Novice and junior career (2004–2010) Hanyu competed for the first time in the 2004–05 season, winning gold at the Japan Championships in the Novice B category, the lower of the two novice level categories. His home rink then closed due to financial issues, forcing him to switch to the in
Aoba ward, Sendai. The same year, Shōichirō Tsuzuki moved to
Yokohama, and
Nanami Abe became Hanyu's main coach and choreographer, guiding him until 2012. On weekends, Hanyu travelled three hours from Sendai to Yokohama for additional lessons at Tsuzuki's new skating club. In summer 2006, at 11 years old, Hanyu's confidence showed up when initiating a
spin battle against that year's Olympic silver medalist,
Stéphane Lambiel, who was known for his world-class spins. Hanyu suffered a disarming defeat, which he remembered as an important career lesson: "After competing against him, I decided to improve my spins as well. You will definitely improve, learning from [the best]." In the 2006–07 season, Hanyu won the bronze medal at the Japan Championships in the Novice A category, which earned him an invitation to the
Japan Junior Championships, where he placed seventh. His home rink in Izumi ward eventually reopened in 2007 after being closed for two years. The next season, he placed first at the Japan Championships in the Novice A category and won the bronze medal at the
Japan Junior Championships. In
2008–09, Hanyu moved up to junior level and made his international debut in the
ISU Junior Grand Prix at the
Merano Cup in Italy, where he placed fifth. The same season, he won gold at the
Japan Junior Championships, becoming the youngest male skater with 13 years to win the event. This result earned him an invitation to the
Japan Senior Championships for the first time, where he placed eighth. His national junior title also qualified him for the
2009 World Junior Championships in February, where he finished 12th with an
ISU personal best score of 161.77 points in the combined total. In that season, Hanyu had included the triple Axel, a jump with three and a half revolutions, in his programs for the first time, though receiving negative
grades of execution (GOE) for all three attempts. The following
2009–10 season marked the beginning of an 11-year-long quest for the first
Super Slam in the
men's singles discipline, with wins at the
ISU Junior Grand Prix Final and
World Junior Championships. Hanyu placed first at both of his Grand Prix assignments, in
Poland and
Croatia, and entered the
Final as the top qualifier, which he won with a new personal best score of 206.77 points. At
Junior Nationals, he successfully defended his title from the previous season, qualifying him for the
Senior Nationals, where he finished sixth. Based on his results, Hanyu was selected to compete at the
2010 World Junior Championships, winning gold after placing third in the
short program and first in the free skate with a new personal best score of 216.10 points. Hanyu became the fourth and youngest Japanese man to win the junior world title. In that season, he had significantly improved the quality of the triple Axel, his most difficult technical element at that time, having landed nine jumps with positive GOE in ten attempts.
First Olympic cycle (2010–2014) 2010–11 season: International senior debut In the
2010–11 season, Hanyu moved up to senior level at 15 years old, facing significant competition in the Japanese men's field, including
Daisuke Takahashi,
Nobunari Oda,
Takahiko Kozuka, and
Tatsuki Machida, who all had finished ahead of him at the previous Japan Championships. Hanyu skated his short program to "White Legend" from
Pyotr Tchaikovsky's ballet
Swan Lake, performed by Japanese violinist
Ikuko Kawai, and used
Zigeunerweisen by
Pablo de Sarasate for the free skate. He gave his international senior debut at the
2010 NHK Trophy, where he landed his first successful
quadruple jump at an ISU-sanctioned event; a quad
toe loop. He placed fourth overall at the competition and seventh at the subsequent
Rostelecom Cup, missing out on a medal at his first two senior
Grand Prix events. At the
2010–11 Japan Championships, Hanyu was in second place after the short program, but faltered in the free skate and finished fourth overall. The next year, at the
2011 Four Continents Championships, he won his first medal at a main international senior competition, placing second behind Daisuke Takahashi with a new personal best score of 228.01 points. At 16 years old, Hanyu became the youngest medalist at the Four Continents Championships. On March 11, 2011, he was skating at his home rink in Sendai when the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami struck his hometown and the Tōhoku region. With his house being damaged, he had to spend the following three days with his family at an evacuation center. A month later, on April 7, the water pipes at his rink burst as a result of an
aftershock, known as the
April 2011 Miyagi earthquake, and Hanyu was forced to move his training base to Yokohama and
Hachinohe until his home rink reopened on July 24, 2011. In the meantime, he had participated in 60
ice shows across Japan, using them as an opportunity to get additional practice time and raise money for the areas affected by the disaster.
