- Joined
- Jan 5, 2019
Pupils of Tutberidze and their records
Yuliya Lipnitskaya.
Everyone remembers the soulful routines of Yuliya Lipnitskaya at the Olympic Games in Sochi. In addition to the fact that Yuliya, together with the Russian team, managed to ascend the top step of the Olympic pedestal, the figure skater also managed to set a kind of age record. In 2014,Yuliya Lipnitskaya “took” the status of the youngest Olympic single champion from Tara Lipinski, winning the title in the Sochi 2014 team tournament at the age of 15 years and 249 days. Thus, Lipnitskaya is the youngest Olympic single ladies champion in the history of world figure skating.
Yevgeniya Medvyedeva.
Everyone knows that now for the second season, Yevgeniya is training under the guidance of Canadian coach Brian Orser, but, nevertheless, Zhenya achieved the greatest success in her career precisely under the leadership of Eteri Georgiyevna. According to the previous grading system, Medvyedeva is the first skater in the history of women's figure skating who scored more than 160 points in the free program, more than 80 points in the short program, and more than 240 in total points. The owner of historical world records in the free program and the total points. She broke world records in the short and free programs 4 times, in terms of total points - 3 times. Beat the world records of Kim Yong-ah and Mao Siege. Since the season 2018/2019 when a new rating system was put into place, those records that were set before this season are automatically recognised as historical. Let me remind you that Yevgeniya set two world records that nobody managed to beat according to the old grading system - 160.46 points for the free program and the total score of 241.31 at the 2017 World Team Championship.
Alina Zagitova.
In fact, Alina is the owner of several records.
First, her score of 82.92 points for a short program at the Olympics-2018 is recognised as historical and is included in the so-called chronicle of world figure skating, and Alina is the first and only skater to break the 82-point threshold in the short program under the old judging system and the first skater who scored 80 points in the short and more than 150 in the free program according to the new judging system.
Second, currently Zagitova holds world records in the free program (158.50) and the total score (238.43).
Third, Zagitova is the second after Kim Yong-ah and the youngest skater who managed to win at all major starts, the first Russian skater who won all the titles in the world figure skating both at the junior and senior levels.
Elisabet Tursynbayeva.
Unlike previous athletes, Elisabet competes for the national team of Kazakhstan, but trains in Moscow with Eteri Tutberidze. Last season Tursynbayeva significantly improved, and silver at the 2019 World Championship serves as confirmation of this. By the way, it was there that the figure skater performed the quad Salchow and became the first girl in history to successfully complete this jump in official competitions at senior level, and indeed Elisabet is the first girl to complete the quadruple jump in senior competitions.
Alyona Kostornaya.
Alyona Kostornaya is the embodiment of tenderness, grace and incredible beauty on ice. At the same time, tshe also has a record that no one has yet managed to beat. In the final of the Junior Grand Prix series in the short program, Alena scored 76.32 points. I note that according to the results of two programs Kostornaya won this tournament.
Anna Shcherbakova.
The current champion of Russia began her first adult season at the Lombardia Trophy in Italy, where she won a fairly confident victory. And immediately, at this senior debut for herself, she set a record - Anna became the first senior figure skater in history to perform the quad Lutz at competitions under the auspices of the International Skating Union.
A season earlier, on October 6, 2018, in the free program at the second stage of the Russian Figure Skating Cup in Yoshkar-Ola, she jumped two quad Lutz's (separately and in a cascade with a triple Toeloop), thus becoming the first skater in the world with two successful quad jumps in one program. In addition, Shcherbakova set a world record in the free program, gaining 159.43 points for her routine, which was not counted however since the competition was domestic.
Aleksandra Trusova.
“Who doesn’t know Sasha?” - “Everyone knows Sasha!”
Aleksandra Trusova twice entered the Guinness Book of Records as the first performer of a quad Toeloop and Lutz. The quad Toeloop and the quad Lutz, first performed at official competitions by Russian figure skater Aleksandra Trusova, are recognised as records and listed in the Guinness Books of Records.
“I am very glad that I got in the Guinness Book of Records”, Trusova said. "It is a great honour to be mentioned among such incredible legends of Soviet sports as Sergey Bubka and Irina Rodnina. It, of course, is even more motivating, you have to be worthy of it. "
The certificates received by the skater testify to the consolidation of the first successful official execution of these jumps for Alexandra. Previously, among the Guinness champion figure skaters, only Mickey Ando was present with a quadruple Salchow, who, by the way, Trusova performed as the second after the Japanese. Alexandra performed the quad Toeloop on March 10, 2018, the first among women at the Junior World Championships in Sofia (Bulgaria). 7 months later, the Russian girl wrote history again, performing the first female quadruple Lutz at official starts - the Grand Prix stage in Yerevan (Armenia, October 12, 2018).
Trusova was also the first to perform two quadruple jumps in one program: a quad Toeloop and a cascade of quad - triple Toeloops. Sasha is the current record holder of the ISU in all three competition modes: in the short and free programs and in total. Moreover, her maximum technical score in the free program - 92.35 points - is a record not only among juniors, but also among seniors.
Well done, girls! Let the new season bring you new victories and records. Good luck
-----
From: https://www.sports.ru/tribuna/blogs/sportwithmari/2573846.html
Yuliya Lipnitskaya.
