In the <Anchor>
figure skating team event, 16-year-old Balieva, a Russian record maker, stood out.
With a jump to a different level, they outperformed the second-placed player by a large score difference.
Let's take a look.
Correspondent Seo Dae-won.
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Baliyeva, who broke her world record eight times in her first season as a senior, was different from her Olympic debut.
She's banned from 4 round jumps, she's perfectly digested in the women's short program with a Tano jump where she runs with her hands above her head, starting with her highest triple axel in three and a half laps, and continuing through the other two triple jumps. I did.
She was literally fantastic with her delicate facial expressions, graceful steps and spins.
After Baliyeva finished her performance, she gave a look of emotion and got a score of 90.18 on the billboard.
She was just 0.27 points short of her own world record she wrote last month, outpacing her second-placed player by a whopping 15 points.
[Kamila Balieva/Russia Figure Skating National Team: It is a great honor to participate in the Olympics.
I was very nervous at the start, but I was able to overcome it while acting.]
As Balieva showed off her overwhelming skills from the team event, the women's singles to be held from the 15th is actually more about whether she wins by setting a new record rather than whether she wins a gold medal or not. It is an atmosphere of interest.
Japanese Hanyu, who aroused curiosity because the whereabouts of the game was imminent, arrived in Beijing today (6th).
Hanyu will only have one training session tomorrow and face off against Nathan Chen for the century.
(Video coverage: Chan-soo Lee, video editing: Jeong-taek Lee)