ISU Junior Grand Prix Final

The ISU Junior Grand Prix Final or JGP Final (titled the ISU Junior Series Final in the 1997–98 season) is the culmination of a series of junior-level competitions – the ISU Junior Grand Prix organized by the International Skating Union. Medals are awarded in men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Skaters earn qualifying points at each Junior Grand Prix event. At the end of the series, the six highest-placing skaters from each discipline advance to the JGP Final.

History

The event was first held in early March 1998 in Lausanne, Switzerland, following six qualifying competitions at the start of the season. Eight skaters qualified in each singles' discipline, in addition to six pairs and six ice dancing teams. In 1998, at the inaugural competition, Timothy Goebel landed the first quadruple Salchow jump in competition.

The JGP Final was shifted to December beginning in the 1999–2000 season. The number of pairs and dance qualifiers expanded to eight in the 2000–01 season.

At the JGP Final in 2002, Miki Ando became the first woman to land a quadruple jump in competition, performing a quadruple Salchow. In the 2008–09 season, the JGP Final was organized together with its senior-level complement, the Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, for the first time. Following the 2010–11 season, the International Skating Union reduced the number of qualifiers from eight to six in each discipline.

Medalists

Men's singles

Season Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1997–98 Lausanne Timothy Goebel Ivan Dinev Matthew Savoie
1998–99 Detroit Vincent Restencourt Ilia Klimkin Alexei Vasilevski
1999–00 Gdańsk Gao Song Stefan Lindemann Fedor Andreev[1]
2000–01 Ayr Ma Xiaodong Sergei Dobrin Stanislav Timchenko[2]
2001–02 Bled Stanislav Timchenko Ma Xiaodong Kevin van der Perren[3]
2002–03 The Hague Alexander Shubin Sergei Dobrin Parker Pennington[4]
2003–04 Malmö Evan Lysacek Andrei Griazev Christopher Mabee[5]
2004–05 Helsinki Dennis Phan Yasuharu Nanri Alexander Uspenski[6]
2005–06 Ostrava Takahiko Kozuka Austin Kanallakan Geoffry Varner[7]
2006–07 Sofia Stephen Carriere Brandon Mroz Kevin Reynolds[8]
2007–08 Gdańsk Adam Rippon Brandon Mroz Armin Mahbanoozadeh[9]
2008–09 Goyang Florent Amodio Armin Mahbanoozadeh Richard Dornbush[10]
2009–10 Tokyo Yuzuru Hanyu Song Nan Ross Miner[11]
2010–11 Beijing Richard Dornbush Yan Han Andrei Rogozine[12]
2011–12 Quebec City Jason Brown Yan Han Joshua Farris[13]
2012–13 Sochi Maxim Kovtun Joshua Farris Ryuju Hino[14]
2013–14 Fukuoka Jin Boyang Adian Pitkeev Nathan Chen[15]
2014–15 Barcelona Shoma Uno Sōta Yamamoto Alexander Petrov[16]
2015–16 Barcelona Nathan Chen Dmitri Aliev Sōta Yamamoto[17]
2016–17 Marseille Dmitri Aliev Alexander Samarin Cha Jun-hwan[18]
2017–18 Nagoya Alexei Krasnozhon Camden Pulkinen Mitsuki Sumoto[19]
2018–19 Vancouver Stephen Gogolev Petr Gumennik Koshiro Shimada[20]
2019–20 Turin Shun Sato Andrei Mozalev Daniil Samsonov[21]
2020–21 Beijing Competition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[22]
2021–22 Osaka [23]
2022–23 Turin Nikolaj Memola Lucas Broussard Nozomu Yoshioka[24]
2023–24 Beijing Rio Nakata Kim Hyun-gyeom Adam Hagara[25]

Women's singles

Season Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1997–98 Lausanne Julia Soldatova Amber Corwin Elena Pingacheva
1998–99 Detroit Viktoria Volchkova Sarah Hughes Daria Timoshenko
1999–00 Gdańsk Deanna Stellato Jennifer Kirk Svetlana Bukareva[1]
2000–01 Ayr Ann Patrice McDonough Kristina Oblasova Yukari Nakano[2]
2001–02 Bled Miki Ando Ludmila Nelidina Akiko Suzuki[3]
2002–03 The Hague Yukina Ota Carolina Kostner Miki Ando[4]
2003–04 Malmö Miki Ando Lina Johansson Viktória Pavuk[5]
2004–05 Helsinki Mao Asada Yuna Kim Kimmie Meissner[6]
2005–06 Ostrava Yuna Kim Aki Sawada Xu Binshu[7]
2006–07 Sofia Caroline Zhang Ashley Wagner Megan Oster[8]
2007–08 Gdańsk Mirai Nagasu Rachael Flatt Yuki Nishino[9]
2008–09 Goyang Becky Bereswill Yukiko Fujisawa Alexe Gilles[10]
2009–10 Tokyo Kanako Murakami Polina Shelepen Christina Gao[11]
2010–11 Beijing Adelina Sotnikova Elizaveta Tuktamysheva Li Zijun[12]
2011–12 Quebec City Yulia Lipnitskaya Polina Shelepen Polina Korobeynikova[13]
2012–13 Sochi Elena Radionova Hannah Miller Anna Pogorilaya[14]
2013–14 Fukuoka Maria Sotskova Serafima Sakhanovich Evgenia Medvedeva[15]
2014–15 Barcelona Evgenia Medvedeva Serafima Sakhanovich Wakaba Higuchi[16]
2015–16 Barcelona Polina Tsurskaya Maria Sotskova Marin Honda[17]
2016–17 Marseille Alina Zagitova Anastasiia Gubanova Kaori Sakamoto[18]
2017–18 Nagoya Alexandra Trusova Alena Kostornaia Anastasia Tarakanova[19]
2018–19 Vancouver Alena Kostornaia Alexandra Trusova Alena Kanysheva[20]
2019–20 Turin Kamila Valieva Alysa Liu Daria Usacheva[21]
2020–21 Beijing Competition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[22]
2021–22 Osaka [23]
2022–23 Turin Mao Shimada Shin Ji-a Kim Chae-yeon[24]
2023–24 Beijing Mao Shimada Shin Ji-a Rena Uezono[25]