Everyone remembers the soulful routines of Yuliya Lipnitskaya at the Olympic Games in Sochi. In addition to the fact that Yuliya, together with the Russian team, managed to ascend the top step of the Olympic pedestal, the figure skater also managed to set a kind of age record. In 2014,Yuliya Lipnitskaya “took” the status of the youngest Olympic single champion from Tara Lipinski, winning the title in the Sochi 2014 team tournament at the age of 15 years and 249 days. Thus, Lipnitskaya is the youngest Olympic single ladies champion in the history of world figure skating.
Yevgeniya Medvyedeva.
Everyone knows that now for the second season, Yevgeniya is training under the guidance of Canadian coach Brian Orser, but, nevertheless, Zhenya achieved the greatest success in her career precisely under the leadership of Eteri Georgiyevna. According to the previous grading system, Medvyedeva is the first skater in the history of women's figure skating who scored more than 160 points in the free program, more than 80 points in the short program, and more than 240 in total points. The owner of historical world records in the free program and the total points. She broke world records in the short and free programs 4 times, in terms of total points - 3 times. Beat the world records of Kim Yong-ah and Mao Siege. Since the season 2018/2019 when a new rating system was put into place, those records that were set before this season are automatically recognised as historical. Let me remind you that Yevgeniya set two world records that nobody managed to beat according to the old grading system - 160.46 points for the free program and the total score of 241.31 at the 2017 World Team Championship.
Alina Zagitova.
In fact, Alina is the owner of several records.
First, her score of 82.92 points for a short program at the Olympics-2018 is recognised as historical and is included in the so-called chronicle of world figure skating, and Alina is the first and only skater to break the 82-point threshold in the short program under the old judging system and the first skater who scored 80 points in the short and more than 150 in the free program according to the new judging system.
Second, currently Zagitova holds world records in the free program (158.50) and the total score (238.43).
Third, Zagitova is the second after Kim Yong-ah and the youngest skater who managed to win at all major starts, the first Russian skater who won all the titles in the world figure skating both at the junior and senior levels.
Elisabet Tursynbayeva.
Unlike previous athletes, Elisabet competes for the national team of Kazakhstan, but trains in Moscow with Eteri Tutberidze. Last season Tursynbayeva significantly improved, and silver at the 2019 World Championship serves as confirmation of this. By the way, it was there that the figure skater performed the quad Salchow and became the first girl in history to successfully complete this jump in official competitions at senior level, and indeed Elisabet is the first girl to complete the quadruple jump in senior competitions.
Alyona Kostornaya.
Alyona Kostornaya is the embodiment of tenderness, grace and incredible beauty on ice. At the same time, tshe also has a record that no one has yet managed to beat. In the final of the Junior Grand Prix series in the short program, Alena scored 76.32 points. I note that according to the results of two programs Kostornaya won this tournament.
Anna Shcherbakova.
The current champion of Russia began her first adult season at the Lombardia Trophy in Italy, where she won a fairly confident victory. And immediately, at this senior debut for herself, she set a record - Anna became the first senior figure skater in history to perform the quad Lutz at competitions under the auspices of the International Skating Union.
A season earlier, on October 6, 2018, in the free program at the second stage of the Russian Figure Skating Cup in Yoshkar-Ola, she jumped two quad Lutz's (separately and in a cascade with a triple Toeloop), thus becoming the first skater in the world with two successful quad jumps in one program. In addition, Shcherbakova set a world record in the free program, gaining 159.43 points for her routine, which was not counted however since the competition was domestic.
Aleksandra Trusova.
“Who doesn’t know Sasha?” - “Everyone knows Sasha!”
Aleksandra Trusova twice entered the Guinness Book of Records as the first performer of a quad Toeloop and Lutz. The quad Toeloop and the quad Lutz, first performed at official competitions by Russian figure skater Aleksandra Trusova, are recognised as records and listed in the Guinness Books of Records.
“I am very glad that I got in the Guinness Book of Records”, Trusova said. "It is a great honour to be mentioned among such incredible legends of Soviet sports as Sergey Bubka and Irina Rodnina. It, of course, is even more motivating, you have to be worthy of it. "
The certificates received by the skater testify to the consolidation of the first successful official execution of these jumps for Alexandra. Previously, among the Guinness champion figure skaters, only Mickey Ando was present with a quadruple Salchow, who, by the way, Trusova performed as the second after the Japanese. Alexandra performed the quad Toeloop on March 10, 2018, the first among women at the Junior World Championships in Sofia (Bulgaria). 7 months later, the Russian girl wrote history again, performing the first female quadruple Lutz at official starts - the Grand Prix stage in Yerevan (Armenia, October 12, 2018).
Trusova was also the first to perform two quadruple jumps in one program: a quad Toeloop and a cascade of quad - triple Toeloops. Sasha is the current record holder of the ISU in all three competition modes: in the short and free programs and in total. Moreover, her maximum technical score in the free program - 92.35 points - is a record not only among juniors, but also among seniors.
Well done, girls! Let the new season bring you new victories and records. Good luck
-----
From: https://www.sports.ru/tribuna/blogs/sportwithmari/2573846.html