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Alysa Liu shows off her Olympic gold medals during an appearance on Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen.
Alysa Liu shows off her Olympic gold medals during an appearance on Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen. Photograph: Bravo/Charles Sykes/Getty Images
Alysa Liu shows off her Olympic gold medals during an appearance on Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen. Photograph: Bravo/Charles Sykes/Getty Images

Olympic champion Alysa Liu withdraws from world figure skating championships

  • Olympic champion Liu withdraws from worlds

  • US star rests after historic Milan gold medal

  • Sarah Everhardt replaces Liu on US team roster

Olympic figure skating champion Alysa Liu has withdrawn from the world championships later this month, an unsurprising move for the defending champ after she won the first Winter Games gold medal by an American woman in more than two decades.

Liu would have performed alongside Olympic teammates Amber Glenn and Isabeau Levito when worlds begin 24 Match at O2 Arena in Prague. Bradie Tennell was the first alternate but declined, so Sarah Everhardt will take Liu’s place on the US team.

The 20-year-old Liu, who retired after the 2022 Beijing Games only to launch a triumphant comeback two years later, became the first American woman since Kimmie Meissner in 2006 to win the world title last year in Boston. She followed up with the first Olympic gold medal for a US woman since Sarah Hughes in 2002 when she stood atop the podium last month at the Milan Cortina Games.

Liu actually came away with two gold medals from Italy; she joined Glenn in helping the US defend its Olympic team title.

Liu has quickly become a star, not only because of her success but also because her attitude and style. Once burned out by the sport, she returned with a fresh, happy-go-lucky outlook, and that positive vibe served her well amid the pressure of the Winter Games.

And with her distinctive streaked haircut, which is supposed to mimic growth rings on a tree, and prominent frenulum piercing, Liu has eschewed the “ice princess” style of yesteryear for a look that has been embraced by the alt, punk and emo crowd.

It is common for Olympic athletes to skip the following world championships. The season is long enough with the first events taking place in early fall, and many choose to begin their offseason early after the stress of performing at the Winter Games.

Among those who also have withdrawn from worlds are Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara, the Olympic pairs champions from Japan; Sara Conti and Niccolo Macii, the pairs team that helped earn team bronze for host Italy; and Loena Hendrickx of Belgium, who has endured a season marked by injuries and finished 14th in the women’s event at the Milan Cortina Games.

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  • Amber Glenn says she will not visit White House to celebrate Olympic gold

  • Alysa Liu released the pressure, reclaimed her joy and turned it into Olympic gold

  • Alysa Liu wins Winter Olympics gold to end US women’s 24-year figure skating drought

  • Japanese teenager Ami Nakai overshadows USA’s Blade Angels in women’s figure skating opener

  • Ilia Malinin holds off resurgent Japan to seal repeat US team figure skating gold

  • Chock and Bates post world-best score as Olympic figure skating gets under way

  • Quad God and the Blade Angels: is the new USA Dream Team a group of figure skaters?

  • Amber Glenn edges Alysa Liu for second straight Cup of China figure skating title

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