1962 World Figure Skating Championships

The World Figure Skating Championships is an annual figure skating competition sanctioned by the International Skating Union in which figure skaters compete for the title of World Champion.

1962 World Figure Skating Championships
Type:ISU Championship
Date:March 14 – 17
Season:1962
Location: Prague, Czechoslovakia
Champions
Men's singles:
Donald Jackson
Ladies' singles:
Sjoukje Dijkstra
Pairs:
Maria Jelinek / Otto Jelinek
Ice dance:
Eva Romanová / Pavel Roman
Previous:
1960 World Championships
Next:
1963 World Championships

The 1962 competitions for men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance took place from March 14 to 17 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. The Figure Skating World Championships in Prague were originally planned for 1961, but were cancelled due to the crash of Sabena Flight 548, which killed everyone on board the plane, including the entire US figure skating team.

East Germany participated in the World Figure Skating Championships for the first time.

This competition is best remembered for Donald Jackson's come-from-behind victory in the men's event with a tour-de-force free skating that included the first triple lutz jump ever landed in competition as well as a triple salchow jump and 20 other double and single jumps, including jumps in opposite directions and jumps with variations in arm position or delayed rotation. Jackson received 7 perfect 6.0 scores for this performance.[1]

Prague hometown favorites Eva Romanová / Pavel Roman won the dance event - breaking the British domination of this discipline - and Canadians Maria Jelinek / Otto Jelinek were the winners in the pairs. As children, the Jelineks had defected from Czechoslovakia with their parents after the post-war Communist takeover, and there were significant fears for their safety in returning to their home country. The "official" story that had been circulated at the time of the previous year's planned competition was that they were merely of Czech descent.[2] The Jelineks' chief competitors, 1960 runners-up Marika Kilius / Hans-Jürgen Bäumler, were forced to withdraw from the competition after colliding on side-by-side jumps during their program,[3] and the silver medal was won by Lyudmila Belousova / Oleg Protopopov.

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Czechoslovakia)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Canada2114
2 Czechoslovakia*1102
3 Netherlands1001
4 France0112
5 Soviet Union0101
6 Austria0011
 West Germany0011
Totals (7 entries)44412

Results

Men

Rank Name Points Places
1 Donald Jackson2277.113
2 Karol Divín2255.917
3 Alain Calmat2200.725
4 Donald McPherson2172.337
5 Manfred Schnelldorfer2094.054
6 Monty Hoyt2059.159
7 Emmerich Danzer2033.868
8 Scott Allen2002.881
9 Peter Jonas2005.582
10 Nobuo Satō1984.792
11 Bodo Bockenauer97
12 Robin Jones101
13 Sepp Schönmetzler109
14 Valeriy Meshkov1895.7117
15 Per Kjølberg137
16 Károly Újlaky1832.4142
17 Robert Dureville149
18 Alain Trouillet159

Judges:

  • Ernst K. Bauch
  • Pamela Davis
  • Jeanine Donnier-Blanc
  • Milan Duchón
  • Georgiy Felitsyn
  • Norman V. S. Gregory
  • A. Koutny
  • Adolf Walker
  • Franz Wojtanowskyj

Ladies

Rank Name Points Places
1 Sjoukje Dijkstra2350.09
2 Wendy Griner2273.221
3 Regine Heitzer2218.339
4 Petra Burka2219.742
5 Barbara Roles2200.952
6 Nicole Hassler2172.064
7 Jana Mrázková2151.871
8 Karin Frohner2144.679
9 Miwa Fukuhara2137.081
10 Lorraine Hanlon2103.098
11 Jacqueline Harbord101
12 Helli Sengstschmid101
13 Eva Grožajová105
14 Franziska Schmidt108
15 Karin Gude122
16 Victoria Fisher148
17 Ann-Margreth Frei159
18 Sandra Brugnera161
19 Helga Zöllner1968.7166
20 Tatyana Nemtsova1952.2174
21 Gabriele Seyfert178

Judges:

  • Ernst K. Bauch
  • Jeanine Donnier-Blanc
  • M. Drake
  • H. Dudová
  • Paul Engelfriet
  • Martin Felsenreich
  • A. Koutny
  • Melville Rogers
  • Adolf Walker

Pairs

Rank Name Points Places
1 Maria Jelinek / Otto Jelinek102.215
2 Lyudmila Belousova / Oleg Protopopov102.116.5
3 Margret Göbl / Franz Ningel100.125.5
4 Debbi Wilkes / Guy Revell93.345
5 Milada Kubíková / Jaroslav Votruba95.152.5
6 Gertrude Desjardins / Maurice Lafrance92.359.5
7 Gerda Johner / Rüdi Johner91.063.5
8 Dorothyann Nelson / Pieter Kollen90.270.5
9 Irene Müller / Hans-Georg Dallmer89.073.5
10 Judianne Fotheringill / Jerry Fotheringill87.473.5
11 Valerie Hunt / Peter Burrows81.5
12 Diana Hinko / Bernhard Henhappel107.5
13 Mieko Ōiwa / Yutaka Dōke113
WD Marika Kilius / Hans-Jürgen BäumlerDNF

Judges:

Ice dance

Rank Name Points Places
1 Eva Romanová / Pavel Roman318.515
2 Christiane Guhel / Jean Guhel315.826
3 Virginia Thompson / William McLachlan316.823
4 Linda Shearman / Michael Phillips310.242
5 Paulette Doan / Kenneth Ormsby311.045
6 Donna Mitchell / John Mitchell306.455.5
7 Dorothyann Nelson / Pieter Kollen306.657
8 Yvonne Littlefield / Peter Betts303.064.5
9 Mary Parry / Roy Mason297.277
10 Györgyi Korda / Pál Vásárhelyi281.399
11 Helga Burkhardt / Hannes Burkhardt108
12 Olga Gilardi / Germano Ceccattini114
13 Marlyse Fornachon / Charly Pichard116
14 Armelle Flichy / Pierre Brun119
15 Christel Trebesiner / Georg Felsinger131
16 Gabriele Rauch / Rudi Matysik142
17 Keiko Kaneko / Mikio Takeuchi143

Judges:

  • Pamela Davis
  • M. Drake
  • Norman V. S. Gregory
  • Ferenc Kertész
  • Eugen Kirchhofer
  • L. Lauret
  • Hans Meixner
  • Emil Skákala
  • Hermann Wollersen

References

  1. Beverley Smith, Figure Skating: A Celebration, ISBN 0-7710-2819-9
  2. Henry Jelinek, Jr. and Ann Pinchot, On Thin Ice
  3. "Champions of the World", Skating magazine, June 1963

Sources

  • Result List provided by the ISU
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