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2017 Skate America

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Figure skating competition held in Lake Placid, New York
2017 Skate America
Type:Grand Prix
Date:November 24 – 26
Season:2017–18
Location:Lake Placid, New York
Host:U.S. Figure Skating
Champions
Men's singles:
United StatesNathan Chen
Ladies' singles:
JapanSatoko Miyahara
Pairs:
GermanyAliona Savchenko /Bruno Massot
Ice dance:
United StatesMaia Shibutani /Alex Shibutani
Navigation
Previous:
2016 Skate America
Next:
2018 Skate America
Previous Grand Prix:
2017 Internationaux de France
Next Grand Prix:
2017-18 Grand Prix Final

The2017Skate America was the sixth event of six in the2017–18 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held inLake Placid,New York, on November 24–26. Medals were awarded in the disciplines ofmen's singles, ladies' singles,pair skating, andice dance. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the2017–18 Grand Prix Final.

Entries

[edit]

The ISU published the preliminary assignments on May 26, 2017.[1][2][3][4]

CountryMenLadiesPairsIce dance
 CanadaLiam Firus
Kevin Reynolds
Roman Sadovsky
Gabrielle DalemanMeagan Duhamel /Eric Radford
Kirsten Moore-Towers /Michael Marinaro
Piper Gilles /Paul Poirier
 ChinaJin Boyang
Yan Han
Li XiangningYu Xiaoyu /Zhang HaoWang Shiyue /Liu Xinyu
 GermanyAliona Savchenko /Bruno Massot
 IsraelDaniel Samohin
 ItalyAnna Cappellini /Luca Lanotte
 JapanTakahito MuraSatoko Miyahara
Kaori Sakamoto
Kana Muramoto /Chris Reed
 RussiaMaxim Kovtun
Sergei Voronov
Alena Leonova
Serafima Sakhanovich
Polina Tsurskaya
Natalia Zabiiako /Alexander EnbertVictoria Sinitsina /Nikita Katsalapov
Tiffany Zahorski /Jonathan Guerreiro
 SlovakiaNicole Rajičová
 United StatesNathan Chen
Ross Miner
Adam Rippon
Karen Chen
Bradie Tennell
Ashley Wagner
Haven Denney /Brandon Frazier
Alexa Scimeca Knierim /Chris Knierim
Deanna Stellato /Nathan Bartholomay
Kaitlin Hawayek /Jean-Luc Baker
Rachel Parsons /Michael Parsons
Maia Shibutani /Alex Shibutani

Changes to preliminary assignments

[edit]
DisciplineWithdrewAddedNotesRef.
DateSkater(s)DateSkater(s)
MenSeptember 19United StatesRoss MinerHost picks
LadiesUnited StatesBradie Tennell
PairsUnited StatesDeanna Stellato /Nathan Bartholomay
Ice danceUnited StatesRachel Parsons /Michael Parsons
MenNovember 10RussiaAlexander PetrovNovember 13CanadaRoman SadovskyInjury
November 16South KoreaCha Jun-hwanNovember 16ChinaYan HanFocus on injury recovery[5]
LadiesNovember 17South KoreaChoi Da-bin
November 20RussiaAnna PogorilayaNovember 20RussiaSerafima SakhanovichFocus on injury recovery
MenNovember 22BelgiumJorik HendrickxNovember 22CanadaLiam Firus
Ice danceIsraelIsabella Tobias /Ilia Tkachenko

Results

[edit]

Men

[edit]

Nathan Chen, skating with a left blade that had a nick in the outside edge, won the short program by a 15-point margin over Adam Rippon.[6][7][8]

Rippon ranked first in the next segment, finishing 5.6 points ahead of Chen. Before skating, Rippon assisted in removing various insects on the ice.[9] Having replaced the nicked blade, Chen stated, "I think that was a bad call. It was a little too sharp on the inside edge, and every time I pressed into it for sal(chow), toe and even flip, it would catch into the ice way harder than I was used to."[10]

