2025-26 Japanese Women's Figure Skating | Page 3 | Golden Skate

2025-26 Japanese Women's Figure Skating

Saki Miyake and Mako Yamashita got the Kinoshita Cup CS assignment.
It just occurs to me: last season, Mako got the Asian Trophy, but Yuna got the NHK spot. So could it be a 3rd person getting the NHK this year (maybe not Yuna, because of her recent WD from the Summer Cup).

Or, to have both Saki and Mako entering the Kinoshita Cup, as a skate-off to decide who to be given the NHK spot...
 
It just occurs to me: last season, Mako got the Asian Trophy, but Yuna got the NHK spot. So could it be a 3rd person getting the NHK this year (maybe not Yuna, because of her recent WD from the Summer Cup).

Or, to have both Saki and Mako entering the Kinoshita Cup, as a skate-off to decide who to be given the NHK spot...
I am also guessing that the NHK spot is a third skater (not Saki nor Mako). But we will see soon.
 
I was about to rage about Sumiyoshi not being assigned to Kinoshita, but I see she’s assigned to Lombardia which is the following week. I don’t recall her ever going to a Challenger before - so I was hoping she’ll get a fall assignment for an early chance to earn a SB before the GP series.

I’m also hoping that she’ll do well enough this season to go to 4CC. 4CC selections should be a bit more open this season because of the Olympics.
 
Mana (Kawabe) maybe? She did really well at Minato Aquls.
I almost agreed with you but today reminded me there is one more name that I think NHK and JSF would love to award that spot to provided that she is healthy enough to skate her SP and FS...... Mai Mihara.
 
I almost agreed with you but today reminded me there is one more name that I think NHK and JSF would love to award that spot to provided that she is healthy enough to skate her SP and FS...... Mai Mihara.
She is healthy enough to do that, as she just showed. The reality is that we have no idea who took part in the selection, how they performed there and what exactly JSF is taking into consideration when making the choice.

Based on their results so far this season, Mai, Mana, Mako and Saki all have made strong statements, and while Yuna withdrew from her first competition, we do not know when she was injured. I'm just glad I don't have to choose between all of these wonderful skaters.
 
She is healthy enough to do that, as she just showed. The reality is that we have no idea who took part in the selection, how they performed there and what exactly JSF is taking into consideration when making the choice.
Yeah I had zero expectations for Mai going into the Summer Cup, and even after her SP... but I was just so moved today. I didn't think she can recover AGAIN. I thought asking for another comeback is too much... but wow.

I'm so curious I need them to announce the NHK host spots NOOOWWWWWWWWWWW 😂
 
Can someone refresh my memory on how academies vs. schools vs. sponsors work with Japanese skaters? I was looking through some ISU bios and got myself confused again.

For example, Ami Nakai and Rinka Watanabe both train at MF Academy. While both list the MF Academy coaches in their ISU bios, neither skater specifically mentions MF Academy. Is there any reason why?

Rinka attends Hosei University, which she mentions in her ISU bio. I believe Ami attends Ichikawa High School, but she doesn't mention it or any other school in her ISU bio. Is there any reason why? (Also, why is it that Japanese skaters are somewhat unique in advertising their school affiliations? You don't see this with skaters from most other countries.)

Rinka mentions SanwaKenso, which I believe is a solar company, in her ISU bio. Ami mentions Tokyo Inkarami, which I believe is a haircare company, in her ISU bio. I assume these are sponsors? Is it common for skaters at the same academy to have different sponsors?

Also, not relevant to Ami and Rinka, but with the Kinoshita skaters, why is it that some skaters mention affiliation with Kinoshita Academy, while others mention affiliation with Kinoshita Group? It seems like it's the younger and/or less established skaters who are more likely to do the former, and the older and/or more established skaters who are more likely to do the latter.
 
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Can someone refresh my memory on how academies vs. schools vs. sponsors work with Japanese skaters? I was looking through some ISU bios and got myself confused again.

For example, Ami Nakai and Rinka Watanabe both train at MF Academy. While both list the MF Academy coaches in their ISU bios, neither skater specifically mentions MF Academy. Is there any reason why?

Rinka attends Hosei University, which she mentions in her ISU bio. I believe Ami attends Ichikawa High School, but she doesn't mention it or any other school in her ISU bio. Is there any reason why? (Also, why is it that Japanese skaters are somewhat unique in advertising their school affiliations? You don't see this with skaters from most other countries.)

Rinka mentions SanwaKenso, which I believe is a solar company, in her ISU bio. Ami mentions Tokyo Inkarami, which I believe is a haircare company, in her ISU bio. I assume these are sponsors? Is it common for skaters at the same academy to have different sponsors?

