Figure skating anime Medalist is the perfect companion to the Winter Olympics
It’s that time that only comes every four years, when athletes who’ve been preparing their entire lives get to perform absurdly dangerous cold-weather stunts on international television: the Winter Olympics. From snowboarding to the fittingly named skeleton, where riders jettison their bodies down icy tracks at upwards of 80 mph, there’s plenty of superhuman feats to watch. Of these, one of the most outwardly graceful, eye-catching, and prestigious is figure skating.
Compared to many of the somewhat straightforward racing events featured at the Games, it can be tough to make sense of how figure skating actually works: There are many jump types, seemingly similar events that are actually quite different, and scoring specifics complicated enough to give professional judges headaches. There are also many misnomers about the sport, like how its elegant outward appearance implies a sort of athletic “daintiness,” when in reality, competitors risk broken bones and life-changing injuries every time they go on the ice.
There’s some good news, though. One of the best sports anime in recent years, Medalist, timed its return to coincide with this year’s Olympics. This is a big deal because the series is not only great at explaining the baseline rules of figure skating, but is also willing to dive deep into the weeds. It explains scoring, strategy, and the reasons why these competitors are willing to risk so much. It’s enough to make this year’s figure skating events, from free skates to rhythm dancing, much more rewarding as a spectator.
Medalist is based on the manga of the same name, and it began airing last January. It follows Inori Yuitsuka, who dreams of winning gold at the Olympics against all odds. As for why she’s counted out, she began competitive skating at age 11, which is considered four or five years after when “serious” skaters with any real shot begin training. While deeply socially anxious and hesitant in her regular life, she remains undeterred, teaming up with coach Tsukasa Akeuraji, a newbie instructor who also started late in the sport, to take the skating world by storm.

