Javier Fernandez

2016 Europeans Review Part 1 (Men)

A cold snap with freezing fog enveloped Bratislava as everyone arrived for the European Championships, but as the week wore on temperatures gradually rose. It was no different inside the Ondrej Nepela Arena where the battle to be crowned European champion in all four categories was hotly contested.

2016 Europeans Men Medallists (more…)

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7 Things We’ll Remember About 2014/2015 Season

It’s officially the start of a new season, but we thought it might be fun to take a look back at our highlights of 2014/2015.

1. Fantastic French
Waiting your turn used to be a tradition in ice dance. At the start of an Olympic cycle, teams would move up to fill the empty spaces above them. The rulebook was rewritten last season by Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron. It was due in no small part to their stunning free dance to Mozart’s “Adagio from Concerto No.23” which propelled them to their European and World titles. Hailed as a masterpiece from early on, it might be the most sublime piece of ice dance choreography since “Bolero” and has other teams flocking to Montreal to work with coaches Romain Haguenauer, Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon. We can’t wait to see what they will come up with this season.

2. Russian Rebound
It seemed that wherever you went this season Elizaveta Tuktamysheva was there. The diminutive Russian skated at a whopping 11 competitions and more impressively she only lost twice – Skate America and Russian Nationals to Elena Radionova. Her consistency was phenomenal, but the courage it took to attempt a triple Axel in the short programme at the World Championships blew us all away. After her disastrous Olympic season, Tuktamysheva is without a doubt the comeback kid of the year.

3. Super Spain
If anybody had told us even five years ago that Spain would have a three-time European and a World champion and host a Grand Prix Final, we would have been sceptical to say the least. However, this season all the above came to pass. Barcelona hosted the Grand Prix Final so consummately that the event will be heading there again in December. It is the first time ever that the Grand Prix Final has been held in the same city two years in a row. Our personal highlight of the event was the Spanish audience enthusiastically shouting “Olé!” during the Paso Doble short dances.

Sara Hurtado and Adrià Díaz managed to finish fifth at the European Championships in Stockholm in January, but once again the MVP of Spanish skating was Javier Fernandez. He captured his third European title in Sweden and his first Worlds in Shanghai much to his own disbelief. He also announced that he is dating Miki Ando (we like to call the couple “Fernando” for short). All in all it was a very good year to be Spanish.

4. Pairs Pleasure
There is no shortage of drama in figure skating, but this season, in our eyes, it was the pairs event that really drew our attention. Yuko Kavaguti and Alexander Smirnov were back after sitting out 2013/2014 with their mesmerising Manfred Symphony free which brought them a memorable gold medal at Europeans. At the same competition Ksenia Stolbova and Fedor Klimov came in second after Klimov tripped before their final element, a throw triple Salchow. At the end of the routine, Stolbova just stood and stared at him with her hands on her hips and a death stare not seen since Barbara Fusar-Poli in 2006. We were scared.

There were also exciting new pairs, like Valentina Marchei and Ondrej Hotarek and Lubov Iliushechkina and Dylan Moscovitch. Qing Pang and Jian Tong came out of retirement for one last go (we think) at Worlds and Meagan Duhamel was uncharacteristically speechless when she and Eric Radford won Canada’s first pairs title since 2001. Olympic champions Tatiana Volosozhar and Maxim Trankov return this season and we are looking forward to an even more thrilling year ahead.

5. Machida Moves On
The Japanese public was stunned when Tatsuki Machida announced live on TV that he would not be accepting a berth on the Japanese team for the World Championships. The 2014 World silver medallist had finished a disappointing fourth at Japanese Nationals and had decided to call it a day and concentrate on his studies. The void left by Machida meant the Japanese men struggled at Worlds and will have only two places this season.

6. Broken China
Anyone who watches figure skating is used to witnessing all sorts of spills, but seeing blood on the ice is never a good sign. Yuzuru Hanyu and Han Yan locked heads with each other on the warm-up for the free skating at Cup of China in November. Incredibly and perhaps foolishly, both of them then skated after being seen to by a doctor with Hanyu performing with a bandage wrapped around his head. The Olympic champion scraped through to the Grand Prix Final which he won, but then was diagnosed with a rare bladder condition that required surgery. Hanyu will be hoping for a less eventful season this year.

7. Green Glimpses
In order to make the sport more appealing to television audiences, there have been many innovations over the past few years. This season we really loved the green room that was installed behind the kiss & cry where the leaders of the event waited while the competition continued. It was probably uncomfortable for those skaters who weren’t pleased with their performance or scores, but the reactions behind the scenes were almost as entertaining as the skating itself.

Here’s hoping for another great season of skating memories in 2015/2016!

2015 Europeans Recap – Men

If you had told anybody five years ago that Spain would have a three times in a row European figure skating champion, most people would have asked you if you were feeling alright. Yet here we are in 2015 and Javier Fernandez has captured his third consecutive European title, a feat that skaters like Alexei Urmanov, Ilia Kulik, Alexei Yagudin, Evgeni Plushenko or Brian Joubert were not able to accomplish. In fact, the last time there was a threepeat in the men’s event the Soviet Union still existed as a country when Alexander Fadeev won in Birmingham in 1989. The similiarities between Fernandez and Fadeev’s streaks continue in that they began in a pre-Olympic season and neither skater was able to collect a medal at the Olympics themselves with both finishing up in 4th place. Fernandez still has the opportunity to change that.

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Medals Are The Name Of The Game In Stockholm

After a very tense and exhausting pre-Olympic Europeans last year, there is a notably more calm and rounded atmosphere permeating the air in Stockholm this year. Indeed round is the optimal word as the event takes place in the Globe Arena, the largest spherical building in the world.

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Barcelona Grand Prix Final 2014 Review (Part 1)

Skating broke new ground this past weekend with Spain hosting a major senior competition for the first time. In the first part of our review of the ISU Grand Prix Final of Figure Skating, we take a look back at the men and ladies’ events.

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Five Things You Must Do in Barcelona

“Barcelona, it was the first time that we met.”

So goes the song and for skaters, judges, officials and fans this month’s Grand Prix Final in the Catalan capital provides the perfect excuse to visit this fascinating and vibrant city. As is always the case with skating competitions though, there is often very little time to venture outside the confines of the arena and its vicinity. The Centre de Convencions Internacional de Barcelona (CCIB), the Grand Prix Final venue, is located on the eastern edge of Barcelona away from the hustle and bustle of the centre of downtown. With that in mind, we’ve compiled our top five recommendations of things to do in the city when you’re not watching the best skaters in the world.

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That Was The Week That Was In Figure Skating (27 October – 2 November 2014)

Here’s a short recap of some of the things that happened during the past week in the world of figure skating.

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