![]() Alexander Zhulin in 2010 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Full name | Alexander Viacheslavovich Zhulin | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Other names | Aleksandr Zhulin Sasha Zhulin | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Born | (1963-07-20)20 July 1963 (age 62) Moscow,Russian SFSR, Soviet Union | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Height | 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Figure skating career | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Country | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Skating club | Profsoyuz Moskva / Spartak Moskva | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Retired | 1994 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Alexander (Sasha) Viacheslavovich Zhulin (Russian:Александр Вячеславович Жулинⓘ; born 20 July 1963) is a Russianice dancing coach and former competitor. WithMaya Usova, he is a two-time Olympic medalist (1994 silver,1992 bronze), the1993 World champion, and the1993 European champion. They also won gold medals atSkate America,NHK Trophy,Nations Cup, andWinter Universiade. They represented the Soviet Union, the Unified Team, and Russia.
CoachNatalia Dubova paired him withMaya Usova in 1980. In 1988, they made their first appearance at theEuropean Championships, placing fourth. The next season, they won silver at the1989 European Championships inBirmingham, England and silver in theirWorld Championships debut, inParis. The next two seasons, they took bronze at Worlds.
At the1991 World Championships inMunich, Germany, they were very close to winning. They led after both the compulsory dances and original dance (although finishing 2nd in the original dance portion), and in the free dance received 4 1st place ordinals from the 9 judges. Nonetheless, a strange ordinal situation led to them finishing only 3rd in the free dance and dropping to 3rd overall behind the Duchensays and Klimova and Ponomarenko.[citation needed] They later described their 1991 free dance as "being aboutPaganini and his muse".[1] Zhulin wore brown tights and a loose beige shirt. Kestnbaum also reported that they skated their program with "intense emotion" and created "an overall aura of Romanticism and uncanniness", using little runs and turns on their toepicks, knee slides, and "sensuous flowing and intertwining movements" that were enhanced by their billowing costumes.[1] Kestnbaum also reported that as a "flamboyant performer", Zhulin displayed his partner as much as he displayed himself.[1]
In the 1991–92 season, Usova/Zhulin won silver at the1992 European Championships inLausanne, Switzerland and then captured their first Olympic medal, bronze, at the1992 Winter Olympics inAlbertville, France.
Usova and Zhulin's free skate during the 1991–1992 season, set to music fromThe Four Seasons byVivaldi, centered on the theme of statues coming to life, was full of images of symmetry, parallelism, and equality. Figure skating writer Ellyn Kestnbaum described their program in this way: "It is not about sexual difference, but it does convey sexual attraction. These are passionate, eroticized statues, and the skaters' gazes are focused centripetally into the relationship, at each other's bodies and into each other's eyes".[2]
Usova/Zhulin ended their season with silver at the1992 World Championships inOakland, California. They moved with Dubova from Moscow toLake Placid, New York in September 1992.[3][4]
In the 1992–93 season, Usova/Zhulin won the1993 European Championships inHelsinki and the1993 World Championships inPrague.
The next season, they were third at the1994 European Championships inCopenhagen, behindJayne Torvill /Christopher Dean andOksana Grishuk /Evgeni Platov. They had been sitting in 1st place and seemingly ensured the title as Grishuk & Platov were mathematically out of gold medal contention, after Torvill & Dean were placed behind them in the free dance 5 judges to 4. However Grishuk & Platov won the free dance and changed the ordinals between Usova & Zhulin, and Torvill & Dean, dropping Usova & Zhulin to a 3rd-place finish. This loss seemed to indicate a loss of their #1 Russian status and instilled fear in their chances for the Olympic Gold medal. Their new free program to a collection of Nina Rota tunes also received negative reviews from fans and judges alike as it was a sharp departure from their previous work, and many critics felt it did not suit their sensual and elegant style.
At the1994 Winter Olympics inLillehammer, Norway, they won the silver medal behind Grishuk/Platov. They tied for 1st place with Grishuk & Platov in the compulsory dances, and went into the free dance tied for overall 1st with Torvill & Dean who won the original dance, setting up an intense 3-way battle for gold. Unlike the Europeans all 3 teams in position to win gold simply by winning the free dance. In the free dance they received 3 1st place ordinals and 6 2nd place ordinals, but lost the gold to Grishuk & Platov who received 5 1st place ordinals, 1 2nd place ordinal, and 3 3rd place ordinals, losing the free dance and gold based on the majority rule, despite having no judges place them 3rd and a lower total of ordinals than Grishuk & Platov. Had 1 of 3 judges changed their mark by .1 Usova & Zhulin would have won the gold. Upset about the controversial Olympic loss, Usova & Zhulin withdrew from the 1994 World Figure Skating Championships, which they had intended to be their final competitive event.[citation needed] Usova and Zhulin were known for excelling technically and artistically and according to writer Ellyn Kestnbaum, "leaned toward drama and passion".[1]
Usova/Zhulin skated together professionally from 1994 to 1997. They toured withChampions on Ice and won theWorld Professional Championships. Zhulin then skated with former rival, Oksana Grishuk, for one year. His former partner, Maya Usova, would compete for many years with former rival, Evgeni Platov.

