2012 Finlandia Trophy
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2012) |
2012 Finlandia Trophy | |
---|---|
Type: | Senior International |
Date: | October 4 – October 7 |
Season: | 2012–13 |
Location: | Espoo, Finland |
Host: | Finnish Figure Skating Association |
Venue: | Barona Arena |
Champions | |
Men's singles: Yuzuru Hanyu | |
Ladies' singles: Julia Lipnitskaia | |
Synchronized skating: Team Unique | |
Previous: 2011 Finlandia Trophy | |
Next: 2013 Finlandia Trophy |
The 2012 Finlandia Trophy was an international figure skating competition in the 2012–13 season. The 17th edition of the annual event was held October 4–7, 2012 in Espoo, Finland.[1] Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, ice dancing and synchronized skating on the senior level.[2]
Competitors
The initial entries were:[3]
Overview
Spain's Javier Fernández won the men's short program ahead of Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu and the United States' Richard Dornbush.[4][5] Hanyu placed first in the free program and won the title while Dornbush moved up to take the silver and Fernandez slipped to third.[6][5] Johnny Weir made his return to competition at Finlandia Trophy after a two-season absence.[6]
In the ladies' event, Finland's Kiira Korpi was first in the short program, followed by Russia's Julia Lipnitskaia and the United States' Mirai Nagasu.[7][5] Julia Lipnitskaia won the free program and the overall ladies' event.[8][5]
Canada's Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir withdrew before the event due to a slight muscle strain in Moir's neck.[9] Russia's Ekaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev won the short dance ahead of Italy's Anna Cappellini / Luca Lanotte and the United States' Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue.[10][5] Cappellini and Lanotte were first in the free dance by a small margin but it was not enough to overtake Bobrova and Soloviev for the gold.[8][5][2]
In the synchronized skating competition, included in Finlandia Trophy for the first time, the Finnish Team Unique took gold by a margin of 2.5&nsp;points to the fellow Finnish Rockettes, who in turn were closely followed by the Russian Paradise by a margin of only 0.6 points.[2]
Results[2]
Men
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yuzuru Hanyu | Japan | 248.13 | 2 | 75.57 | 1 | 172.56 |
2 | Richard Dornbush | United States | 239.99 | 3 | 71.19 | 2 | 168.80 |
3 | Javier Fernández | Spain | 235.20 | 1 | 80.77 | 3 | 154.43 |
4 | Johnny Weir | United States | 201.42 | 4 | 69.03 | 5 | 132.39 |
5 | Zhan Bush | Russia | 194.29 | 5 | 69.01 | 7 | 125.28 |
6 | Misha Ge | Uzbekistan | 187.92 | 6 | 61.32 | 6 | 126.60 |
7 | Kento Nakamura | Japan | 187.42 | 9 | 54.14 | 4 | 133.28 |
8 | Adrian Schultheiss | Sweden | 177.84 | 7 | 57.30 | 9 | 120.54 |
9 | Maciej Cieplucha | Poland | 177.82 | 10 | 53.59 | 8 | 124.23 |
10 | Valtter Virtanen | Finland | 151.93 | 8 | 56.81 | 11 | 95.12 |
11 | Mikael Redin | Switzerland | 146.27 | 12 | 47.40 | 10 | 98.87 |
12 | Matthias Versluis | Finland | 144.92 | 11 | 52.71 | 12 | 92.21 |
13 | Julian Lagus | Finland | 134.46 | 13 | 43.79 | 13 | 90.67 |
14 | Viktor Zubik | Finland | 131.06 | 14 | 41.53 | 14 | 89.53 |
15 | Samuel Koppel | Estonia | 118.90 | 15 | 38.20 | 15 | 80.70 |
Ladies
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Julia Lipnitskaia | Russia | 188.23 | 2 | 64.05 | 1 | 124.18 |
2 | Kiira Korpi | Finland | 181.16 | 1 | 69.27 | 2 | 111.89 |
3 | Mirai Nagasu | United States | 163.09 | 3 | 52.75 | 3 | 110.34 |
4 | Natalia Popova | Ukraine | 153.39 | 5 | 48.74 | 4 | 104.65 |
5 | Isabelle Olsson | Sweden | 151.67 | 4 | 51.18 | 5 | 100.49 |
6 | Juulia Turkkila | Finland | 143.04 | 6 | 47.04 | 6 | 96.00 |
7 | Sonia Lafuente | Spain | 126.80 | 7 | 45.75 | 7 | 81.09 |
8 | Beata Papp | Finland | 118.95 | 8 | 45.59 | 8 | 73.36 |
9 | Fleur Maxwell | Luxembourg | 112.57 | 9 | 44.93 | 10 | 67.64 |
10 | Alisa Mikonsaari | Finland | 112.04 | 11 | 39.54 | 9 | 72.50 |
11 | Jasmine Costa | Estonia | 109.46 | 10 | 42.66 | 11 | 66.80 |
Synchronized skating
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Team Unique | Finland | 60.43 | 1 | 60.43 |
2 | Rockettes | Finland | 57.95 | 2 | 57.95 |
3 | Paradise | Russia | 57.34 | 3 | 57.34 |
4 | Marigold IceUnity | Finland | 51.80 | 4 | 51.80 |
5 | Revolutions | Finland | 46.39 | 5 | 46.39 |
References
- ^ "Finlandia Trophy Announcement". International Skating Union. 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Full event protocol". Finnish Figure Skating Association. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 16, 2012.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Entries". Finnish Figure Skating Association. September 26, 2012. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012.
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Pirkkalainen, Jyrki (October 5, 2012). "Fernandez steals Weir's thunder in Finlandia short". Icenetwork.
- ^ a b c d e f Flade, Tatjana (October 8, 2012). "2012 Finlandia Trophy". Golden Skate.
- ^ a b Pirkkalainen, Jyrki (October 6, 2012). "Humble Hanyu wins Finlandia with grace on, off ice". Icenetwork.
- ^ Pirkkalainen, Jyrki (October 6, 2012). "Flaxen-haired Korpi delights Finn crowd with win". Icenetwork.
- ^ a b Pirkkalainen, Jyrki (October 7, 2012). "Russia wins ladies, dance on last day at Finlandia". Icenetwork.
- ^ "Virtue, Moir withdraw from Finlandia Trophy". Skate Canada. Icenetwork. October 4, 2012.
- ^ Pirkkalainen, Jyrki (October 6, 2012). "Bobrova, Soloviev dot Finlandia lead with polka". Icenetwork.
External links
- Finlandia Trophy at the Finnish Figure Skating Association