2011–12 season: First world medal (center) and
Daisuke Takahashi (left) at the
2012 World Championships podium In the
2011–12 season, Hanyu skated his short program to
Alexander Scriabin's
Étude in D-sharp minor and the free skate to a medley of
Romeo + Juliet by
Craig Armstrong. The choreographies were created by Nanami Abe in collaboration with
Natalia Bestemianova and
Igor Bobrin from Russia. Hanyu opened the season at the
Nebelhorn Trophy, where he won his first gold medal at an international senior competition. During the event, he shared his career goals with the media: "My goals for the future are to land all quad jumps in competition. I would also like to learn the quad Axel. Another goal is to win the next two Olympics, or at least win medals." For the
2011–12 Grand Prix series, he was assigned to the
Cup of China, where he placed fourth, and the
Rostelecom Cup, which he won with one of the closest margins of 0.03 points ahead of
Javier Fernández from Spain. The results qualified him for his first senior
Grand Prix Final, where he finished fourth. Hanyu then won the bronze medal at the
Japan Championships, earning a spot on the Japanese team for the
2012 World Championships. At his senior Worlds debut, he competed on a sprained ankle, placing seventh in the short program, but with a strong free skate he moved up to third place overall, winning the bronze medal with a new personal best score of 251.06 points. He became the youngest Japanese world medalist, finishing behind then two-time world champion
Patrick Chan (gold) and Daisuke Takahashi (silver). After the competition, both skaters acknowledged Hanyu as a potential strong rival in the future. Upon the conclusion of the 2011–12 season, Hanyu changed coaches, training with
Brian Orser and
Tracy Wilson at the
Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club (Toronto CSCC) in Canada, who had coached Korean single skater
Yuna Kim to Olympic gold in
2010 among others. Hanyu's main motivation for the change were the consistent quadruple jumps performed by Orser's student Javier Fernández. According to Hidehito Ito, figure skating director of the
Japan Skating Federation, the change was also necessary to "challenge" Hanyu and "raise the level [of his skating] more". The first months, Hanyu was making frequent trips to Toronto, but continued to attend high school in Sendai. After moving to Canada, he increased his on-ice training to 3–4 hours a day, up from 1–2 hours, which had been due to limited ice time in Sendai, schooling, and asthma.
2012–13 season: First national senior title In the first season at his new skating club, Hanyu teamed up with two new choreographers. His short program was created by the
2008 World champion,
Jeffrey Buttle, to "
Parisienne Walkways" by
Gary Moore, and the free skate was choreographed by Canadian
David Wilson to a medley of
Riccardo Cocciante's musical
Notre-Dame de Paris. The coaching change resulted in immediate success; At the
2012 Finlandia Trophy, Hanyu landed his first quadruple
Salchow in international competition and won the event. In the Grand Prix series, he scored his first two
world records in the short program with 95.07 points at the
2012 Skate America, where he finished second behind Takahiko Kozuka, and 95.32 points at the
NHK Trophy, which he won ahead of Daisuke Takahashi. The placements qualified him for the
Grand Prix Final, where he finished second behind Takahashi and beat Patrick Chan for the first time in competition. At the
Japan Championships, Hanyu won his first national senior title, defeating the reigning and five-time national champion, Daisuke Takahashi, scoring an unofficial record of 285.23 points in the combined total. However, his win was not well received among spectators and officials, being booed on the podium, but Orser encouraged his student, saying: "They will come around. Just give it some time and they will come your way." After the
2013 Four Continents Championships, where he had finished second behind Canadian
Kevin Reynolds, Hanyu suffered a knee injury and resumed training two weeks prior to the
World Championships. An additional ankle sprain in practice forced him to compete on painkillers. Placing ninth after the short program, he fought back with a strong free skate, finishing fourth overall behind Patrick Chan (gold),
Denis Ten (silver), and Javier Fernández (bronze), and earning a third spot for Japanese men at the