Also, not relevant to Ami and Rinka, but with the Kinoshita skaters, why is it that some skaters mention affiliation with Kinoshita Academy, while others mention affiliation with Kinoshita Group? It seems like it's the younger and/or less established skaters who are more likely to do the former, and the older and/or more established skaters who are more likely to do the latter.
Someone more knowledgeable than me should correct this later, but to my understanding the "Club" listed in the ISU bio is usually the place where the skaters:
- "work at" , if it's a company
- "study at" , if it's an university / school
- "skate at" , if it's a skating club.

When a skater is contracted by a company as their affiliated athlete, they put the company as their "place of work" in their bio, and the company creates a "skating club" in their organization structure where the skaters belong to.

When a skater doesn't have a contract with a company as their affiliated athlete, they put their university as their "place of study" and the university usually has a skating club where they are a member of.

When a skater has graduated (no more school) and no contract with a company, they put the skating club where they "skate at" and is a member of in their affiliation, like MF Academy and Kinoshita Academy. Kinoshita Academy specifically seems to have a different arrangement with their skaters who are still in school / university, they tend to put Kinoshita Academy instead of the school / university they are studying at.

For example, the MF Academy students Club / affiliations:

Ami Nakai: Tokio Inkarami
Ami has an active affiliation contract with Tokio Inkarami, and so, belong to Tokio Inkarami's skating club launched in 2023 (currently alongside Rio Nakata).

Rinka Watanabe: SanwaKenso / Hosei University
Rinka likely has an active affiliation contract with SanwaKenso, and still studies at Hosei University and belongs to their university skating club. Rinka was reported to be 1 of the skaters with Ami and Rio to belong in Tokio Inkarami's skating club launched in 2023 back then, but I assume her contract was not renewed hence the new affiliation + university.

Yuna Aoki: MF Academy
Yuna has graduated from her university (Nihon University) in 2024 so she's not listing that as affiliation. No affiliation contract with any company, so her affiliation is her actual skating club: MF Academy.

Rio Nakata: Tokio Inkarami
Rio has an active affiliation contract with Tokio Inkarami, and so, belong to Tokio Inkarami's skating club launched in 2023 (currently alongside Ami Nakai).

Other companies that has skating clubs and active affiliation contracts with active Japanese skaters:
- OrientalBio: Yuma Kagiyama, Kao Miura, Rio Sumiyoshi (previously Azusa Tanaka/Shingo Nishiyama)
- Sysmex: Kaori Sakamoto, Mai Mihara, Tatsuya Tsuboi, Saki Miyake

- Kinoshita Group: Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara, Mao Shimada, Mone Chiba, Koshiro Shimada (previously Satoko Miyahara)
*note: Kinoshita Group is the Company (and its group companies), while Kinoshita Academy is the skating club. Only select few in the academy are contracted by Kinoshita Group.

- NOEVIR: Wakaba Higuchi
- Aim Services: Shun Sato
- Daichi Juuken Group: Kazuki Tomono
- MIXI: Sota Yamamoto

And of course you know ANA and Toyota, back when Yuzuru and Shoma are still competing. There was a case like Mao Asada, where she was said to have so many sponsor companies, that she chose to affiliate herself with her almamater Chukyo University at the end of her competitive career, instead of choosing just one company to be her affiliation.

There are also companies who officially "sponsor" the skaters but it's not where the skaters work at, like Colantotte (that magnetic necklace company). Clothing companies also tend to engage with skaters on a sponsorship basis, such as adidas, Mizuno, Puma, Under Armour.
 
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Someone more knowledgeable than me should correct this later, but to my understanding the "Club" listed in the ISU bio is usually the place where the skaters:

Thank you so much! This is an amazing explanation. 🙏🏼👏🏼

Is Kinoshita Academy full owned by Kinoshita Group, so that it goes beyond just being a sponsorship or affiliation? I know the rink where they train is called Kinoshita Academy Kyoto Ice Arena, so it seems like maybe Kinoshita Group owns the facilities, pays the coaches' salaries, etc.?

And for Kinoshita Academy skaters who are not yet affiliated with Kinoshita Group, are they still receiving direct or indirect support from Kinoshita Group? Perhaps in the form of free ice time, coaching, etc..
 
Thank you so much! This is an amazing explanation. 🙏🏼👏🏼

Is Kinoshita Academy full owned by Kinoshita Group, so that it goes beyond just being a sponsorship or affiliation? I know the rink where they train is called Kinoshita Academy Kyoto Ice Arena, so it seems like maybe Kinoshita Group owns the facilities, pays the coaches' salaries, etc.?