After retiring, Zhulin became a skating coach and choreographer. He coached inNew Jersey[5] before moving back to Russia in 2006.[6] He is based inMoscow and often coaches in collaboration with Oleg Volkov.[7] Zhulin has also been involved in Russian ice shows, such asIce Age.[8]
Among others, Zhulin has coached:
His current students include:
Zhulin marriedMaya Usova in 1986[4] but the two eventually divorced.[32] He was romantically involved with competitive rivalOksana Grishuk.[33][34] In 2000, he marriedTatiana Navka, with whom he has a daughter, Sasha, born in May 2000.[9]
Zhulin became an American citizen in 2006.[35] In April 2010, he and Navka filed for divorce.[7][36] He marriedNatalia Mikhailova in August 2018.[37] Their daughter, Ekaterina, was born on 10 January 2013 in Moscow.[38][39]
In 2021, he connected theCOVID-19 pandemic to theBlack Lives Matter movement andtransgender athletes, saying "the world is going to hell".[40]
In 2023, Zhulin attacked American skatersAdam Rippon andAshley Wagner:[41]
We don't care what they think of us. This "Eva Rippon" [Eve; playing on Adam and Eve] is a boy whose dick got in the way of completing his jumps, so he never completed them and achieved nothing.
If he had done the operation [gender transition] on time and would have called himself "Eva Rippon", then he would have skated much better in women's single skating.
The second girl Ashley Wagner is also offended by God. She skated great, but she couldn't jump, she didn't twist. Naturally, they hate the Russians [who can jump].
These two people are not the cream of society to have the right to give their opinion about figure skating and about our great country. So I don't give a fuck about their opinion.
According toOleksandra Nazarova /Maksym Nikitin, Zhulin did not contact his former students after they survived weeks of Russia's bombardment of their hometown,Kharkiv, and documented what they had experienced in February and March 2022.[42] In late March 2022, Zhulin gave an interview to the Russian media in which he dismissed Nazarova and Nikitin as "brainwashed".[43]
Following sanctions announced by Ukraine in April 2023, Zhulin said: "It's like Katsalapov being banned from entering Uganda. Roughly the same. Who needs Ukraine, no one is going there for the next ten years. I hope sooner. I hope that it will already have another name."[44]


| Season | Original dance | Free dance[45] | Exhibition[46] |
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| 1993–94 |
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| 1992–93 |
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| 1991–92 |
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| 1990–91 |
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| 1989–90 |
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| 1988–89 |
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| 1987–88 |
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| Post-1994[46] |
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| Season | Programs |
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| 1998–99 |
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With Usova
| International | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Event | 82–83 | 83–84 | 84–85 | 85–86 | 86–87 | 87–88 | 88–89 | 89–90 | 90–91 | 91–92 | 92–93 | 93–94 |
| Olympics | 3rd | 2nd | ||||||||||
| Worlds | 2nd | 3rd | 3rd | 2nd | 1st | |||||||
| Europeans | 4th | 2nd | 2nd | 3rd | 2nd | 1st | 3rd | |||||
| Skate America | 1st | 1st | ||||||||||
| Nations Cup | 1st | |||||||||||
| NHK Trophy | 2nd | 1st | 1st | 1st | ||||||||
| Moscow News | 6th | 4th | 3rd | 2nd | ||||||||
| Goodwill Games | 2nd | |||||||||||
| Nebelhorn | 1st | |||||||||||
| St. Gervais | 1st | |||||||||||
| St. Ivel / Electric | 1st | 1st | ||||||||||
| Universiade | 1st | 2nd | ||||||||||
| National | ||||||||||||
| Soviet Champ. | 2nd | 5th | 3rd | 3rd | 3rd | 3rd | 2nd | 1st | ||||
| Spartakiada | 1st | |||||||||||
| USSR Cup | 3rd | |||||||||||