
From the moment Alysa Liu stepped onto the ice at the Milano Cortina Arena in February 2026, the world watched a story unfold that felt scripted for the silver screen. At 20 years old, she glided through her short program with effortless grace, landing a triple Axel that drew gasps from the crowd, then unleashed a free skate to Donna Summerβs βMacArthur Parkβ that blended technical brilliance with pure, unfiltered joy. When the scores flashedβ226.79 total, a new personal bestβshe became the first American woman to win Olympic gold in women’s singles figure skating since Sarah Hughes in 2002, ending a 24-year drought. She also claimed team event gold earlier in the Games, making her a two-time Olympic champion in one Olympics. But this triumph wasn’t just about medals; it capped a journey that began in secrecy, soared to prodigy status, crashed into burnout, and rose again on her own terms.
Alysa was born on August 8, 2005, in Clovis, California, into a family unlike any other in elite sports. Her father, Arthur Liu, a Chinese immigrant and immigration lawyer who fled political persecution after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, chose to become a single father by design. At age 40, longing for children but without a partner, he turned to IVF, anonymous egg donors (Caucasian, to embrace a diverse gene pool), and gestational surrogates. Alysa arrived first, followed by sister Selina (using the same egg donor), and then triplets Julia, Joshua, and Justin. Arthur raised all five alone in Richmond, California, with help from his mother Shu, who moved from China, and later a close friend. He poured everythingβfinancially, emotionallyβinto his kids, especially Alysa once her talent emerged.
Arthur introduced Alysa to skating at age 5, spotting her natural flair during a family outing. By 7, she competed nationally; by 12, she landed the first triple Axel by an American woman in international competition at the 2018 Asian Open Trophy. Her jumps were explosive, her presence magnetic. Under coach Laura Lipetsky, she trained relentlessly in Oakland, her life revolving around the rink. Arthur structured everything around her dreamβextra jobs, no vacations, constant travelβfueling a prodigy narrative that captivated America.
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The breakthrough came in January 2019 at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit. At just 13 years and 5 months old, Alysa became the youngest women’s national champion ever, dethroning Bradie Tennell with a score of 217.51. She landed three triple Axelsβone in the short, two in the freeβbecoming the first U.S. woman to do so in one competition. The arena erupted; commentators called her the future of American skating, a counter to Russia’s young quad queens. She defended the title in 2020 at 14, becoming the youngest to win back-to-back senior titles, and attempted a quad Lutzβthe first woman worldwide to combine a quad and triple Axel in one program at Junior Grand Prix events.
Her junior success was staggering: 2018 U.S. junior champion, 2019-20 Junior Grand Prix Final silver, 2020 World Junior bronze. She pioneered technical featsβfirst American woman to land a quad in competition, first to attempt one at senior nationals. Yet the pressure mounted. Training consumed her; Arthur’s involvement was intense, dictating diet, music, costumes. Alysa later reflected on feeling like skating was something she “had to” do, not “wanted to.”

Beijing 2022 tested her limits. At 16, she finished sixth in women’s singlesβthe best U.S. resultβand helped the team to bronze (though left off the final roster). A month later, she earned World bronze in Montpellier, the first U.S. woman on the world podium since 2016. It seemed the pinnacle. Then, in April 2022, she posted a casual Instagram: “Heyyyyy so I’m here to announce that I am retiring from skating.” No drama, just truth. Burnout hit hardβPTSD so severe she avoided rinks entirely. She craved normalcy: high school friends, sleepovers, freedom from the scale and spotlight.
For two years, Alysa stepped away completely. She enrolled at UCLA in fall 2023, studying psychology, living a college lifeβdorms, classes, parties. Her siblings cheered the break; they finally had their big sister home more. Arthur felt the sadness but supported her. The ice called back quietly. In late 2023, she laced up againβnot for glory, but curiosity. She told coaches Phillip DiGuglielmo and Massimo Scali sheβd return only on her terms: choosing music, costumes, training schedule; Arthur stepping back from daily oversight. Boundaries were keyβno more “have to.”
In March 2024, an Instagram reel of jumps ended with: “this 2024-25 season, back on the ice.” The skating world buzzed. She dominated Challenger Series events, took silver at 2025 U.S. Championships, then stunned at Worlds in Bostonβgold, the first U.S. women’s world title since Kimmie Meissner in 2006. Her free skate radiated joy; she skated because she wanted to.
Milano Cortina 2026 cemented the fairy-tale arc. In the team event on February 8, her short program helped secure U.S. gold. In women’s singles, she placed third after the short (personal best 76.59), then delivered a flawless freeβtriple Axel, intricate spins, emotional depthβto claim individual gold. Fans wept; commentators hailed the comeback queen. She closed the exhibition gala with playful flair to PinkPantheress, blonde-brown striped hair (a yearly tradition adding stripes for growth) catching arena lights.
Her story inspires because it’s real. From anonymous beginningsβno biological mother in the traditional sense, a father who built a family through determinationβto prodigy pressures, retirement heartbreak, and self-directed revival. Alysa proves elite success can follow stepping away, prioritizing mental health, reclaiming control. At UCLA, she balances studies and skating, hinting at creative pursuits post-competitionβperhaps choreography, advocacy for athlete well-being.
As she prepares for Worlds in Prague, Alysa embodies resilience. Her journeyβfrom secret IVF origins to Olympic gloryβreminds us greatness often blooms from unconventional starts, breaks for healing, and choices made freely. In an era of burnout awareness, her gold isn’t just a medal; it’s proof that sometimes walking away leads straight back to the top, happier and stronger.















