The 2012–13 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the 16th season of the series of junior international competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the 2012–13 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating contested by senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance.
2012–13 ISU Junior Grand Prix | |
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Type: | ISU Junior Grand Prix |
Date: | August 22 – December 9, 2012 |
Season: | 2012–13 |
Location: | Courchevel Lake Placid Linz Istanbul Bled Zagreb Chemnitz Sochi |
Previous: 2011–12 ISU Junior Grand Prix | |
Next: 2013–14 ISU Junior Grand Prix |
Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the final at each of the seven Junior Grand Prix events. The top six skaters or teams from each discipline met at the 2012–13 Junior Grand Prix Final, which was held concurrently with the senior final.
Competitions
editThe locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2012–13 season, the series was composed of the following events in autumn 2012:[1][2]
Date | Event | Location | Details | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
August 23–25 | 2012 JGP Courchevel | Courchevel, France | Results, Details | No pairs |
August 30 – Sept. 1 | 2012 JGP Lake Placid | Lake Placid, USA | Results, Details | |
September 13–15 | 2012 JGP Austria | Linz, Austria | Results, Details | |
September 22–24 | 2012 JGP Bosphorus | Istanbul, Turkey | Results, Details | No pairs |
September 27–29 | 2012 JGP Sencila Bled Cup | Bled, Slovenia | Results, Details | No pairs |
October 4–6 | 2012 JGP Croatia Cup | Zagreb, Croatia | Results, Details | |
October 11–13 | 2012 JGP Pokal der Blauen Schwerter | Chemnitz, Germany | Results, Details | Venue changed from Dresden on 2 August 2012. |
December 6–9 | 2012–13 Junior Grand Prix Final | Sochi, Russia | Results, Details | Held with senior GPF |
Qualifying
editSkaters who reached the age of 13 by July 1, 2012 but had not turned 19 (singles and females of the other two disciplines) or 21 (male pair skaters and ice dancers) were eligible to compete on the junior circuit. Unlike the senior Grand Prix, skaters for the JGP are not seeded by the ISU. The number of entries allotted to each ISU member federation is determined by their skaters' placements at the previous season's Junior World Championships in each respective discipline.
A possibility for pairs to compete on both the junior and senior Grand Prix series in the same season was removed before the 2012–2013 season.[1]
Overview
editISU abbreviations: Jumps | |
---|---|
T | Toe loop |
S | Salchow |
Lo | Loop |
F | Flip |
Lz | Lutz |
A | Axel |
Series
editThe 2012–2013 ISU Junior Grand Prix season began in August 2012 in Courchevel, France.[3] Russia's Elena Radionova and China's Jin Boyang, both making their JGP debut, won gold in the ladies' and men's event respectively, while France's Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron won gold in ice dance.[4][5][6]
The next event was held in Lake Placid, USA.[7] Joshua Farris of the United States won his fourth JGP title,[8] while Japan's Satoko Miyahara, Canadian pair Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro, and American ice dancers Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton all recorded their first wins on the circuit.[9]
The series then moved to Linz, Austria,[10] where Radionova and Papadakis / Cizeron took their second titles and qualified for the JGP Final. Making their debuts, Nathan Chen of the United States and Brittany Jones / Ian Beharry of Canada won gold in the men's and pairs' events respectively.[11]
The next event was held in Istanbul, Turkey,[12] where reigning JGP Final champion Jason Brown won his second JGP title and qualified for his second final. This made it three for four for the American men and golds. Leah Keiser of the United States won gold in the ladies' event in her first JGP event. Satoko Miyahara of Japan won the bronze and qualified for the JGP Final. Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won the ice dance event, winning their fifth JGP title.[13]
Bled, Slovenia hosted the next event.[14] Americans Joshua Farris and Aldridge / Eaton picked up their second wins of the season and qualified for the JGP Final, ahead of the silver medalists by 24 and 9 points respectively, while South Korea's Kim Hae-jin took her first JGP title.[15]
The Junior Grand Prix series continued in Zagreb, Croatia.[16] Canada's Purdy and Marinaro won their second title and qualified for the Final. In the free skate, fourth-place finishers Kamilla Gainetdinova / Ivan Bich became the first pair to land a side-by-side 3Lz+2T combination in a junior competition.[17][18] Russia's Maxim Kovtun won the men's event. Russians Valeria Zenkova / Valerie Sinitsin and American Angela Wang won their first JGP titles, in ice dance and ladies' singles respectively.[17][19] Nathan Chen, who had earlier won the Austrian event, withdrew due to a lower leg injury and thus did not qualify for the Final.[19]
The final qualifying event was held in Chemnitz, Germany.[20] Russians won all four disciplines[21] – Anna Pogorilaya and Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin won their first JGP titles, while Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won their sixth and Maxim Kovtun his third. All qualified for the JGP Final in Sochi.
