Winter Olympics 2026: Amber Glenn’s Devastating Missed Jump

MILAN — The most disheartening aspect of Amber Glenn’s performance wasn’t her failure to execute an element, which critically damaged her score. Rather, it was that the most challenging segment of her program had already concluded before this misstep occurred.

Glenn, the current U.S. titleholder, came to Milan aspiring to claim an individual gold. A mere two critical seconds during her women’s short program on the ice probably shattered that aspiration for this year, a reality she comprehended instantly.

Glenn had successfully performed her triple axel, a maneuver so complex that only one other competitor on Tuesday’s ice, Japan’s Ami Nakai, who led the evening, managed it. The triple axel is an exceptionally challenging leap, involving a forward entry and a backward landing, necessitating a precise 3½ rotations. Glenn stands among the scarce female skaters possessing the strength for this, and her execution of this element surpassed Nakai’s.

However, moments later, Glenn tried a triple loop, a jump she has perfected countless times, and one that all participants in Tuesday’s program are capable of executing. Yet, for an unclear reason—be it apprehension, the surface, or chance—she faltered, completing only a double loop. Consequently, according to the strict metrics of figure skating judgment, she received zero points for that endeavor.

If she had successfully landed the triple loop, even with a standard score, she would have concluded the program approximately in fifth place, poised to contend for a medal. Instead, the nullification of points decimated her score, relegating her to 13th position, over 11 points adrift of Nakai.

Beneath the stands, observing on a screen, Alysa Liu, Glenn’s teammate from the Blade Angels, gasped, immediately understanding the situation. She quietly witnessed Glenn push through the concluding 80 seconds of her short program, a small, harsh ‘X’ marring the display of Glenn’s marks.

Glenn performs to Madonna’s track “Like A Prayer,” a powerful song expressing yearning, connection, and conviction. She has perfected this routine throughout the season, employing it to secure victory at the U.S. nationals in St. Louis the previous month. Madonna personally recorded a brief message, urging Glenn to harness the song’s spirit towards a gold medal. Her routine’s design was precisely intended for this outcome.

As “Like a Prayer” transitions from its uplifting choral part into its rhythmic dance beat, Glenn typically initiates the more expressive segment of her performance. However, on Tuesday evening, her gaze appeared distant, her facial expression fixed and unsmiling. She executed her routine mechanically, relying on ingrained movements, with the sharpness of her choreography having vanished.