And for Kinoshita Academy skaters who are not yet affiliated with Kinoshita Group, are they still receiving direct or indirect support from Kinoshita Group? Perhaps in the form of free ice time, coaching, etc..
I'm going to refer to the "Concept" as stated in the Kinoshita Academy website (https://kinoshitaacademy.com/) :

The Kinoshita Skate Academy, operated by the Kinoshita Group, is dedicated to training figure skaters who can compete successfully in international competitions.
Based at the Kyoto rink (Kinoshita Academy Kyoto Ice Arena), which also supports off-ice training, the academy offers instruction under a team structure led by General Manager Mie Hamada.
Through collaboration with international coaches and a well-equipped training environment, the academy aims to develop skaters who possess both the "technical skills" and "expressive abilities" essential for figure skating.
So to answer your question: yes, the Kinoshita Academy is operated by the Kinoshita Group.

The Kyoto Uji Arena rink itself is managed by Patine Leisure Co., Ltd. , and to my knowledge, the rink has existed in Kyoto before the establishment of Kinoshita Academy. After the dispute between Mie Hamada and Nobunari Oda at Kansai University back in 2019, to my knowledge, Mie Hamada moved her base of operations to the Kyoto Uji rink followed by most of her students. The students who were not able to move with her (such as Yuna Shiraiwa who was studying at Kansai University) had to seek out other coaches. I assume this was the foundation of the Kinoshita Academy that we know now, that the Kinoshita Group has worked together with Mie Hamada's students before (Satoko Miyahara was affiliated to Kinoshita Group during her active years), and decided to fully commit in establishing a skating academy, with Hamada as the General Manager.

Regarding the name of the rink, I assume that Kinoshita Academy (operated by Kinoshita Group) bought the naming rights of the rink, similar to how Sysmex bought and now owns the naming rights of the new year-round skating rink in Kobe (now named Sysmex Kobe Ice Campus) from April 2025 - March 2030. It's likely that they bought the operating rights to the rink too, and obtain income from when other people are using the rink (there is another skating club aside from Kinoshita Academy using the rink, and also there are curling and speed skating there).

So Kinoshita Academy exists as its own company / management office (focusing on training figure skaters) but with operations funding from Kinoshita Group. Kinoshita Group (or their subsidiaries, like KSM) then has affiliation contracts with individual skaters, separate from their support for Kinoshita Academy, but it's not a stretch to say that Kinoshita Academy skaters are more likely to catch the eye and support from Kinoshita Group compared to skaters not in the academy, with few exceptions.

Regarding support from Kinoshita Group to Kinoshita Academy skaters, I assume the few skaters accepted into the academy are still required to pay academy fees for coaching, rink time and other facilities, but there may be a certain arrangement for their acceptance. It can be something like they are paying a flat lower annual / monthly fee that allows them to benefit from all the facilities Kinoshita Academy has (which is quite a lot), but with the condition that they have to commit to Kinoshita Academy (likely why their affiliation is singularly Kinoshita Academy without any mention of external companies or current university / school) and not affiliate / contract with external companies without the approval of Kinoshita Academy.

And something like they have to agree with the direction Kinoshita Academy sets for them (such as change of disciplines from singles to pairs / ice dance), and the partners they are paired with. If they decide to not continue with the direction, the skater can decide to not continue with the academy and is free to find their way with another coaching team. Of course it's not a one size fits all, like some skaters stayed in the academy despite their pairs / ice dance team-up not working out (Ikura Kushida, Haruna Murakami) while others move out (Sae Shimizu, Nao Kida, Azusa Tanaka).


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Please feel free to correct me if there's any misinformation in my post btw.
 
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I gotta say I completely fell in love with Ikura Kushida. She's got great programs this season and she's so naturally elegant, has beautiful posture and great movement quality. Also skating skills ofc. Any other fans of her?

I'm reposting her skates from the Summer Cup that tsuyoboogie posted some time ago in the Summer Cup thread (I hope it's OK).



 
I gotta say I completely fell in love with Ikura Kushida. She's got great programs this season and she's so naturally elegant, has beautiful posture and great movement quality. Also skating skills ofc. Any other fans of her?

I'm reposting her skates from the Summer Cup that tsuyoboogie posted some time ago in the Summer Cup thread (I hope it's OK).




Yes, me. And I can't wait to see her in ice dance with Koshiro Shimada.
 
I gotta say I completely fell in love with Ikura Kushida. She's got great programs this season and she's so naturally elegant, has beautiful posture and great movement quality. Also skating skills ofc. Any other fans of her?

I'm reposting her skates from the Summer Cup that tsuyoboogie posted some time ago in the Summer Cup thread (I hope it's OK).
I really like her too. Her Little Prince program from a few years ago was one of my favorite FPs that season. Her artistry and maturity stand out in a big way, especially among juniors.
 
Did Mone go back to her SP from last season? Her bio has been updated but it says "Last Dance" for the short for the new season...
 
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