Final
editRussia swept all four gold medals at the JGP Final and the entire pairs' podium.
The United States' Joshua Farris won the men's short program ahead of Russia's Maxim Kovtun and the 2011 JGP Final champion Jason Brown.[22] Kovtun won the free skate with a program that included a 4T-3T, 3A+3T, and 3A.[23] He won the title by 11 points over the silver medalist, Farris, while Japan's Ryuju Hino moved ahead of Brown to take the bronze.[24]
Russia's Elena Radionova was first in the ladies' short program, with the United States' Hannah Miller in second and Russia's Anna Pogorilaya in third.[25] Radionova also placed first in the free skate and won the junior ladies' title by 11 points ahead of silver medalist Miller, who placed fourth in the segment, and bronze medalist Pogorilaya.[26] Angela Wang of the United States was second in the free skate but remained in fourth overall.
Russia's Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin took the lead in the pair's short program, followed by Canada's Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro and Russia's Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat.[27] Fedorova / Miroshkin were also first in the free skate and won gold with a total score slightly over five points ahead of the silver medalists, Davankova / Deputat, while Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev rose to take the bronze, producing a Russian sweep of the podium.[28] Davankova / Deputat were the only junior pairs' medalists to attempt (and complete) side-by-side triple jumps.[29] Vigalova (born 29 June 1999) was the youngest skater at the JGP Final.
Russia's Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin won the short dance ahead of France's Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron and 2011 JGP Final silver medalists Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov.[30] Stepanova / Bukin also placed first in the free dance and won gold by ten points ahead of Papadakis / Cizeron, while the United States' Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton moved past Yanovskaia / Mozgov to take the bronze.[31]
Medalists
editMen
editCompetition | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
JGP France | Jin Boyang | Jason Brown | Ryuju Hino | Details |
JGP United States | Joshua Farris | Keiji Tanaka | Roman Sadovsky | Details |
JGP Austria | Nathan Chen | Ryuju Hino | Kim Jin-seo | Details |
JGP Turkey | Jason Brown | Alexander Petrov | Nam Nguyen | Details |
JGP Slovenia | Joshua Farris | Jin Boyang | Alexander Samarin | Details |
JGP Croatia | Maxim Kovtun | Yan Han | Harrison Choate | Details |
JGP Germany | Maxim Kovtun | Shoma Uno | Alexander Samarin | Details |
JGP Final | Maxim Kovtun | Joshua Farris | Ryuju Hino | Details |
Ladies
editCompetition | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
JGP France | Elena Radionova | Rika Hongo | Uliana Titushkina | Details |
JGP United States | Satoko Miyahara | Courtney Hicks | Angela Wang | Details |
JGP Austria | Elena Radionova | Hannah Miller | Samantha Cesario | Details |
JGP Turkey | Leah Keiser | Park So-youn | Satoko Miyahara | Details |
JGP Slovenia | Kim Hae-jin | Barbie Long | Evgenia Gerasimova | Details |
JGP Croatia | Angela Wang | Hannah Miller | Anna Pogorilaya | Details |
JGP Germany | Anna Pogorilaya | Miyabi Oba | Maria Stavitskaia | Details |
JGP Final | Elena Radionova | Hannah Miller | Anna Pogorilaya | Details |
Pairs
editCompetition | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
JGP United States | Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro | Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat | Madeline Aaron / Max Settlage | Details |
JGP Austria | Brittany Jones / Ian Beharry | Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin | Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev | Details |
JGP Croatia | Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro | Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang | Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat | Details |
JGP Germany | Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin | Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev | Brittany Jones / Ian Beharry | Details |
JGP Final | Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin | Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat | Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev | Details |
Ice dance
editMedals table
editRank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Russia (RUS) | 13 | 10 | 11 | 34 |
2 | United States (USA) | 8 | 8 | 6 | 22 |
3 | Canada (CAN) | 3 | 0 | 8 | 11 |
4 | France (FRA) | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
5 | Japan (JPN) | 1 | 5 | 3 | 9 |
6 | China (CHN) | 1 | 3 | 0 | 4 |
7 | South Korea (KOR) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
8 | Germany (GER) | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Totals (8 entries) | 29 | 29 | 29 | 87 |
Junior Grand Prix Final qualification and qualifiers
editQualification rules
editAt each event, skaters earn points toward qualification for the Junior Grand Prix Final. Following the 7th event, the top six highest scoring skaters/teams advance to the Final. The points earned per placement are as follows:
