ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating

(Redirected from ISU Grand Prix)

The ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating (known as ISU Champions Series from 1995 to 1997) is a series of senior international figure skating competitions organized by the International Skating Union. The invitational series was inaugurated in 1995,[1] incorporating several previously existing events. Medals are awarded in men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The junior-level equivalent is the ISU Junior Grand Prix.

Summary

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Competitions

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Currently, the sanctioned competitions for the Grand Prix are:

  •   Skate America. First held in 1979 as the Norton Skate, this event has been part of the series since 1995 and its location changes yearly.
  •   Skate Canada International. First held in 1973, this event has been part of the series since 1995 and its location changes yearly. It was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  •   Cup of China. This event was created in 2003 and joined the Grand Prix series in the same year. It has been held in numerous cities. It was replaced by the Grand Prix of Helsinki in 2018, by the Gran Premio d'Italia in 2021, and by the MK John Wilson Trophy in 2022.
  •   Grand Prix de France (known as the Grand Prix International de Paris 1987–93, the Trophée de France 1994–95, 2016, the Trophée Lalique 1996–2003, the Trophée Éric Bompard 2004–15, and the Internationaux de France 2017–21). First held in 1987, this event has been part of the series since 1995. From 1987 to 2014, it was almost always held in Paris. Since 2014, it has been held in Bordeaux (2014–15), Paris (2016), Grenoble (2017–19, 2021), and Angers (2022–23). It was cancelled after the first day in 2015 due to the November 2015 Paris attacks; the short program results were later confirmed as the final results. It was also cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  •   NHK Trophy. First held in 1979, this event has been part of the series since 1995. The location changes yearly.
  •   Grand Prix of Finland. The 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki replaced the Cup of China in 2018. The Grand Prix of Espoo replaced the Rostelecom Cup in 2022 after the Rostelecom Cup was cancelled due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  • Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final (known as the Champions Series Final from 1995 to 1997). This event was created in 1995 to serve as the concluding event and features the top six qualifiers in each discipline from the six earlier competitions. The event adopted its current name in the 1998–99 season. Its location changes yearly. It was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Discontinued competitions

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Background

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Fall international competitions such as Skate America, organized by the skating federations of their host countries, had been held for many years prior to being organized into a series as separate individual events. Following the Nancy Kerrigan attack in 1994, television coverage of skating was saturated with made-for-TV professional skating events, while the traditional "amateur" or "eligible" competitions were neglected. In order to remedy this situation, in 1995, the skating federations from the United States, Canada, Germany, France, and Japan began to plan their events as a series with cooperative marketing of the television rights in those countries, and with prize money funded by the sale of those rights. At this point, the International Skating Union stepped in and asserted its ownership of the international television rights to the series.

When it was first created in the 1995–1996 skating season, the series was known as the ISU Champions Series. It did not become known as the Grand Prix of Figure Skating until the 1998–1999 season, when the ISU gained the rights to use that name.

It was originally composed of five events, held in the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, and France. Following the demise of the Prize of Moscow News, last held in 1990, the Russian federation created the Cup of Russia, which increased the number of events to six in 1996, the series' second year. In the fall of 2003, the event in Germany, the Bofrost Cup on Ice, was discontinued, and was replaced with one in China, due to the ISU having negotiated a more favorable television contract in that country.

In 1997, the ISU also created a similar series of developmental events for junior age-eligible skaters. Initially known as the ISU Junior Series, these events are now named the ISU Junior Grand Prix. This season begins before the senior-level one does.

Qualifying

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Skaters are entered in the individual events either by being seeded or by invitation. The seeding of top skaters at Grand Prix events basically takes into account their placement from the previous World Championships, as well as their ISU international ranking. Skaters who are not seeded can be invited by the hosting country and each country can invite up to three of their own skaters for each discipline. This is to give a balanced field throughout the series, as well as allowing the hosting country a chance to showcase their top competitors.

The Grand Prix of Figure Skating uses a points-based system based on results from the selected international events. The top qualifying skaters from each discipline are eligible to compete in the Grand Prix Figure Skating Final. The entry, seeding, and qualification rules for the individual events have varied from year to year, and also between the different disciplines. Currently, skaters are assigned to one or two events.

Starting with the 2003–04 season, the Interim Judging System was introduced for scoring events in the Grand Prix. This later developed into the ISU Judging System, often called the Code of Points (CoP), of figure skating, replacing the previous 6.0 system.

Over the years, the ISU has experimented with different formats for the Grand Prix Final competition. In some years, skaters were required to prepare three different programs rather than the normal two, with the third program being used for a skate-off between the top two finishers in each discipline after the initial rounds. This is no longer the case.