Pairs

Season Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1997–98 Lausanne
1998–99 Detroit
1999–00 Gdańsk [1]
2000–01 Ayr [2]
2001–02 Bled [3]
2002–03 The Hague
[4]
2003–04 Malmö [5]
2004–05 Helsinki
  • Brittany Vise
  • Nicholas Kole
[6]
2005–06 Ostrava
[7]
2006–07 Sofia
  • Jessica Rose Paetsch
  • Jon Nuss
[8]
2007–08[lower-alpha 1] Gdańsk
  • Jessica Rose Paetsch
  • Jon Nuss
[9]
2008–09 Goyang [10]
2009–10 Tokyo [11]
2010–11 Beijing [12]
2011–12 Quebec City [13]
2012–13 Sochi [14]
2013–14 Fukuoka [15]
2014–15 Barcelona [16]
2015–16 Barcelona [17]
2016–17 Marseille [18]
2017–18 Nagoya [19]
2018–19 Vancouver [20]
2019–20 Turin [21]
2020–21 Beijing Competition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[22]
2021–22 Osaka [23]
2022–23 Turin
  • Cayla Smith
  • Andy Deng
[24]
2023–24 Beijing
  • Ava Rae Kemp
  • Yohnatan Elizarov
  • Jazmine Desrochers
  • Kieran Thrasher
[25]
Note
  1. The original winners, Vera Bazarova and Yuri Larionov from Russia, were later disqualified from the competition due to a positive doping sample from Larionov.

Ice dance

Season Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1997–98 Lausanne
1998–99 Detroit
1999–00 Gdańsk
[1]
2000–01 Ayr [2]
2001–02 Bled [3]
2002–03 The Hague [4]
2003–04 Malmö [5]
2004–05 Helsinki [6]
2005–06 Ostrava [7]
2006–07 Sofia [8]
2007–08 Gdańsk [9]
2008–09 Goyang [10]
2009–10 Tokyo [11]
2010–11 Beijing [12]
2011–12 Quebec City [13]
2012–13 Sochi [14]
2013–14 Fukuoka [15]
2014–15 Barcelona [16]
2015–16 Barcelona [17]
2016–17 Marseille [18]
2017–18 Nagoya [19]
2018–19 Vancouver [20]
2019–20 Turin [21]
2020–21 Beijing Competition cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic [22]
2021–22 Osaka [23]
2022–23 Turin [24]
2023–24 Beijing [25]

Medal tables

Men

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States97824
2 Japan52512
3 Russia49518
4 China3407
5 France2002
6 Canada1045
7 Italy1001
8 South Korea0112
9 Bulgaria0101
 Germany0101
11 Belgium0011
 Slovakia0011
Totals (12 entries)25252575

Women

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia1211932
2 Japan72817
3 United States57416
4 South Korea1315
5 Italy0101
 Sweden0101
7 China0022
8 Hungary0011
Totals (8 entries)25252575

Pairs

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia9131234
2 China61310
3 Ukraine3003
4 Canada2316
5 Australia2002
6 United States15814
7 Japan1113
8 Georgia1001
9 Germany0202
Totals (9 entries)25252575

Ice dance

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia12111134
2 United States88622
3 Canada2103
4 Italy1135
5 Hungary1102
6 Georgia1001
7 France0101
 Israel0101
 South Korea0101
10 Germany0033
11 Czech Republic0011
 Ukraine0011
Totals (12 entries)25252575

Cumulative medal count

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia374437118
2 United States23272676
3 Japan1351432
4 China95519
5 Canada54514
6 Ukraine3014
7 Italy2237
8 France2103
9 Australia2002
 Georgia2002
11 South Korea1528
12 Hungary1113
13 Czech Republic0213
14 Germany0134
15 Bulgaria0101
 Israel0101
 Sweden0101
18 Belgium0011
 Slovakia0011
Totals (19 entries)100100100300

References

  1. "1999–2000 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2013-10-05.
  2. "2000–01 Junior Grand Prix Final". National Ice Skating Association. Archived from the original on 24 April 2001.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. "2001–02 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  4. "2002–03 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  5. "2003–04 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  6. "2004–05 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  7. "2005–06 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  8. "2006–07 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  9. "2007–08 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  10. "2008–09 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  11. "2009–10 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  12. "2010–11 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  13. "2011–12 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  14. "2012–13 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  15. "2013–14 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  16. "2014–15 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  17. "2015–16 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  18. "2016–17 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  19. "2017–18 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  20. "2018–19 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  21. "2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  22. "ISU Junior Grand Prix Series 2020/21 cancelled". International Skating Union. July 20, 2020.
  23. "Cancellation of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final 2021, Osaka/Japan". International Skating Union. December 17, 2021.
  24. "2022–23 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
  25. "2023–24 Junior Grand Prix Final". International Skating Union.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.