ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland

Summary

The ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland is an international figure skating competition. Sanctioned by the International Skating Union, it is periodically held in the autumn as part of the Junior Grand Prix (JGP) series. Medals may be awarded in men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance.

ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland
Type:ISU Junior Grand Prix
Location: Poland

When held in Gdańsk, the qualifying event is usually known as the Baltic Cup. It may also be called the Toruń Cup or Copernicus Stars when held in Toruń. The 2023 edition held in Gdańsk went under the official name PGE Solidarity Cup, referring to the main sponsor PGE and the Solidarność movement that originated in Gdańsk.

The Croatian Skating Federation was scheduled to host the fifth competition of the 2022 JGP in Zagreb, but cancelled the event due to logistical reasons.[1] The Fédération Française des Sports de Glace initially volunteered to host two separate JGP events. However, on July 29, 2022, the ISU announced that France would no longer host the event in Grenoble as planned. The event was reallocated to the Polish Figure Skating Association, which hosted two back-to-back JGP events in Gdańsk instead.[2]

Results edit

Men's singles edit

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1999 Final Gdańsk   Gao Song   Stefan Lindemann   Fedor Andreev [3]
2000   Ryan Bradley   Andrei Griazev   Stanislav Timchenko [4]
2001   Stanislav Timchenko   Karel Zelenka   Alexander Uspenski [5]
2003   Parker Pennington   Alexander Uspenski   Yasuharu Nanri [6]
2005   Alexander Uspenski   Austin Kanallakan   Yang Chao [7]
2007 Final   Adam Rippon   Brandon Mroz   Armin Mahbanoozadeh [8]
2009 Toruń   Yuzuru Hanyu   Austin Kanallakan   Gordei Gorshkov [9]
2011 Gdańsk   Joshua Farris   Artur Dmitriev Jr.   Ryuichi Kihara [10]
2013   Adian Pitkeev   Alexander Petrov   Zhang He [11]
2015 Toruń   Sota Yamamoto   Deniss Vasiļjevs   Roman Sadovsky [12]
2017 Gdańsk   Alexey Erokhov   Camden Pulkinen   Conrad Orzel [13]
2019   Daniil Samsonov   Yuma Kagiyama   Daniel Grassl [14]
2021   Gleb Lutfullin   Mikhail Shaidorov   Egor Rukhin [15]
2022
Poland I
  Lucas Broussard   Chen Yudong   Raffaele Francesco Zich [16]
2022
Poland II
  Takeru Amine Kataise   Robert Yampolsky   Seo Min-kyu [17]
2023   Lim Ju-heon   Beck Strommer   Daiya Ebihara [18]

Women's singles edit

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1999 Final Gdańsk   Deanna Stellato   Jennifer Kirk   Svetlana Bukareva [3]
2000   Anna Jurkiewicz   Colette Irving   Carina Chen [4]
2001   Irina Tkatchuk   Svitlana Pylypenko   Magdalena Leska [5]
2003   Viktória Pavuk   Akiko Kitamura   Kiira Korpi [6]
2005   Haruka Inoue   Akiko Kitamura   Xu Binshu [7]
2007 Final   Mirai Nagasu   Rachael Flatt   Yuki Nishino [8]
2009 Toruń   Kanako Murakami   Anna Ovcharova   Christina Gao [9]
2011 Gdańsk   Yulia Lipnitskaya   Satoko Miyahara   Samantha Cesario [10]
2013   Evgenia Medvedeva   Angela Wang   Gabrielle Daleman [11]
2015 Toruń   Polina Tsurskaya   Ekaterina Mitrofanova   Rin Nitaya [12]
2017 Gdańsk   Alena Kostornaia   Daria Panenkova   Rino Kasakake [13]
2019   Alysa Liu   Viktoria Vasilieva   Anastasia Tarakanova [14]
2021   Sofia Akateva   Elizaveta Kulikova   Shin Ji-a [15]
2022
Poland I
  Mao Shimada   Mone Chiba   Kim Chae-yeon [16]
2022
Poland II
  Ami Nakai   Shin Ji-a   Kwon Min-sol [17]
2023   Rena Uezono   Kwon Min-sol   Youn Seo-jin [18]

Pairs edit

Vera Bazarova and Yuri Larionov of Russia originally won the gold medal at the 2007–08 ISU Junior Grand Prix Final, but were later disqualified due to a positive doping test from Larionov.[19]

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1999 Final Gdańsk
[3]
2000 [4]
2001
  • Cathy Monette
  • Daniel Castelo
[5]
2003
[6]
2005
  • Aaryn Smith
  • Will Chitwood
[7]
2007 Final
  • Jessica Rose Paetsch
  • Jon Nuss
[8]
2009 Toruń [9]
2011 Gdańsk [10]
2015 Toruń [12]
2017 Gdańsk [13]
2019
[14]
2021
  • Ekaterina Chikmareva
  • Matvei Ianchenkov
  • Ekaterina Petushkova
  • Evgenii Malikov
[15]
2022
Poland I
[16]
2022
Poland II
[17]
2023
  • Ava Kemp
  • Yohnatan Elizarov
  • Jazmine Desrochers
  • Kieran Thrasher
[18]

Ice dance edit

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1999 Final Gdańsk
[3]
2000 [4]
2001 [5]
2003
[6]
2005 [7]
2007 Final [8]
2009 Toruń [9]
2011 Gdańsk [10]
2013 [11]
2015 Toruń [12]
2017 Gdańsk [13]
2019
  • Ekaterina Katashinskaia
  • Aleksandr Vaskovich
[14]
2021
[15]
2022
Poland I
  • Célina Fradji
  • Jean-Hans Fourneaux
[16]
2022
Poland II
  • Jordyn Lewis
  • Noah McMillan
[17]
2023
  • Sara Kishimoto
  • Atsuhiko Tamura
[18]

References edit

  1. ^ "Decisions of the ISU Council". International Skating Union. February 24, 2022.
  2. ^ "ISU Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating Grenoble (FRA) reallocated to Gdansk (POL)". International Skating Union. July 29, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d "1999–2000 JGP Final". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2013-10-05.
  4. ^ a b c d "2000 Int. Junior Competition Gdansk". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 2013-02-28.
  5. ^ a b c d "2001 JGP Gdańsk". IceCalc. Archived from the original on 3 October 2002.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
    • "2001 JGP Gdańsk". International Skating Union.
  6. ^ a b c d "2003 JGP Gdańsk Cup". Polish Figure Skating Association. Archived from the original on 12 March 2005.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
    • "2003 JGP Gdańsk Cup". International Skating Union.
  7. ^ a b c d "2005 JGP Gdańsk Cup". International Skating Union.
  8. ^ a b c d "2007–2008 JGP Final". International Skating Union.
  9. ^ a b c d "2009 JGP Torun Cup". International Skating Union.
  10. ^ a b c d "2011 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  11. ^ a b c "2013 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  12. ^ a b c d "2015 JGP Copernicus Stars". International Skating Union.
  13. ^ a b c d "2017 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  14. ^ a b c d "2019 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  15. ^ a b c d "2021 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  16. ^ a b c d "2022 JGP Solidarity Cup". International Skating Union.
  17. ^ a b c d "2022 JGP Baltic Cup". International Skating Union.
  18. ^ a b c d "2023 JGP Solidarity Cup". International Skating Union.
  19. ^ "Entry/Resultlist". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 8 June 2008.

External links edit