Eligibility

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To be eligible for the senior Grand Prix series, skaters are required to have turned 15 by the preceding July 1 (e.g. July 1, 2009 for the 2009–10 series). A skater must meet the age requirement before it turns July 1 in their place of birth. For example, Adelina Sotnikova was born a few hours into July 1, 1996, in Moscow and consequently, was not eligible to compete until the 2011–12 season.[2]

In 2011, minimum score requirements were added to the senior Grand Prix series and set at two-thirds of the top scores at the 2011 World Championships. Prior to competing in a senior Grand Prix event, skaters must earn the following:[3]

Discipline Minimum
scores
Men's singles 168.60
Women's singles 117.48
Pairs 130.71
Ice dance 111.15

The International Skating Union decided that the minimums do not apply to "host picks", i.e. Canadians Adriana DeSanctis and Elladj Baldé were allowed to compete at their home country's event, 2011 Skate Canada, despite failing to reach the minimums at the 2011 Nebelhorn Trophy.

Gold medalists

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Men's singles

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Year Skate America Skate Canada International Bofrost Cup on Ice Cup of China[a] Grand Prix de France Cup of Russia[b] Grand Prix of Finland[c] NHK Trophy Grand Prix Final
1995   Todd Eldredge   Alexei Urmanov   Vyacheslav Zahorodnyuk   Ilia Kulik   Elvis Stojko   Alexei Urmanov
1996   Todd Eldredge   Elvis Stojko   Alexei Urmanov   Todd Eldredge   Alexei Urmanov   Elvis Stojko   Elvis Stojko
1997   Todd Eldredge   Elvis Stojko   Elvis Stojko   Alexei Yagudin   Alexei Yagudin   Ilia Kulik   Ilia Kulik
1998   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Alexei Yagudin   Alexei Yagudin   Alexei Urmanov   Evgeni Plushenko   Alexei Yagudin
1999   Alexei Yagudin   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Evgeni Plushenko   Evgeni Plushenko
2000   Timothy Goebel   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Evgeni Plushenko   Evgeni Plushenko
2001   Timothy Goebel   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Alexei Yagudin   Evgeni Plushenko   Takeshi Honda   Alexei Yagudin
2002   Brian Joubert   Takeshi Honda   Evgeni Plushenko   Michael Weiss   Evgeni Plushenko   Ilia Klimkin   Evgeni Plushenko
2003   Michael Weiss   Evgeni Plushenko   Timothy Goebel   Evgeni Plushenko   Evgeni Plushenko   Jeffrey Buttle   Emanuel Sandhu
2004   Brian Joubert   Emanuel Sandhu   Jeffrey Buttle   Johnny Weir   Evgeni Plushenko   Johnny Weir   Evgeni Plushenko
2005   Daisuke Takahashi   Emanuel Sandhu   Emanuel Sandhu   Jeffrey Buttle   Evgeni Plushenko   Nobunari Oda   Stéphane Lambiel
2006   Nobunari Oda   Stéphane Lambiel   Evan Lysacek   Brian Joubert   Brian Joubert   Daisuke Takahashi   Brian Joubert
2007   Daisuke Takahashi   Brian Joubert   Johnny Weir   Patrick Chan   Johnny Weir   Daisuke Takahashi   Stéphane Lambiel
2008   Takahiko Kozuka   Patrick Chan   Jeremy Abbott   Patrick Chan   Brian Joubert   Nobunari Oda   Jeremy Abbott
2009   Evan Lysacek   Jeremy Abbott   Nobunari Oda   Nobunari Oda   Evgeni Plushenko   Brian Joubert   Evan Lysacek
2010   Daisuke Takahashi   Patrick Chan   Takahiko Kozuka   Takahiko Kozuka   Tomáš Verner   Daisuke Takahashi   Patrick Chan
2011   Michal Březina   Patrick Chan   Jeremy Abbott   Patrick Chan   Yuzuru Hanyu   Daisuke Takahashi   Patrick Chan
2012   Takahiko Kozuka   Javier Fernández   Tatsuki Machida   Takahito Mura   Patrick Chan   Yuzuru Hanyu   Daisuke Takahashi
2013   Tatsuki Machida   Patrick Chan   Yan Han   Patrick Chan   Tatsuki Machida   Daisuke Takahashi   Yuzuru Hanyu
2014   Tatsuki Machida   Takahito Mura   Maxim Kovtun   Maxim Kovtun   Javier Fernández   Daisuke Murakami   Yuzuru Hanyu
2015   Max Aaron   Patrick Chan   Javier Fernández   Shoma Uno   Javier Fernández   Yuzuru Hanyu   Yuzuru Hanyu
2016   Shoma Uno   Patrick Chan   Patrick Chan   Javier Fernández   Javier Fernández   Yuzuru Hanyu   Yuzuru Hanyu
2017   Nathan Chen   Shoma Uno   Mikhail Kolyada   Javier Fernández   Nathan Chen   Sergei Voronov   Nathan Chen
2018   Nathan Chen   Shoma Uno   Nathan Chen   Yuzuru Hanyu   Yuzuru Hanyu   Shoma Uno   Nathan Chen
2019   Nathan Chen   Yuzuru Hanyu   Jin Boyang   Nathan Chen   Alexander Samarin   Yuzuru Hanyu   Nathan Chen
2020   Nathan Chen   Jin Boyang   Mikhail Kolyada   Yuma Kagiyama
2021   Vincent Zhou   Nathan Chen   Yuma Kagiyama[d]   Yuma Kagiyama   Morisi Kvitelashvili   Shoma Uno
2022   Ilia Malinin   Shoma Uno   Daniel Grassl[e]   Adam Siao Him Fa   Ilia Malinin   Shoma Uno   Shoma Uno
2023   Ilia Malinin   Sōta Yamamoto   Adam Siao Him Fa   Adam Siao Him Fa   Kao Miura   Yuma Kagiyama   Ilia Malinin
2024   Ilia Malinin   Ilia Malinin   Shun Sato   Adam Siao Him Fa   Yuma Kagiyama   Yuma Kagiyama   Ilia Malinin