Kovtun withdrew due to a foot injury incurred during the short program and Samohin withdrew after dislocating his left shoulder when he fell on a quad Salchow.[11] Rippon had some pain in his right shoulder after falling on a quad Lutz but was able to continue. Jin skated on two sprained ankles, but still achieved a free skate score and placement high enough to qualify for the Grand Prix final. Chen finished first overall by 9.43 points, Rippon won silver, and Voronov took bronze, withRafael Arutyunyan coaching the top two.[10][8]

RankNameNationTotal pointsSPFS
1Nathan Chen United States275.881104.122171.76
2Adam Rippon United States266.45289.041177.41
3Sergei Voronov Russia257.49387.513169.98
4Jin Boyang China246.03677.974168.06
5Yan Han China228.33485.977142.36
6Ross Miner United States219.62871.595148.03
7Takahito Mura Japan212.77775.058137.72
8Liam Firus Canada210.831165.176145.66
9Kevin Reynolds Canada204.051069.109134.95
10Roman Sadovsky Canada200.10970.8510129.25
WDDaniel Samohin Israel82.28582.28withdrew
WDMaxim Kovtun Russia64.981264.98withdrew

Ladies

[edit]

Miyahara placed first in the short program, Sakamoto was second with a 1.32-point deficit, and Daleman third.[12][13][14]

Miyahara, first in the free skate, won gold with a 3.44-point margin over Sakamoto, who won her first Grand Prix medal (in her second appearance on the senior series). Making her senior Grand Prix debut, Tennell rose from fourth after the short program to take the bronze medal. Wagner withdrew due to a skin infection on her ankle.[15][16][14]

RankNameNationTotal pointsSPFS
1Satoko Miyahara Japan214.03170.721143.31
2Kaori Sakamoto Japan210.59269.402141.19
3Bradie Tennell United States204.10467.013137.09
4Polina Tsurskaya Russia195.56863.204132.36
5Serafima Sakhanovich Russia189.75566.285123.47
6Gabrielle Daleman Canada189.14368.088121.06
7Alena Leonova Russia185.93763.917122.02
8Karen Chen United States182.80959.536123.27
9Nicole Rajičová Slovakia167.611055.439112.18
10Li Xiangning China164.321155.2410109.08
WDAshley Wagner United States64.12664.12withdrew

Pairs

[edit]

Duhamel/Radford won the short program with a 1.7-point lead over Yu/Zhang.[17][18][19]

In the free skate, Savchenko/Massot scored a personal best to win the title although Massot continued to be troubled by back pain. Yu/Zhang took the silver medal while Duhamel/Radford dropped to third.[20][21][19]

RankNameNationTotal pointsSPFS
1Aliona Savchenko /Bruno Massot Germany223.13372.551150.58
2Yu Xiaoyu /Zhang Hao China219.20273.672145.53
3Meagan Duhamel /Eric Radford Canada215.68175.373140.31
4Natalia Zabiiako /Alexander Enbert Russia197.89470.155127.74
5Alexa Scimeca Knierim /Chris Knierim United States189.07564.276124.80
6Kirsten Moore-Towers /Michael Marinaro Canada187.81759.974127.84
7Haven Denney /Brandon Frazier United States172.16663.047109.12
8Deanna Stellato /Nathan Bartholomay United States165.00857.188107.82

Ice dance

[edit]

In the short dance, most teams received lower levels than they expected, with the exception of the Shibutanis, who scored a personal best and placed first with a 6.48-point lead over Cappellini/Lanotte.[12][22][23]

The Shibutanis also ranked first in the free dance (by a margin of 6.14 points) and won the gold medal by over 12 points. Cappellini/Lanotte struggled with a lift but finished second overall and qualified to the Grand Prix Final along with the winners.[24][25][23]

