He is raw. Sometimes, that can look cocky -- as when he suggested before the U.S. Nationals in January that the event was "going to be my coronation" -- and sometimes it can be hilarious, like when he posted a detailed tweet about whether or not he used extra padding to enhance his posterior while performing ("No, it's just my real butt.")
It is, at all times, genuine. Rippon's celebration when he finished his long program here -- which featured several muscle-flexes and some fevered jumping up and down -- was only eclipsed by his reaction as he watched teammate Mirai Nagasu dazzle in the women's portion of the event.
Four years ago, Rippon and Nagasu shared hamburgers and regrets as they watched the figure skating event at the Sochi Olympics go on without them. On Monday, Rippon was in tears watching his friend become the first American woman to land a triple axel in the Olympics, and his shriek as she closed her program could be heard two levels up from the ice.
Rippon is showing that it is, in fact, possible to be a strong athlete, a strong teammate and a strong advocate all at the same time. Sharing a kiss with Gus Kenworthy, another openly gay athlete at these Games, during the Opening Ceremony did not somehow impinge his ability to land a triple lutz.
Neither did declaring that he wouldn't go to the White House if invited after the Olympics nor, for that matter, did commenting on his disappointment over the "generic" condoms being distributed at the Olympic Village ("I thought maybe they'd have like Olympic rings on them"). Rippon's candor is not just limited to his sexual identity, either. He finds no weakness in talking about his frustration when he struggles, and spoke frankly about how he was depressed after missing the 2014 Olympics.
"You're an ambassador," Nagasu said to Rippon in the mixed zone, and he beamed.
Rippon's mother, he said, often told him that there was value in talking about his experiences and his thoughts because there is undoubtedly meaning to it for others far beyond his own circle.
Now, on the biggest stage of his career, he has embraced that idea. And he is determined to be himself.
"I always knew I had a voice," he said, "but it took me a very long time to find it and to use it."
Mirai Nagasu reacting to her Olympic free skate, 2010 → 2018