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Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America
Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America

World champions Alysa Liu and Madison Chock and Evan Bates headline November's Skate America as figure skating's Grand Prix Series assignments for the Olympic season have been announced. The world's top skaters each compete twice over the six-event regular season in October and November, with the top six per discipline over the series qualifying for December's Grand Prix Final in Nagoya, Japan. Advertisement The Final will be the last gathering of the world's top skaters before the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics. Liu and Chock and Bates will be joined by at Skate America in Lake Placid, New York, by two-time U.S. Olympian Jason Brown. GRAND PRIX ASSIGNMENTS: Women | Men | Pairs | Ice Dance This season, Skate America is the fifth of six Grand Prix stops from Nov. 14-16. The Grand Prix season starts in France from Oct. 17-19, then moves to China, Canada and Japan before Skate America. After Skate America, the last regular season Grand Prix is in Finland. Two-time world champion Ilia Malinin is entered in the first and third Grand Prix events in France and Canada. Adeliia Petrosian ISU names figure skaters from Russia eligible for Olympic qualifying as neutral athletes Adelia Petrosian has been cleared to compete in Olympic figure skating qualifying and is a gold-medal contender.

Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America
Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America

NBC Sports

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • NBC Sports

Figure skating Grand Prix assignments: Alysa Liu, Chock/Bates headline Skate America

World champions Alysa Liu and Madison Chock and Evan Bates headline November's Skate America as figure skating's Grand Prix Series assignments for the Olympic season have been announced. The world's top skaters each compete twice over the six-event regular season in October and November, with the top six per discipline over the series qualifying for December's Grand Prix Final in Nagoya, Japan. The Final will be the last gathering of the world's top skaters before the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics. Liu and Chock and Bates will be joined by at Skate America in Lake Placid, New York, by two-time U.S. Olympian Jason Brown. This season, Skate America is the fifth of six Grand Prix stops from Nov. 14-16. The Grand Prix season starts in France from Oct. 17-19, then moves to China, Canada and Japan before Skate America. After Skate America, the last regular season Grand Prix is in Finland. Two-time world champion Ilia Malinin is entered in the first and third Grand Prix events in France and Canada. Nick Zaccardi,

Isabeau Levito back from injury at figure skating worlds, recalling a perfect moment
Isabeau Levito back from injury at figure skating worlds, recalling a perfect moment

NBC Sports

time25-03-2025

  • Sport
  • NBC Sports

Isabeau Levito back from injury at figure skating worlds, recalling a perfect moment

Isabeau Levito still draws a beaming smile when asked about the 2024 World Championships, even though more recent months have been some of the most difficult of her figure skating career. Levito, who between the ages of 13 and 15 won U.S. junior, world junior and U.S. senior titles, took silver at last March's senior worlds in Montreal, three weeks after her 17th birthday. She matched the best U.S. women's finish at worlds since 2006 (when Kimmie Meissner won). Levito stepped on the Bell Centre ice for that free skate 'overwhelmed and stressed.' When she finished her clutch four-minute program, she had an eye-popping look of astonishment. Nick Zaccardi, That all belied the confidence she developed in the prior two months, since falling three times in her 2024 U.S. Championships free skate (she ended up third in defense of her 2023 national title). 'I really locked into my training like a machine,' she said last week. 'I just drilled into it, and then by the time I got to worlds, everything was like breathing to me. My programs were just like tracing the back of my hand.' Levito placed the silver medal on a shoulder-level shelf on her New Jersey bedroom wall. 'You could just see it all the time,' she said. 'It was always looking at you.' This week's World Championships in Boston will mark the first time she'll skate injury-free in a top-level competition since last year's worlds. 'I'm not going into this worlds thinking I have to podium. I have to be like last year. I have to do better,' Levito said. 'I barely have been able to skate this season, barely been able to compete this season. So I'm just glad that I'm competing again and that I'm in shape again.' She began feeling right foot pain in practices leading up to last October's Skate America, the first event of the fall Grand Prix Series. She skated through it to place third, then underwent an MRI and learned it was a bone injury. A stress reaction. She withdrew from her second Grand Prix event in November. In all, Levito spent most of three months off the ice and some of it in a boot. She would take three weeks off, try to come back and have to stop again. The cycle repeated. She filled the time with pre-calculus, psychology, economics and chemistry, working on her senior year of online schoolwork. It was the longest she had ever been sidelined by injury, 'and the hardest to come back from,' she said. Levito withdrew one week before January's U.S. Championships. Then the week of nationals, she was able to do a single Lutz without pain. A U.S. Figure Skating committee put her on the three-woman team for worlds, pending she show readiness closer to the competition. So Levito flew to Milan — her mother's hometown and where her grandmother still lives — and competed in the 2026 Olympic test event from Feb. 19-20. Levito estimated she skated 'at 50%" there. She had done just one free skate run-through in practice before performing it in front of an audience and judges in Italy. Still, Levito got the job done with her runner-up finish, showing enough progress with her triple jumps to secure her spot in Boston. 'Especially my free program, I was very fatigued from the get-go,' she said. 'Some of my friends from Bergamo that were in the stands were like, 'Girl, you were fighting from start to finish. We saw you fighting.' 'If I didn't know myself so well, I would have been nervous, like, oh my god, am I going to land the triples in the second half? Because it's the free program, and I haven't run it many times. But knowing myself, I would never let that happen. Never let myself go down in competition like that because I'm tired.' Levito started feeling like herself again two weeks ago. Last Tuesday, she said her coaches would probably assess her readiness at 85%. 'She's looking OK. She's looking good right now,' Yulia Kuznetsova, her coach since age 4, said last Thursday. 'I don't want to make any predictions or any promises because Isabeau did miss three months of skating.' Levito's silver medal from 2024 is no longer on the shelf. She — and the medal — moved to a new room in her house. 'Sometimes I try to think of what I was thinking before that (2024 Worlds) free program,' she said. 'I have no idea. I just felt like I wasn't even thinking the whole program. But before I knew it, it was done, and I had done it so well, and it was just completely because of the training. 'It just felt so right, and it was just such a high moment in my life. It was so perfect.'