RankNameNationTotal pointsSPFS
1Maia Shibutani /Alex Shibutani United States194.25179.181115.07
2Anna Cappellini /Luca Lanotte Italy181.63272.702108.93
3Victoria Sinitsina /Nikita Katsalapov Russia176.53368.723107.81
4Piper Gilles /Paul Poirier Canada166.54564.074102.47
5Kaitlin Hawayek /Jean-Luc Baker United States163.53762.155101.38
6Tiffany Zahorski /Jonathan Guerreiro Russia160.28464.20696.08
7Kana Muramoto /Chris Reed Japan155.80662.30893.50
8Wang Shiyue /Liu Xinyu China149.36955.57793.79
9Rachel Parsons /Michael Parsons United States145.54858.36987.18

References

[edit]
  1. ^"ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating 2017/18: Men"(PDF). International Skating Union. 26 May 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 17 November 2017. Retrieved2 June 2017.
  2. ^"ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating 2017/18: Ladies"(PDF). International Skating Union. 26 May 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 December 2017. Retrieved2 June 2017.
  3. ^"ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating 2017/18: Pairs"(PDF). International Skating Union. 26 May 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 December 2017. Retrieved2 June 2017.
  4. ^"ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating 2017/18: Ice Dance"(PDF). International Skating Union. 26 May 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 18 September 2017. Retrieved2 June 2017.
  5. ^"피겨 차준환, 그랑프리 6차대회 포기…평창 2차선발전 '올인'" [Cha Jun-hwan, giving up the Grand Prix 6th contest ... Pyeongchang Second Lane Development 'All In'] (in Korean). Donga. November 16, 2017. Archived fromthe original on 2017-11-17. Retrieved2017-11-16.
  6. ^Leamy, Liz (November 25, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Men's Short Program".iceskatingintnl.com.
  7. ^Rutherford, Lynn (November 24, 2017)."Chen dominates field to take lead in Lake Placid".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2017. RetrievedNovember 27, 2017.
  8. ^ab"Chen: 'That was pretty rough'".goldenskate.com. November 25, 2017.
  9. ^Herrmann, Suzanne (November 26, 2017)."Skate America 2017 Day 2".absoluteskating.com.
  10. ^abRutherford, Lynn (November 25, 2017)."Chen falls to earth, still wins Skate America crown".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2017. RetrievedNovember 27, 2017.
  11. ^Leamy, Liz (November 26, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Men's Free Skate".iceskatingintnl.com.
  12. ^abRutherford, Lynn (November 25, 2017)."Miyahara leads tight ladies race at Skate America; Tennell slots fourth in Grand Prix debut; Shibutanis in control of dance field".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2017. RetrievedNovember 27, 2017.
  13. ^Leamy, Liz (November 26, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Ladies Short Program".iceskatingintnl.com.
  14. ^ab"Miyahara wins gold in Lake Placid".goldenskate.com. November 26, 2017.
  15. ^Rutherford, Lynn (November 26, 2017)."Miyahara returns to form with Skate America win".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved2017-11-27.
  16. ^Leamy, Liz (November 28, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Ladies Free Skate".iceskatingintnl.com.
  17. ^Rutherford, Lynn (November 24, 2017)."Duhamel, Radford in command at Skate America".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2017. RetrievedNovember 27, 2017.
  18. ^Leamy, Liz (November 25, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Pairs Short Program".iceskatingintnl.com.
  19. ^ab"Savchenko and Massot: 'It was a good fight'".goldenskate.com. November 25, 2017.
  20. ^Leamy, Liz (November 26, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Pairs Free Skate".iceskatingintnl.com.
  21. ^Rutherford, Lynn (November 25, 2017)."Savchenko, Massot win gold with career-best free".IceNetwork.com.
  22. ^Leamy, Liz (November 26, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Short Dance".iceskatingintnl.com.
  23. ^ab"Shibutanis defend Skate America title".goldenskate.com. November 26, 2017.
  24. ^Rutherford, Lynn (November 26, 2017)."Trust the process: Shibs defend Skate America title".IceNetwork.com. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2017. RetrievedNovember 27, 2017.
  25. ^Leamy, Liz (November 28, 2017)."2017 Skate America - Free Dance".iceskatingintnl.com.

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