2014 Winter Olympics.
2013–14 season: First Olympic and world title at the
2014 Winter Olympics For his first Olympic season, Hanyu returned to his short program "Parisienne Walkways" and selected
Nino Rota's music from
Romeo and Juliet for the free skate, choreographed by David Wilson. He launched the season with a win at the
2013 Finlandia Trophy and won silver in both of his Grand Prix events, the
2013 Skate Canada and
Trophée Éric Bompard, qualifying him for the
2013–14 Grand Prix Final. At the Final, he set a new world record in the short program with 99.84 points and placed first overall ahead of Patrick Chan (silver) and Nobunari Oda (bronze), winning his first major international senior title. At the
Japan Championships, Hanyu went on to win a second national title and was selected to represent the Japanese team at the
2014 Winter Olympics and
World Championships. At the Winter Olympics in
Sochi, he participated in the men's short program of the
figure skating team event, earning ten points for
Team Japan. In the individual event, he broke his world record, becoming the first skater to score above 100 points in the short program with a score of 101.45. Despite two falls in the free skate, he managed to win the event with a new
Olympic record of 280.09 points in the combined total, finishing ahead of Patrick Chan (silver) and Denis Ten (bronze). With his win, Hanyu became the youngest gold medalist since American
Dick Button in
1948. It was the first Olympic title for an Asian skater in the men's singles event and the second for Japan in figure skating, following
Shizuka Arakawa's win in the
women's event in 2006 in
Turin. Hanyu concluded the season with a victory at the World Championships in
Saitama, Japan, defeating compatriot Tatsuki Machida with 0.33 points and becoming the first skater to win the Olympics, Worlds, and the Grand Prix Final in the same season after Russian
Alexei Yagudin in 2002–01.
Second Olympic cycle (2014–2018) 2014–15 season: Second Grand Prix Final win After the Sochi Olympics, Hanyu's coaching team was joined by jump expert
Ghislain Briand who had coached Canadian skater
Elvis Stojko to Olympic silver and two world titles in the 1990s. After Stojko's retirement, Briand was convinced that he would "never have the opportunity to work with another athlete with that much talent, dedication, and passion." However, with Hanyu, Briand had eventually found a student who was open towards his unconventional training methods and analysis of
figure skating jumps, stating: "Yuzu is probably the first athlete who really recognizes what I do with him. He is the perfect model and he masters his art like no one else. It sometimes makes the job easier, but his higher level also comes with many challenges." In the
2014–15 season, Hanyu skated his short program to
Frédéric Chopin's
Ballade No. 1 in G minor and selected a medley from
Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical
The Phantom of the Opera for the free skate. The programs were choreographed by Jeffrey Buttle and
Shae-Lynn Bourne, respectively, who created all short and free skate programs for Hanyu from 2014 onward. For Hanyu, the 2014–15 season was shaped by a series of injuries, starting with an accident in practice, where he hurt his back and was forced to withdraw from the
2014 Finlandia Trophy. In his first Grand Prix event at the
Cup of China, he collided with Chinese skater
Yan Han during the free skate warm-up, suffering bruises on his head and chin along with injuring his midriff, left thigh, and right leg. Despite his severe condition, he decided to compete in the free skate and managed to finish second overall behind
Maxim Kovtun from Russia. At the
NHK Trophy, he came in fourth, securing his place at the
Grand Prix Final by one of the slimmest margins of 0.15 points. At the Final, he successfully defended his title with 34.26 points ahead of silver medalist Javier Fernández. In December, Hanyu competed at the
2014–15 Japan Championships, placing first in both segments and winning his third consecutive national title. However, he was forced to withdraw from the exhibition gala due to
abdominal pain. He was diagnosed with a tubal residual disease and had to undergo surgery on his bladder, being hospitalized for two weeks and resting for another month. His series of injuries continued with a sprain of his right ankle that forced him to stay in Japan until the
2015 World Championships, where he finished second behind Fernández by less than three points. In April, Hanyu competed for the first time at the
ISU World Team Trophy, placing first in both competition segments and earning 24 points to help Team Japan win the bronze medal behind Team USA (gold) and Team Russia (silver).
