- Madison Chock and Evan Bates helped Team USA take the lead in the figure skating team event at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
- The ice dance pair faces a demanding schedule of four programs in six days, more than many of their competitors.
- Chock and Bates are aiming for an individual ice dance gold medal in addition to a team medal.
- Despite the challenging schedule, the duo feels mentally and physically prepared for the competition ahead.
MILAN — You wouldn’t have guessed Madison Chock and Evan Bates just put on another season-best performance, no less on the biggest stage at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
The couple were calm and unceremonious with reporters after their free dance in the team event on Saturday, Feb. 7, which put the U.S. in first place with a five-point lead heading into the medal-deciding final day on Sunday.
Were they not happy? Far from it. Were they mad? Doesn’t seem so.
So what was it? Maybe it’s because they have their eyes set on a bigger prize, but are working through a gauntlet to get to it. Simply put, they’re buckling up for arguably the biggest week of their lives.
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Chock and Bates by far have the most challenging schedule of any figure skaters in the Games: Four programs in six days, including back-to-back duty in the team event on Feb. 6 and 7. Now, they have 48 hours until the ice dance competition opens Feb. 9 with the rhythm dance and concludes on Feb. 11 with the free dance. Their performances in the team event set up Team USA for its second straight gold medal.
“Our team is incredibly strong, arguably as strong as it’s ever been, and I have the utmost faith in them,” Chock said. “I’ll be proud of them no matter what the outcome is.”
But the most decorated ice dance pair in U.S. figure skating history wants more than a team medal in Milan — they want the ice dance gold medal, the one achievement they’ve been chasing for years. But while they did so much heavy lifting for their team, their competition got extra rest.
Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron (France) and Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson (Great Britain) didn’t skate the free dance because France and Great Britain didn’t qualify for the final. Canada did made the final, but it opted to go with Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha for the free dance, saving the legs of Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier. They’ll all be well-rested for the ice dance while Chock and Bates will still be recovering.
On paper, it seems like Chock and Bates are at a disadvantage. However, if you’ve seen this duo at all this season, you know that’s far from the case.
“We came into the event knowing that that was a possibility,” Chock said. “We’re mentally and physically prepared.”
For as crowded and deep the ice dance field is, the Americans don’t see it as a competition with others. Bates said they are just competing with themselves.
And every single time, they keep on winning.
“It’s just a progression,” he said. “It’s very cliche, but it is our mindset, and it is our approach, and it’s how we have stayed focused, and it’s how we’ve been training.”
A whirlwind of a week halfway done, but the job is far from over. It’s the biggest challenge of their careers, and this pair is ready for it.








