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Post by Admin on Feb 25, 2015 20:58:36 GMT
Gracie Gold shows off her medal inside the 2015 Gold Meets Golden event held at Equinox Sports Club’s West LA Flagship Lounge in Los Angeles on Saturday afternoon (February 21). The 19-year-old figure skater was joined by current national ladie’s champion Ashley Wagner, speed skater Eddy Alvarez, actor Trevor Donovan and even ran into actress Nicole Kidman. Gold Meets Golden is a star-studded event bringing together Hollywood entertainers and medal-winning Olympians to support current US Olympic teams and athletes.
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Post by Admin on Mar 15, 2015 21:01:04 GMT
It was only a year ago that Adelina Sotnikova and Yuliya Lipnitskaya were bathing in the glow of Olympic triumph at Sochi, having won figure-skating gold for their country at the ages of just 17 and 15, respectively. Yet already Sotnikova and Lipnitskaya have been pushed from the limelight, defeated at the Russian championships by a fresh wave of young stars who turned the distribution of medals at the first major international tournament in 2015 – the European Figure Skating Championships – into an exclusively Russian affair. Two of the winners are in their teens: Anna Pogorilaya and Yelena Radionova are both 16. The European champion, Yelizaveta Tuktamysheva, is older, but she won her first medal at the adult Russian Championships when she was only 12. According to coaches, young skaters differ from adults: They are more flexible, less inhibited by fear and do not carry the weight of past victories on their shoulders, while youthful fervor adds to their desire to set records. However, for some reason this phenomenon does not affect the other leaders in women's figure skating, the U.S. and Japan, as much as Russia. The difference could lie in parental ambitions. "Our parents often have the goal of winning medals when they bring their children in for figure skating," said Alexei Urmanov, a 1994 Lillehammer Olympic champion and now a coach. Adelina Sotnikova was brought to Moscow’s Yuzhny skating rink by her mother when she was four. Within three years, Sotnikova was training at CSKA (Central Sport Club of the Army), under the tutelage of renowned coach Stanislav Zhuk. Having won gold in Sochi, Sotnikova almost decided to end her skating career to go to study at the Theater Institute. But she has a sister in need of expensive medical treatment, and it is mainly Sotnikova who will have to earn money for this treatment. Liza Tuktamysheva first went to the skating rink in the Udmurt town of Glazov at the age of five. For five years, she was taken 1,600 km to St. Petersburg to work with coach Alexei Mishin, who trained Olympic champion Evgeni Plushenko. As a result, her parents eventually decided to move to the northern capital. Judging by the members of the Russian national figure-skating team, it is mostly three schools that take skaters to the international level – CSKA Moscow, Sambo 70, and the Dynamo sports school in St. Petersburg. Everything is concentrated in these two cities: most of the rinks designed for figure skating, qualified coaches, precise selection systems and the structure of competitions, the most gifted children and the most enthusiastic parents keen on making their child into a skater. This combination of conditions has allowed Russia to set up an effectively full-scale production line of young skaters with the highest level of technical training. This could push the sport along the path already trodden, for example, by women's gymnastics, where a 20-year-old female athlete is a veteran. Yelena Buyanova, who performed under the surname Vodorezova, made her entry onto the Olympic ice at Innsbruck in1976 when she was just 12. Adelina Sotnikova is Buyanova's student. "Every age has its charms," said Buyanova. "Sotnikova and Tuktamysheva really raised [the profile of] figure skating, when they were just at the beginning of their careers. They showed that they could perform complex stunts, and Russian coaches began to introduce these stunts into children's skating." For example, the success of Tuktamysheva at the European Championships is down to the fact that she mastered difficult jumps when she was only 13. The other winners of the European Championship are on the same path. "I'll note that the higher the base mastered in childhood, the more prepared the athlete is for making further improvements, but those who remain at that level after they grow up are few," said Buyanova.
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Post by Admin on Apr 15, 2015 20:19:55 GMT
Seventy young skaters in Chisasibi, Que., some as young as four, will perform alongside Olympic medallist Joannie Rochette tonight and tomorrow at the community's annual ice show. It's the first visit to Northern Quebec for Rochette, who won a bronze medal in women's figure skating for Canada at the 2010 Winter Olympics. "I love to do shows and share my passion for skating and I was always curious to go up North," said Rochette. "It will be my first time in the Cree Region and I am really interested to learn more about how they live and their customs and try different food also. That's going to be very exciting." Rochette has learned a few words in Cree such as 'wachiyeh,' which means 'hello,' and said she is looking forward to going dog sledding while in the community. Rhonda Spencer, Chisasibi's youth development co-ordinator, started the figure skating club in 1997. Since then she has invited big names in figure skating including 1988 Olympic silver medallist Elizabeth Manley to perform alongside the local children. "It's such a positive experience," she said. "Our children are stars for two days. All the hard work they have put in all year have come to a show and I believe the community can see that and that they are very proud of our people." Spencer said this year's show is particularly extravagant, with rented costumes, an outside company coming in to do lighting and plenty of decorations. She said she hopes Rochette will also speak to Chisasibi students while she's in town. Having grown up on Île-Dupas, an island in the St. Lawrence River with a population of about 700, Rochette said she understands how important it is for children in isolated communities to be encouraged to follow their dreams. "Everything is possible," said Rochette. "I had this dream to go to the Olympics in figure skating, and I don't think anyone, even my parents, believed it could happen, when I was five or six years old. But we took it step by step and I really enjoyed every single step of the way."
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Post by Admin on Jun 2, 2015 20:01:22 GMT
Kazakhstan's stars will perform in front of the world of figure skating. Among them are Olympic champions Sochi Maxim Trankov and Tatyana Volosozhar from Russia, Joanie Rochette of Canada, Stephane Lambiel, Eladzh Balde, Marie Pierre Leroy Alexander Lubchenco and Jean-Denis Sansha, Olympic champions from China Pang Qing and Tong Jiang, World Championships medalist Jeremy Abbott, Maia and Alex Shibutani, Elena Radionova and Korean Soo Yong Park. The ice show will be called "Dennis and friends." "This year's show will be different from previous formats. In previous experiments we have. For example, the second show we focused on personalities. This year, the idea is to serve, in the stuffing. Will be involved foreign experts, is director of the Canadian Specialist "- said Denis Ten at a press conference in Almaty. The ice show of the bronze medallist at Sochi Denis Ten will be held in Almaty on 20 and 21 June at 18:00.
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Post by Admin on Jul 9, 2015 19:52:03 GMT
Olympic figure skater Sasha Cohen is engaged. The silver medal winner took to Instagram to share her happy news on Monday and tell the world of her joy. She is set to tie the knot with hedge fund manager Tom May. She was pictured on the social media site with her new fiancé and also showed off her gorgeous diamond ring in the photo. She captioned the shot: 'Engaged to the most incredible man… I've never been so happy.' According to People, the 30-year-old figure skater met her man at a Harvard Business School party last year. They enjoyed their first date together in October. Sasha, who starred in Blades of Glory and also voiced Bethany in the Bratz movie, attempted to compete in the 2010 Olympics but was unfortunately not selected for the team. It was Sasha's role as a correspondent for Inside Edition at The 2006 Academy Awards which led to her getting her film role in Blades of Glory. She interviewed Ben Stiller who then told her of a comedy he was working on based around figure skating.
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