2015–16 season: Back-to-back world records at the
2015–16 Grand Prix Final For the
2015–16 season, Hanyu returned to his short program Ballade No. 1 and selected the soundtrack of the films
Onmyōji and
Onmyōji II by
Shigeru Umebayashi for the free skate, portraying the Japanese philosopher and astronomer
Abe no Seimei. He started the season by winning gold at the
2015 Autumn Classic, finishing 36 points ahead of silver medalist
Nam Nguyen. However, in his first Grand Prix event at
Skate Canada, he placed sixth in the short program after invalidating two jumping passes, finishing second overall behind Patrick Chan. Hanyu had been struggling with his short program layout throughout the previous season that included a quad toe loop and a triple
Lutz-triple toe loop combination in the second half. While his coach Brian Orser suggested a more "conservative" change, Hanyu decided to add another quad, stating: "I thought by the time of the Pyeongchang Olympics, you cannot win without a short program that includes two quads with difficult entries and exits—plus excellent footwork, spins, and presentation. As the reigning Olympic champion, I want to be absolutely dominant." The offensive strategy earned him a series of back-to-back world records within two weeks: At the
2015 NHK Trophy, he set new highest scores of 106.33 in the short program, 216.07 in the free skate, and 322.40 in the combined total, becoming the first skater to score above 200 and 300 points in the two segments, respectively. It was the first free skate performance of Hanyu's competitive career with all-positive grades of execution, featuring three quadruple jumps and two triple Axels. At the
2015–16 Grand Prix Final in Barcelona, he broke his own records in all three segments with 110.95 points in the short program, 219.48 in the free skate, and 330.43 overall, becoming the first man to win the Grand Prix Final for three consecutive seasons. He finished 37.48 points ahead of Javier Fernández, breaking the record of the largest victory margin at the Grand Prix Final, which was held by
Evgeni Plushenko with 35.10 points in 2004. At the
Japan Championships, Hanyu won his fourth consecutive national title after placing first in both segments. However, a lingering pain in his left foot worsened throughout the season, threatening his participation at the
2016 World Championships in Boston. At the event, he managed to skate another clean short program of 110.56 points, but faltered in the free skate, placing second overall behind Fernández. It was subsequently announced that Hanyu had been diagnosed with a
Lisfranc injury in his left foot, forcing him off ice for two months.