Women's singles

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Year Skate America Skate Canada International Bofrost Cup on Ice Cup of China[a] Grand Prix de France Cup of Russia[b] Grand Prix of Finland[c] NHK Trophy Grand Prix Final
1995   Michelle Kwan   Michelle Kwan   Michelle Kwan   Josée Chouinard   Chen Lu   Michelle Kwan
1996   Michelle Kwan   Irina Slutskaya   Irina Slutskaya   Michelle Kwan   Irina Slutskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Tara Lipinski
1997   Michelle Kwan   Michelle Kwan   Tanja Szewczenko   Laetitia Hubert   Irina Slutskaya   Tanja Szewczenko   Tara Lipinski
1998   Maria Butyrskaya   Elena Liashenko   Elena Sokolova   Maria Butyrskaya   Elena Sokolova   Tatiana Malinina   Tatiana Malinina
1999   Michelle Kwan   Michelle Kwan   Maria Butyrskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Irina Slutskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Irina Slutskaya
2000   Michelle Kwan   Irina Slutskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Irina Slutskaya   Irina Slutskaya   Irina Slutskaya
2001   Michelle Kwan   Sarah Hughes   Maria Butyrskaya   Maria Butyrskaya   Irina Slutskaya   Tatiana Malinina   Irina Slutskaya
2002   Michelle Kwan   Sasha Cohen   Yoshie Onda   Sasha Cohen   Viktoria Volchkova   Yoshie Onda   Sasha Cohen
2003   Sasha Cohen   Sasha Cohen   Elena Liashenko   Sasha Cohen   Elena Liashenko   Fumie Suguri   Fumie Suguri
2004   Angela Nikodinov   Cynthia Phaneuf   Irina Slutskaya   Joannie Rochette   Irina Slutskaya   Shizuka Arakawa   Irina Slutskaya
2005   Elena Sokolova   Alissa Czisny   Irina Slutskaya   Mao Asada   Irina Slutskaya   Yukari Nakano   Mao Asada
2006   Miki Ando   Joannie Rochette   Júlia Sebestyén   Yuna Kim   Sarah Meier   Mao Asada   Yuna Kim
2007   Kimmie Meissner   Mao Asada   Yuna Kim   Mao Asada   Yuna Kim   Carolina Kostner   Yuna Kim
2008   Yuna Kim   Joannie Rochette   Yuna Kim   Joannie Rochette   Carolina Kostner   Mao Asada   Mao Asada
2009   Yuna Kim   Joannie Rochette   Akiko Suzuki   Yuna Kim   Miki Ando   Miki Ando   Yuna Kim
2010   Kanako Murakami   Alissa Czisny   Miki Ando   Kiira Korpi   Miki Ando   Carolina Kostner   Alissa Czisny
2011   Alissa Czisny   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva   Carolina Kostner   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva   Mao Asada   Akiko Suzuki   Carolina Kostner
2012   Ashley Wagner   Kaetlyn Osmond   Mao Asada   Ashley Wagner   Kiira Korpi   Mao Asada   Mao Asada
2013   Mao Asada   Yulia Lipnitskaya   Anna Pogorilaya   Ashley Wagner   Yulia Lipnitskaya   Mao Asada   Mao Asada
2014   Elena Radionova   Anna Pogorilaya   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva   Elena Radionova   Rika Hongo   Gracie Gold   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva
2015   Evgenia Medvedeva   Ashley Wagner   Mao Asada   Gracie Gold   Elena Radionova   Satoko Miyahara   Evgenia Medvedeva
2016   Ashley Wagner   Evgenia Medvedeva   Elena Radionova   Evgenia Medvedeva   Anna Pogorilaya   Anna Pogorilaya   Evgenia Medvedeva
2017   Satoko Miyahara   Kaetlyn Osmond   Alina Zagitova   Alina Zagitova   Evgenia Medvedeva   Evgenia Medvedeva   Alina Zagitova
2018   Satoko Miyahara   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva   Rika Kihira   Alina Zagitova   Alina Zagitova   Rika Kihira   Rika Kihira
2019   Anna Shcherbakova   Alexandra Trusova   Anna Shcherbakova   Alena Kostornaia   Alexandra Trusova   Alena Kostornaia   Alena Kostornaia
2020   Mariah Bell   Chen Hongyi   Elizaveta Tuktamysheva   Kaori Sakamoto
2021   Alexandra Trusova   Kamila Valieva   Anna Shcherbakova[d]   Anna Shcherbakova   Kamila Valieva   Kaori Sakamoto
2022   Kaori Sakamoto   Rinka Watanabe   Mai Mihara[e]   Loena Hendrickx   Mai Mihara   Kim Ye-lim   Mai Mihara
2023   Loena Hendrickx   Kaori Sakamoto   Hana Yoshida   Isabeau Levito   Kaori Sakamoto   Ava Marie Ziegler   Kaori Sakamoto
2024   Wakaba Higuchi   Kaori Sakamoto   Amber Glenn   Amber Glenn   Hana Yoshida   Kaori Sakamoto   Amber Glenn

