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It's Not Even February and Already There's a Big Controversy in American Women's Figure Skating
Ashley Wagner becomes emotional at mid-ice after her performance during the skating spectacular after the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Boston, Sunday, Jan. 12, 2014. Women's third finisher Mirai Nagasu, the only one of the top four finishers with Olympic experience, was bumped in favor of Wagner when U.S. Figure Skating announced the selections earlier Sunday. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

It's Not Even February and Already There's a Big Controversy in American Women's Figure Skating

"I'm tough as nails."

BOSTON (TheBlaze/AP) — The 2014 Olympic games in Sochi, Russia, are still a few weeks away but the drama has already begun.

Despite finishing fourth in a major competition over the weekend, figure skater Ashley Wagner snagged a spot on the U.S. team.

Wagner finished a distant fourth at the U.S. Championships on Saturday night, calling the performance a "tearful little wimp out on the ice," but this isn't the only criteria U.S. Figure Skating takes into account. As a result, Wagner knocked out third-place finisher, Mirai Nagasu, in the selection for the Olympic team Sunday.

Ashley Wagner Ashley Wagner falls as she competes during the women's free skate at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Boston, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2014. (AP/Elise Amendola)

"If you look at Ashley Wagner's record and performance, she's got the top credentials of any of our female athletes," said the organization's president, Patricia St. Peter.

Nagasu has some pretty impressive credentials herself — she was fourth at the 2010 Games as a 16-year-old. But U.S. Figure Skating's selection guidelines consider only the past year, and Nagasu had mostly struggled until a resurgent performance at nationals.

Fifteen-year-old Polina Edmunds, who was second, was selected even though she has never competed in an international senior event.

The organization does take into account the technical difficulty of skaters' programs, and that might have been what clinched the preternaturally poised Edmunds' spot on the team.

"Even though it is my senior debut, I think I am senior-level, so it doesn't really matter if it's a debut or not," she said.

The one no-brainer was Gracie Gold, who won her first U.S. title Saturday in a runaway.

Polina Edmunds, Gracie Gold, Mirai Nagasu, Ashley Wagner From left, Polina Edmunds, Gracie Gold, Mirai Nagasu and Ashley Wagner pose with their medals after finishing as the top four women at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Boston, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2014. (AP/Elise Amendola)

Wagner finished fifth at the world championships and won the bronze medal at the Grand Prix Final, the next most important events in the selection criteria after this year's nationals.

"I'm happy that my federation was able to see beyond one bad skate," she said through tears once the announcement became official.

Watch footage of the performance Wagner referred to as a "bad skate":

But, oh, was it a bad one. Wagner fell twice and failed to cleanly land two other triple jumps in Saturday's long program. Afterward, she mouthed, "I'm sorry" to her mother.

"I was overwhelmed from the big lights and the big show," she said.

Ashley Wagner Ashley Wagner becomes emotional at mid-ice after her performance during the skating spectacular after the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Boston, Sunday, Jan. 12, 2014. Women's third finisher Mirai Nagasu, the only one of the top four finishers with Olympic experience, was bumped in favor of Wagner when U.S. Figure Skating announced the selections earlier Sunday. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Wagner insists that won't happen again in Sochi, with the pressure off by making the Olympic team.

"I'm not that skater that everyone saw last night," Wagner said. "I'm a fierce competitor. I'm tough as nails."

There was no way she was going to sleep Saturday night. The 22-year-old Wagner video-chatted with some old friends, had a big glass of wine with her mother and brother and watched the movie "The Seven Year Itch."

And she accepted that she might narrowly miss making the Olympic team for the second straight games, prepared to train through 2018.

"I danced with danger last night," she said. "I never want to feel that uncomfortable again."

Ashley Wagner, Rafael Arutunian Ashley Wagne reacts after competing in the women's free skate with her coach Rafael Arutunian at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships Saturday, Jan. 11, 2014 in Boston. (AP/Steven Senne)

Wagner was watching a friend practice Sunday morning when she got the text message that she was on the team.

"It's been a really long four years," she said later, her voice cracking.

Edmunds knew she'd have more Olympic opportunities in her future, but Sochi was special. Her mother, who helps coach her, is from Russia.

Edmunds hasn't been there since she was 2, but she often says hi over Skype to all her relatives in the city of Tver, and when she competed at the Junior Grand Prix in Belarus, her uncle took an 18-hour train trip to see her perform. Edmunds can understand Russian and speaks it some.

The Olympics will also be a homecoming for U.S. pairs champion Simon Shnapir, who was born in Russia. He gleefully said "We're going to Sochi" in Russian when it was announced that he and partner Marissa Castelli were on the team. They will be joined by runners-up Felicia Zhang and Nathan Bartholomay.

The U.S. has three spots in ice dancing, and top-three finishers Meryl Davis and Charlie White, Madison Chock and Evan Bates, and Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani were picked. The men's team will be announced Sunday night after the free skate.

Davis and White, the reigning world champs, are the Americans' best — and perhaps only — hope for a figure skating gold medal. They won silver in Vancouver, and after four years spent establishing themselves as tops in the world, their chance to move up one step on the podium is finally here.

"Obviously we're going into these games with very high expectations," White said. "We've had a lot of great momentum over the last four years since the 2010 Games. We feel like we've put ourselves in a really great position to come home with a gold medal."

Check out the full list of figure skaters from the U.S. attending the 2014 Olympic games.

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