Petrokina wins a surprise European figure skating gold and Guignard and Fabbri lead ice dance
Petrokina wins a surprise European figure skating gold and Guignard and Fabbri lead ice dance

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Petrokina wins a surprise European figure skating gold and Guignard and Fabbri lead ice dance

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Niina Petrokina fell, got back up, and completed the skate of her life. A freak fall on a transition between jumps threatened to derail Petrokina's bid for the European figure skating title but she recovered with a program that otherwise bordered on flawless to win a surprise gold medal on Friday. It was a highlight for figure skating fans at an event which has largely been overshadowed by the deaths of skaters, coaches and their families in a mid-air collision between a passenger jet and military helicopter near Washington, D.C. It was a big moment, too, for the small country of Estonia, which had never won a major figure skating title before and now has a gold on home ice. Before Friday's free skate, the standout achievement of Petrokina's career was a bronze at Skate America over a year ago. She will head to the world championships in Boston in March as an unexpected medal contender. As she skated to the soundtrack of the movie 'Dune,' the cheers from Petrokina's home crowd grew louder with each successful jump. After completing the skate, Petrokina knelt on the ice before waving to the crowd. Then she had to wait for the last skater, short-program leader Anastasiia Gubanova, to finish. When Petrokina's victory was confirmed, she shook her head in disbelief. Petrokina said she was feeling 'really, really big happiness,' and paid tribute to the crowd. "Thank you everyone who come here and support me and all skaters. We did a big job today.' Asked when she knew she was on track to win, Petrokina said with a smile: 'After falling.' Georgian skater Gubanova, the 2023 European champion, took silver for the second year running on 198.61 and Belgium's Nina Pinzarrone the bronze on 191.44. Last year's champion Loena Hendrickx missed the event with injury. Earlier, Italian ice dancers Charlène Guignard and Marco Fabbri closed in on a third consecutive title. Guignard and Fabbri scored 84.23 points in their rhythm dance to music by artists including Stevie Wonder, moving nearly 1.5 points clear of France's Evgeniia Lopareva and Geoffrey Brissaud in second place. Britain's Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson were third on 81.57 after getting out of sync on their opening twizzle element. The ice dance and the men's competition both end on Saturday. The European championships began on Wednesday and have continued following the news that young skaters, their coaches and family members were killed when their plane crashed while returning from a U.S. national development camp for promising young skaters. The International Skating Union president, Jae Youl Kim, told The Associated Press on Friday there would be plans to honor those who died in the crash when Boston hosts the world championships. ___ AP sports:

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