Pairs

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Year Skate America Skate Canada International Bofrost Cup on Ice Cup of China[a] Grand Prix de France Cup of Russia[b] Grand Prix of Finland[c] NHK Trophy Grand Prix Final
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021 [d]
2022 [e]
2023
2024

Ice dance

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Year Skate America Skate Canada International Bofrost Cup on Ice Cup of China[a] Grand Prix de France Cup of Russia[b] Grand Prix of Finland[c] NHK Trophy Grand Prix Final
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021 [d]
2022 [e]
2023
2024
Notes
  1. ^ a b c d The Cup of China joined the circuit in 2003, but was cancelled three times: in 2018, 2021 and 2022. Its spots on the calendar were filled that years by the 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki, 2021 Gran Premio d'Italia, and 2022 MK John Wilson Trophy, respectively.
  2. ^ a b c d Known since 2009 as the Rostelecom Cup for commercial purposes. It was discontinued in 2022 when the ISU banned participation by the Figure Skating Federation of Russia in international competitions following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  3. ^ a b c d The Grand Prix of Finland replaced the Cup of China in 2018 and the Rostelecom Cup beginning in 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d The winner of the 2021 Gran Premio d'Italia.
  5. ^ a b c d The winner of the 2022 MK John Wilson Trophy.

Top gold medalists

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Only top ten positions by number of victories (in each discipline) are shown here.

Note
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Skater who at least once participated in three Grand Prix events within a single season, the Grand Prix Final not included.

Medal tables (1995–2024)

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Cumulative medal count

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Russia240205170615
2  United States135156159450
3  Japan11312889330
4  Canada1028593280
5  China606848176
6  France564359158
7  Germany35142170
8  Italy234043106
9  South Korea1131428
10  Ukraine8151841
11  Bulgaria84820
12  Spain76518
13  Switzerland44412
14  Great Britain35715
15  Uzbekistan3148
16  Belgium26412
17  Czech Republic25613
18  Georgia2237
19  Finland21912
20  Lithuania151319
21  Hungary14712
22  Latvia1124
23  Israel010818
24  Kazakhstan0325
25  Poland021315
26  Azerbaijan0134
27  Belarus0112
28  Austria0101
29  Armenia0011
  Australia0011
  Denmark0011
  Estonia0011
  Romania0011
  Sweden0011
Totals (34 entries)8198198192,457

References

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  1. ^ "Figure skating: ISU Grand Prix Series to go ahead, events targeted at domestic skaters". Reuters. 2020-08-05. Retrieved 2020-12-18. The Grand Prix Series, held every year since 1995, is a six-fixture event that qualifies the top six skaters and teams in each discipline for the Grand Prix Final in December.
  2. ^ Vaytsekhovskaya, Elena (December 13, 2010). Елена Буянова: "Сотникова намного лучше, чем была я" [Elena Buianova: "Sotnikova is much better than I was"]. sport-express.ru (in Russian). Retrieved December 19, 2010.
  3. ^ "ISU Grand Prix 2011 - 12 Announcement". International Skating Union. July 2011. Archived from the original on November 27, 2011. Retrieved July 29, 2011.
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