2016–17 season: Second world title in Helsinki In the
2016–17 season, Hanyu skated to the song "Let's Go Crazy" by
Prince in the short program and a medley of "Asian Dream Song" and "View of Silence" by
Joe Hisaishi, titled
Hope and Legacy, in the free skate. He opened the season with a win at the
2016 Autumn Classic, becoming the first skater to successfully land a quadruple
loop jump in competition. After a rough performance at
Skate Canada with a second-place finish behind Patrick Chan, Hanyu and Orser had a debate on the approach for the next competitions. While Orser described the performances as a "skeleton of the [planned] choreography" and pleaded to work on the "total package", Hanyu was convinced that landing his jumps was the key to a well-rounded program. The strategy paid off with a win at the
NHK Trophy, surpassing the 300 mark with a total score of 301.47. At the
2016–17 Grand Prix Final in Marseille, Hanyu placed first the short program with a season's best score of 106.53. In the free skate, he made mistakes on three jumping passes, placing third in the segment, but his advantage from the short program was enough to stay in first overall, becoming the first male single skater to win four consecutive Grand Prix Finals. After contracting the flu, Hanyu was forced to withdraw from the
Japan Championships, missing the event for the first time. At the
2017 Four Continents Championships, he placed third in the short program after turning his quad Salchow into a double, a jump that had caused him issues throughout the season. He fought back with a strong free skate, placing first in the segment and scoring a new season's best of 303.71 points in the combined total. However, he finished second behind American
Nathan Chen by about four points, taking the silver medal for a third time. At the
World Championships, Hanyu moved up from fifth place after the short program to first with a clean free skate performance that featured four quadruple jumps and two triple Axels. He scored a new world record of 223.20 points in the segment and won his second world title, finishing ahead of his compatriot
Shoma Uno (silver) and
Jin Boyang from China (bronze). The event marked the first time that all three medalists scored above 300 points. In July 2022, Hanyu named the free skate performance of
Hope and Legacy as the one that he thought would represent him best and was the most perfectly executed of his competitive career. At the
2017 World Team Trophy, the final competition of the season, he came in seventh place after an error-filled short program, but placed first in the free skating, becoming the first skater to complete three quadruple jumps in the second half of a skating program. He contributed 18 points to the team score and won gold with Team Japan.
2017–18 season: Second Olympic title (left) and
Javier Fernández (right) at the
2018 Winter Olympics podium For the
Olympic season, Hanyu returned to his short program Ballade No. 1 and free skate
Seimei from the 2015–16 season. At the
2017 CS Autumn Classic, he scored a new world record of 112.72 points in the short program; at the
Rostelecom Cup, he landed his first successful quadruple Lutz jump in international competition. However, due to mistakes, he finished second at both events behind Javier Fernández and Nathan Chen, respectively. In November, Hanyu was scheduled to compete at the
NHK Trophy, but injured a
lateral ligament in his right ankle after a fall on a quad Lutz in practice and was forced to withdraw from all remaining competitions of the year. At the
2018 Winter Olympics in
Pyeongchang, he placed first in the short program with a new Olympic record of 111.68 points. In the free skating, he missed a jump combination and stumbled on his final triple Lutz, placing second in the segment, but it was enough to stay in first overall ahead of Shoma Uno (silver) and Javier Fernández (bronze), scoring another Olympic record of 317.85 points in the combined total. With his win, Hanyu became the first male single skater in 66 years to successfully defend his Olympic title since Dick Button in
1952. Upon the conclusion of the Olympics, Hanyu announced the quadruple Axel as his next career goal, a jump that hadn't been landed in competition until then. In order to allow his injured ankle to recover, he decided to withdraw from the
World Championships, but remained first in the
world standings for a fifth consecutive time at the end of the 2017–18 season.
Third Olympic cycle (2018–2022) 2018–19 season: Records in new judging system For the
2018–19 season, Hanyu selected his programs with the thought to pay tribute to the skating idols of his childhood. His short program to "" by
Raúl Di Blasio was dedicated to American skater Johnny Weir who had used the piece for his free skate in the 2004–05 season. Hanyu's new free skate program
Origin, a medley of the pieces "Art on Ice" and "Magic Stradivarius" by
Edvin Marton, was a homage to Russian Evgeni Plushenko who had skated to the music in his free skate
Tribute to Nijinsky in 2003–04. Regarding his program choices, Hanyu remarked: "I am satisfied that as a result [of my Olympic success] I have been released from the pressure that I have to produce results. I think and feel that I can skate for myself from now on. I want to go back to my skating origins." "" at the
2018 Helsinki GP Hanyu opened the season with a win at the
2018 Autumn Classic, but expressed dissatisfaction with his performances, pledging to improve in the next competitions. At the
Grand Prix of Helsinki, he set
highest scores in all segments under the new +5/-5 GOE
judging system, earning 106.69 points in the short program, 190.43 in the free skate, and 297.12 points in the combined total. He also became the first skater to land a quad toe loop-triple Axel
jump sequence in competition, winning the event by about 40 points over
Michal Březina. At the
Rostelecom Cup in Moscow, Hanyu upped the short program record to 110.53 points, but on the following day, he re-injured his right ankle in practice after falling on a quad loop. Yet he opted to compete, aided by painkillers, and managed to place first in all segments, winning gold at both of his Grand Prix assignments for the first time. After the competition, Hanyu admitted: "I thought about withdrawing because of the injury, but it is my choice. I really wanted to skate this program in Russia." Due to the injured ligaments and tendons in his right foot, he was forced to withdraw from the
Grand Prix Final and
Japan Championships, taking about three weeks of rest and another month of rehabilitation. At the
2019 World Championships in Saitama, Hanyu placed third in the short program after turning his opening quad Salchow into a double, but came back with a strong free skate, becoming the first skater to surpass the 200 and 300 marks in the new judging system with 206.10 points in the free skate and 300.97 in total. However, he finished second behind Nathan Chen who bested both scores later in the event. Similar to his preparations for the Olympics, Hanyu had relied on painkillers before and during the competition to make jumping possible. Due to the injury, he was forced to withdraw from the season's final event, the
World Team Trophy.