Placement | Points (Singles/Dance) | Points (Pairs) |
---|---|---|
1st | 15 | 15 |
2nd | 13 | 13 |
3rd | 11 | 11 |
4th | 9 | 9 |
5th | 7 | 7 |
6th | 5 | 5 |
7th | 4 | 4 |
8th | 3 | 3 |
9th | 2 | – |
10th | 1 | – |
There are seven tie-breakers in cases of a tie in overall points:
- Highest placement at an event. If a skater placed 1st and 3rd, the tiebreaker is the 1st place, and that beats a skater who placed 2nd in both events.
- Highest combined total scores in both events. If a skater earned 200 points at one event and 250 at a second, that skater would win in the second tie-break over a skater who earned 200 points at one event and 150 at another.
- Participated in two events.
- Highest combined scores in the free skating/free dance portion of both events.
- Highest individual score in the free skating/free dance portion from one event.
- Highest combined scores in the short program/short dance of both events.
- Highest number of total participants at the events.
If there is still a tie, the tie is considered unbreakable and the tied skaters all advance to the Junior Grand Prix Final.
Qualifiers
editTop JGP scores
editTop scores attained in Junior Grand Prix competitions.
Men
editRank | Name | Nation | Score | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Maxim Kovtun | Russia | 222.31 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
2 | Nathan Chen | United States | 222.00 | 2012 JGP Austria |
3 | Joshua Farris | United States | 218.69 | 2012 JGP United States |
4 | Han Yan | China | 212.10 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
5 | Ryuju Hino | Japan | 198.92 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
6 | Jason Brown | United States | 198.32 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
7 | Boyang Jin | China | 194.13 | 2012 JGP France |
8 | Shoma Uno | Japan | 188.48 | 2012 JGP Germany |
9 | Harrison Choate | United States | 185.39 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
10 | Alexander Samarin | Russia | 183.03 | 2012 JGP Slovenia |
Ladies
editRank | Name | Nation | Score | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Elena Radionova | Russia | 182.86 | 2012 JGP Austria |
2 | Hannah Miller | United States | 168.41 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
3 | Anna Pogorilaya | Russia | 167.40 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
4 | Angela Wang | United States | 162.65 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
5 | Satoko Miyahara | Japan | 161.65 | 2012 JGP United States |
6 | Samantha Cesario | United States | 157.72 | 2012 JGP Austria |
7 | Leah Keiser | United States | 156.33 | 2012 JGP Turkey |
8 | Courtney Hicks | United States | 153.77 | 2012 JGP United States |
9 | Rika Hongo | Japan | 149.38 | 2012 JGP France |
10 | Kim Hae-jin | South Korea | 147.30 | 2012 JGP Slovenia |
Pairs
editRank | Name | Nation | Score | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin | Russia | 161.11 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
2 | Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat | Russia | 155.96 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
3 | Maria Vigalova / Egor Zakroev | Russia | 153.56 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
4 | Brittany Jones / Ian Beharry | Canada | 152.78 | 2012 JGP Austria |
5 | Margaret Purdy / Michael Marinaro | Canada | 149.94 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
6 | Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang | China | 149.20 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
7 | Kamilla Gainetdinova / Ivan Bich | Russia | 142.26 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
8 | Evgenia Tarasova / Vladimir Morozov | Russia | 137.29 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
9 | Annabelle Prölß / Ruben Blommaert | Germany | 133.48 | 2012 JGP Germany |
10 | Britney Simpson / Matthew Blackmer | United States | 133.05 | 2012 JGP Austria |
Ice dance
editRank | Name | Nation | Score | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin | Russia | 149.57 | 2012–13 JGP Final |
2 | Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron | France | 142.08 | 2012 JGP Austria |
3 | Kaitlin Hawayek / Jean-Luc Baker | United States | 138.61 | 2012 JGP Germany |
4 | Alexandra Aldridge / Daniel Eaton | United States | 138.43 | 2012 JGP Slovenia |
5 | Shari Koch / Christian Nüchtern | Germany | 136.21 | 2012 JGP Turkey |
6 | Evgenia Kosigina / Nikolai Moroshkin | Russia | 135.24 | 2012 JGP United States |
7 | Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov | Russia | 135.02 | 2012 JGP Austria |
8 | Madeline Edwards / Zhao Kai Pang | Canada | 135.01 | 2012 JGP Turkey |
9 | Valeria Zenkova / Valerie Sinitsin | Russia | 134.63 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
10 | Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons | United States | 134.09 | 2012 JGP Croatia |
References
edit- ^ a b "ISU Junior Grand Prix 2012 - 13 Announcement". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2012-05-04.
