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Team USA skater says she faced attacks after Olympic error
Summary
Amber Glenn said she received a torrent of attacks and hate after a short-program error at the Winter Olympics; she rebounded with a strong free skate to place fifth and will keep a team-event gold.
Content
Amber Glenn said she was subjected to a torrent of attacks and hate after a mistake in the short program at the Winter Olympics left her in 13th place. She is 26 and the first openly queer woman figure skater to compete for Team USA. Glenn had earlier said she was taking a break from social media after receiving a "scary amount of hate" related to her comments about Donald Trump and LGBTQ+ issues. She delivered a season-best free skate, finished fifth in the individual event, and will still take home a gold from the team event.
Key points:
- Glenn reported a "bombardment of attacks and hate" following a major error in her short program that put her 13th temporarily.
- She returned with a strong free skate, scoring 214.91 and finishing fifth overall in the individual event.
- Glenn previously stepped away from social media after saying she had received a "scary amount of hate" over her comments on political treatment of the LGBTQ+ community.
- She remains a member of the U.S. team that earned a gold medal in the team competition.
Summary:
Glenn described significant online abuse after her short-program mistake, and she later rebounded to post one of her best free skates and finish fifth while retaining a team-event gold. Undetermined at this time.