2019–20 season: Achieving Super Slam podium, completing the
Super Slam In
2019–20, Hanyu returned to the short program "" and free skate
Origin, and launched the new season with a solid win at the
2019 Autumn Classic. Brian Orser praised his student, noting that he has "never seen him at this time of the year to be so focused." In the Grand Prix series, Hanyu won his first gold medal at
Skate Canada, scoring new personal bests of 212.99 in the free skate and 322.59 in the combined total. He placed first with a new largest victory margin of 59.82 points ahead of Nam Nguyen, improving his own record of 55.97 points from 2015. Hanyu expressed his satisfaction with the performance, feeling reaffirmed about the image of skating he was aiming for, and added: "For the first in a long time, I genuinely felt being able to win against myself." At the
NHK Trophy, he captured another gold with a total score above 300 and more than 55 points ahead of silver medalist
Kevin Aymoz. At the
Grand Prix Final, Hanyu went into the short program without company due to a delayed arrival of his coach Ghislain Briand. In his performance, he missed a mandatory jump combination, placing second in the segment and trailing Nathan Chen by about 13 points. In the free skate, Hanyu landed five quadruple jumps in one program for the first time in his career, including his first attempt on a quad Lutz since 2017, but missed a planned triple Axel-triple Axel sequence, finishing second overall behind Chen by more than 43 points. Competing at his first
Japanese championships since the 2016–17 season, Hanyu placed first in the short program, 5.01 points ahead of
Shoma Uno. Several jump errors in the free skate saw him place third in that segment, behind Uno and
Yuma Kagiyama, and win the silver medal overall. It was Hanyu's first loss to Uno. Heading into the
Four Continents Championships in
Seoul, Hanyu opted to return to his Ballade No. 1 (Chopin) program and his "Seimei" program from prior seasons. Referencing the
2018 Winter Olympics which were held in Pyeongchang, Hanyu noted that while he wanted to win a gold medal once again in South Korea, he wanted to showcase and focus on his own style of figure skating even more. In the short program, Hanyu broke his previous world record with 111.82 points. Hanyu called it "the most perfect performance I've ever done." Despite errors on two of his quad attempts in the free skate, he won that segment as well, taking the gold medal overall with 299.42 points. Hanyu's victory on February 9, made him the first and only male singles skater to win all of the major ISU championship events at the junior and senior levels, a feat known as the
Super Slam, previously only achieved by five other competitors in the other three skating disciplines. He was assigned to compete at the
World Championships in
Montreal, but these were canceled as a result of the
coronavirus pandemic. At the
ISU Skating Awards in 2020, Hanyu was nominated for Best Costume and Most Valuable Skater for the 2019–2020 season, and proceeded to win the latter.
