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Men's silver medallist Patrick Chan performs in the figure skating closing gala at the 2014 Sochi Winter OlympicsPaul Chiasson/The Canadian Press

Patrick Chan was back with Canada's figure skating team for the first time in more than year Wednesday. The 24-year-old from Toronto looks like he never left.

He's lost weight, and is back doing the quadruple jumps that helped him win three world titles.

But only a few weeks ago, there were days when Chan wondered if he'd made a massive mistake returning to competition. He wasn't confident he still had what it takes.

"There was a sense of worry, like 'Oh my god, am I ever going to be able to do it again? Maybe I'm too old for this, or maybe my body can't do it anymore,"' Chan said.

Chan stepped away from the competitive ice after his silver medal at the 2014 Sochi Olympics. He skated professionally, performing in more than 40 shows around the world last season. Then, feeling he had unfinished business, he resumed training in earnest in June for this coming competitive season.

There were some rough days in the beginning. His coach Kathy Johnson took a few phone calls from Chan looking for reassurance.

"I said to him, 'There's a reason you decided to come back,"' said Johnson. "I said 'If I really felt that you were not able to come back and do this at your best, I would tell you.' "His level of fitness and the fact that he skated all year, and his commitment to it, his big jumps are still there, his quality of movement is still there, his skating skills are amazing."

Skating his short program to Michael Buble's version of the toe-tapping tune "Mack the Knife" on Wednesday, Chan looked like he was back at his competitive best. He's lost about eight pounds, and is about three pounds lighter than what he weighed in Sochi.

"I wanted to be 150, which was back to my weight in 2011, when I won my first world championships," Chan said. "I noticed that my quads and my jumps at that time were much lighter, and my margin for error, in my air position and stuff, was much larger.

"I've noticed the weight makes a huge difference in the quality of the jumps, in the lift, and how light and how much flow I have out of my jumps."

Chan faces Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu – who defeated the Canadian for gold in Sochi – right off the bat, at Skate Canada International next month in Lethbridge, Alta.

Nam Nguyen, the 17-year-old who won last season's Canadian title in Chan's absence, said he's happy to have the veteran skater back.

"I look up to him as my idol, and his skating is so great, and I always watch him and learn from him," said Nguyen, the 2014 world junior champion. "Today on our practice session, it was really cool to be on the same ice as him and watch him skate just so fast by you, it was such an amazing experience today."

On the women's side, two-time Canadian champion Kaetlyn Osmond is back after missing all of last season with a broken leg.

The 19-year-old from Marystown, N.L., was practising last September when she swerved to avoid another skater. She caught an edge and fell, fracturing the fibula in her leg.

"It's probably the first time I've ever been injury-free in my life, so it feels absolutely fantastic, to be able to come back and not have any pressure put on me because of it, and it's just a year where I can have fun with it, and just enjoy being back in competition," Osmond said.

She had a rough comeback, at first refusing to practise when other skaters were on the ice, and then avoiding the portion of her program on which she fell.

"It was really frustrating, that injury was something I never thought I'd have to deal with in my life," she said. "So last year was a huge roller-coaster ride and I honestly didn't think I'd be able to come back, but now that I am it's more exciting than ever."

Osmond will also compete at Skate Canada, Oct. 29-Nov. 1.

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