- ^ "ISU Communication No. 1702: Decisions of the ISU Council Milano (ITA)". International Skating Union. 2011-10-21. Archived from the original on 2011-10-10. Retrieved 2011-10-21.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP France". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ "Detailed results: JGP France". International Skating Union. 2012.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-08-26). "2012 JGP Courchevel". Golden Skate.
- ^ Felton, Renee (2012-08-25). "China, Russia, France win golds at JGP France". Icenetwork.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP United States". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ "Detailed results: JGP United States". International Skating Union. 2012.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-09-02). "2012 JGP Lake Placid". Golden Skate.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP Austria". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-09-16). "2012 Cup of Austria". Golden Skate.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP Turkey". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-09-23). "2012 JGP Bosphorus". Golden Skate.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP Slovenia". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-09-30). "2012 JGP Sencila Bled Cup". Golden Skate.
- ^ "Announcement: JGP Croatia". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ a b Slater, Paula (2012-10-07). "2012 JGP Croatia Cup". Golden Skate.
- ^ "ISU JGP Croatia Cup 2012: JUNIOR PAIRS FREE SKATING - JUDGES DETAILS PER SKATER" (PDF). International Skating Union. 2012-10-05.
- ^ a b Ellis, Josh (2012-10-06). "USA's Wang, Miller top ladies podium in Croatia". Icenetwork. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-10-07.
- ^ "Announcement: ISU Germany". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ Slater, Paula (2012-10-14). "2012 JGP Chemnitz". Golden Skate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-07). "Farris takes Junior Men's Short Program in Sochi". GoldenSkate.
- ^ "ISU Grand Prix Final 2012: JUNIOR MEN FREE SKATING JUDGES DETAILS PER SKATER" (PDF). International Skating Union.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-07). "Kovtun captures Junior Men's title in Sochi". GoldenSkate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-07). "Radionova squeaks into first in Junior Ladies at Grand Prix Final". GoldenSkate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-09). "Radionova wins Ladies title at Junior Grand Prix Final". GoldenSkate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-07). "Fedorova and Miroshkin lead Junior Pairs in Sochi". GoldenSkate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-09). "Russia sweeps Junior Pairs at Figure Skating Final". GoldenSkate.
- ^ "ISU Grand Prix Final 2012: JUNIOR PAIRS FREE SKATING JUDGES DETAILS PER SKATER" (PDF). International Skating Union.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-07). "Stepanova and Bukin dominate Junior Dance in Sochi". GoldenSkate.
- ^ Kondakova, Anna (2012-12-08). "Stepanova and Bukin outclass the competition in Sochi". GoldenSkate.
External links
edit- Results: JGP France, JGP United States, JGP Austria, JGP Turkey, JGP Slovenia, JGP Croatia, JGP Germany, JGP Final
- Standings: Men, Ladies, Pairs, Dance at the International Skating Union
- ISU Figure Skating - Official YouTube Channel
- Junior Grand Prix at the International Skating Union
- Official event websites: http://www.courchevel.com/juniorgrandprixoffigureskating/editorial.php?Rub=134[permanent dead link] France], Austria Archived 2012-09-05 at the Wayback Machine