2020–21 season: Seventh world medal In 2021, due to travel restrictions related to the
coronavirus pandemic, Hanyu started to train alone in Sendai with some remote consultation from his coaches. Despite the difficulties of training alone, Hanyu found that it had been a good opportunity to learn how to control and analyze himself, which led him not return to Canada until he turned professional and made Ice Rink Sendai his training base again. Hanyu also opted to receive remote choreography for his programs ever since and has contributed significantly to the choreography of his programs in the 2020–21 season. On August 28, he announced that he would skip the
Grand Prix series, citing the risk of
COVID-19 for himself, the competition staff, and for his fans who would gather to support him. Despite feeling "conflicted" over whether he should have competed or not as COVID-19 continued and practicing without his coaching team, Hanyu decided to compete in
Japanese championships, which doubled as the final qualifier for the upcoming World Championships in
Stockholm. He placed first in the short program (103.53 points) and the free skate (215.83 points) with all positive grades of execution on jumping passes and won his fifth national figure skating title with a total score of 319.36 points. The
2021 World Championships were to be the first direct competition between Hanyu and
Nathan Chen since the
2019–20 Grand Prix Final. Hanyu placed first in the short program with a solid performance, 6.02 points ahead of compatriot
Yuma Kagiyama. In the free skate, Hanyu opened his program with two quadruple jumps and a triple Axel but received negative grades of execution for all three of them. Scoring 182.20 points, he placed fourth in the free skate and third overall, behind Chen and Kagiyama. It was the first competition Hanyu had placed below second since 2014; however, he became the first male single skater besides German
Jan Hoffmann to win seven World medals in the post-war era since 1946. On the following day, Hanyu confirmed the report of his asthma attack by overseas media. He stated that he felt a little painful after finishing the free skate, and explained: "There were few small troubles that kept stacking up ... However, if asked whether that was what led to the huge mistake (in the free skate), I don't think it was as big of a miss as it was in terms of the miss in the score." Hanyu's placement combined with Kagiyama's qualified three berths for Japanese men at the
2022 Winter Olympics. Hanyu competed as part of Team Japan for the
2021 World Team Trophy. He placed second in both the short program and the free skate, only behind Nathan Chen. He achieved a personal season's best score in both the short program and the free skate with 107.12 and 193.76 points respectively and earned a total of 22 points to help his team take home the bronze medal.
2021–22 season: Sixth national title and third Olympics Hanyu confirmed his plans to compete in the
2021–22 Olympic season, and was scheduled to compete at the
2021 NHK Trophy and
2021 Rostelecom Cup in November for the
2021–22 Grand Prix series. On November 4, 2021, the Japan Skating Federation announced Hanyu's withdrawal from the NHK Trophy due to an injury in his right ankle ligament during a fall in practice. The JSF subsequently announced his withdrawal from the Rostelecom Cup prior to the event, but said that he would remain in consideration for the Olympic team. Hanyu made his season debut at the
2021–22 Japan Figure Skating Championships, placing first in both the short program and free skate, winning his sixth
Japanese National title, tying
Takeshi Honda's record of most national titles in the last 50 years. He also attempted a
quadruple Axel for the first time during the free skate, although it was downgraded to a triple Axel with a two-footed landing. Hanyu was assigned to represent Japan at the
2022 Winter Olympics and the
2022 World Championships. At the 2022 Winter Olympics, Hanyu missed his opening quadruple Salchow jump in the short program due to a hole in the ice and placed eighth with 95.15 points, qualifying him for the free skate. The score was his lowest in the segment since the 2019 World Championships. In the free skate, he fell twice in his first two opening jumps, a quadruple Axel and a quad Salchow. His quad Axel attempt is the first that was not downgraded to triple Axel. Other than these two mistakes, he delivered a clean skate, placing third in the free skate and fourth place overall with a total score of 283.21 points, behind fellow Japanese compatriot and bronze medalist Shoma Uno. Following his free skate, Hanyu confirmed in a press conference that he had re-injured his right ankle in practice the day before the free skate, but since it was the Olympics and not a normal competition, he chose to compete on painkillers instead of withdrawing. On March 1, 2022, the Japan Skating Federation announced Hanyu's withdrawal from the 2022 World Championships due to the unhealed injury. ==Professional skating career==