Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Last year, there were skaters invited to the nextgen competition who didn’t eventually make the team or at least not as it is posted on the SC website. Men - Jeffrey Chen, Petro Chenoratov; Women - Megane Vallières, Calissa Adlem, Gabrielle Jugnauth, Kaydee Kaley, Kaylee Sun; Pairs. The 2 teams not listed were because broke up (Kent/Laliberté Laurent) and I think injury (Wong/Conforti); Ice dance - Kalaganis/Deveau, Proulx/Cincon-Debout, Theroux/Gossard, Podgornei/Caron.According to the below document, the 2026 NextGen Team will be announced in April 2026. Last year, I made a note and they didn’t update the website with the team till May 2025.
My understanding from previous years was that the Next Gen competition was meant to form part of the selection process for the Next Gen team. That it why it confused me that team members were being announced now. I am kind of still confused about what is going on.Last year, there were skaters invited to the nextgen competition who didn’t eventually make the team or at least not as it is posted on the SC website. Men - Jeffrey Chen, Petro Chenoratov; Women - Megane Vallières, Calissa Adlem, Gabrielle Jugnauth, Kaydee Kaley, Kaylee Sun; Pairs. The 2 teams not listed were because broke up (Kent/Laliberté Laurent) and I think injury (Wong/Conforti); Ice dance - Kalaganis/Deveau, Proulx/Cincon-Debout, Theroux/Gossard, Podgornei/Caron.
So, perhaps SC has changed the process on team selection. But April seems to be early. Particularly with pairs and dance with many new teams forming this spring.
I don't see LaLa bowing out now that they will finally be Canada #1.I think LaLa are aiming for a full cycle so we will see next year how invested IAM is in what could be the Canadian number 1 team. When they did have Virtue and Moir, they did well for them.
I know it would be difficult, and clunky, to word it to include him every time the team is mentioned as a whole, but I do wonder how the lone male skater on the team feels reading that with its constant repetition of "the girls"?Robert Brodie interviews Olivia Di Giandomenico and Julia Bernardo, co-captains of Les Supremes:
![]()
'So much pride and happiness'
One year after a disappointing finish at their biggest event of the season, Canada's Les Supremes are back on top of the synchronized skating worldrwbrodiewrites.substack.com
you can see our discussion about this in the country change threadFrom the Wikipedia page, it sounds like Paul Ayer will represent Mexico:
“In April 2026, Ayer announced that he had acquired Mexican citizenship.”
Maybe, this is his way to make it to the 2030 Olympic Games![]()
Arghyou can see our discussion about this in the country change thread
I think it could be wanting to be on the more competitive teams. Their home country may not be as strong in synchro, or they might not feel like their country's top team is a good fit for them.Otherwise, an interesting article about the training process of a team. Why, I wonder, would skaters move from other countries to join them? Do they plan to coach teams themselves eventually in their home countries and want to learn with the best? It's not as if a synchro team retires en masse to skate in shows as a team, so that wouldn't be their goal?
I am curious about who are the "international" people.I know it would be difficult, and clunky, to word it to include him every time the team is mentioned as a whole, but I do wonder how the lone male skater on the team feels reading that with its constant repetition of "the girls"?
Otherwise, an interesting article about the training process of a team. Why, I wonder, would skaters move from other countries to join them? Do they plan to coach teams themselves eventually in their home countries and want to learn with the best? It's not as if a synchro team retires en masse to skate in shows as a team, so that wouldn't be their goal?
The article mentions that the team has two skaters from Japan and the US who moved to Montreal to join them. I don't know if nationality or citizenship matters in synchro as a team sport, considering the number of players on hockey etc teams who come from other countries (but then play for their own country's team at the Olympics), and both girls may have family ties to Canada. I was just curious. I hadn't heard of that happening in synchro before.I am curious about who are the "international" people.
For Les Supremes, Rikako Fukase who represented Japan in Ice Dance. She trained at IAM while competing in ice dance, and Les Supremes are the IAM team. So she probably got involved through that.I am curious about who are the "international" people.
That sounds like a more logical reason than the ones I tossed around. With Pascal Denis coaching both disciplines, he may keep an eye out among the dancers as a recruiter for his synchro teams also.For Les Supremes, Rikako Fukase who represented Japan in Ice Dance. She trained at IAM while competing in ice dance, and Les Supremes are the IAM team. So she probably got involved through that.
wouldn't matter until it's an olympic sportThe article mentions that the team has two skaters from Japan and the US who moved to Montreal to join them. I don't know if nationality or citizenship matters in synchro as a team sport, considering the number of players on hockey etc teams who come from other countries (but then play for their own country's team at the Olympics), and both girls may have family ties to Canada. I was just curious. I hadn't heard of that happening in synchro before.
makes sense... forget about my traditional Italian family relationships thenFor Les Supremes, Rikako Fukase who represented Japan in Ice Dance. She trained at IAM while competing in ice dance, and Les Supremes are the IAM team. So she probably got involved through that.
Yes, I thought of that but figured I'd leave that Olympic-synchro can of worms closedwouldn't matter until it's an olympic sport![]()
