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2019 Skate America

2019 Skate America
Type:Grand Prix
Date:October 18 – 20
Season:2019–20
Location:Las Vegas, Nevada
Host:U.S. Figure Skating
Venue:Orleans Arena
Champions
Men's singles:
United States Nathan Chen
Ladies' singles:
Russia Anna Shcherbakova
Pairs:
China Peng Cheng / Jin Yang
Ice dance:
United States Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue
Navigation
Previous:
2018 Skate America
Next:
2020 Skate America
Next GP:
2019 Skate Canada International

The 2019 Skate America presented by American Cruise Lines was the first event in the 2019–20 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on October 18–20. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2019–20 Grand Prix Final.

Skate America was the first senior international event in International Skating Union history to be streamed live by the ISU on YouTube with geographical restrictions, as part of the federation's new deal for the 2019–20 Grand Prix series to reach countries that do not have broadcasting rights for any skating events.[1]

Entries

[edit]

The ISU announced the preliminary assignments on June 20, 2019.[2]

Country Men Ladies Pairs Ice dance
 Australia Ekaterina Alexandrovskaya / Harley Windsor
 Canada Keegan Messing Véronik Mallet Camille Ruest / Andrew Wolfe Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Nikolaj Sørensen
 China Jin Boyang Peng Cheng / Jin Yang Chen Hong / Sun Zhuoming
 Czech Republic Michal Březina
 France Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac
 Great Britain Zoe Jones / Christopher Boyadji
 Hong Kong Yi Christy Leung
 Israel Alexei Bychenko
 Japan Koshiro Shimada
Kazuki Tomono
Wakaba Higuchi
Kaori Sakamoto
Mako Yamashita
 Russia Dmitri Aliev
Roman Savosin
Stanislava Konstantinova
Anna Shcherbakova
Elizaveta Tuktamysheva
Daria Pavliuchenko / Denis Khodykin Sofia Shevchenko / Igor Eremenko
Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin
Tiffany Zahorski / Jonathan Guerreiro
 South Korea Cha Jun-hwan Lim Eun-soo
 Spain Olivia Smart / Adrián Díaz
 United States Jason Brown
Nathan Chen
Alexei Krasnozhon
Karen Chen
Amber Glenn
Bradie Tennell
Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc
Jessica Calalang / Brian Johnson
Haven Denney / Brandon Frazier
Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko
Caroline Green / Michael Parsons
Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue

Changes to preliminary assignments

[edit]
Discipline Withdrew Added Notes Ref.
Date Skater(s) Date Skater(s)
Men September 10 United States Alexei Krasnozhon Host picks [3]
Ladies United States Amber Glenn
Pairs United States Jessica Calalang / Brian Johnson
Ice dance United States Caroline Green / Michael Parsons
Pairs October 1 Russia Natalia Zabiiako / Alexander Enbert October 4 United Kingdom Zoe Jones / Christopher Boyadji Health (Enbert) [4]
Men October 3 France Romain Ponsart October 5 Israel Alexei Bychenko
Ladies October 11 Kazakhstan Elizabet Tursynbaeva October 14 Hong Kong Yi Christy Leung Injury

Results

[edit]

Men

[edit]
Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Nathan Chen  United States 299.09 1 102.71 1 196.38
2 Jason Brown  United States 255.09 4 83.45 2 171.64
3 Dmitri Aliev  Russia 253.55 2 96.57 3 156.98
4 Keegan Messing  Canada 239.34 3 96.34 8 143.00
5 Kazuki Tomono  Japan 229.72 8 75.01 4 154.71
6 Jin Boyang  China 224.98 9 74.56 5 150.42
7 Alexei Bychenko  Israel 219.70 6 79.76 10 139.94
8 Cha Jun-hwan  South Korea 219.67 7 78.98 9 140.69
9 Alexei Krasnozhon  United States 216.59 10 72.30 6 144.29
10 Koshiro Shimada  Japan 216.03 11 72.12 7 143.91
11 Michal Březina  Czech Republic 213.17 5 81.11 11 132.06
12 Roman Savosin  Russia 182.16 12 57.92 12 124.24

Ladies

[edit]

Russia's Anna Shcherbakova became the first woman to land two quad lutzes in the free skate.[5]

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Anna Shcherbakova  Russia 227.76 4 67.60 1 160.16
2 Bradie Tennell  United States 216.14 1 75.10 2 141.04
3 Elizaveta Tuktamysheva  Russia 205.97 5 67.28 3 138.69
4 Kaori Sakamoto  Japan 202.47 2 73.25 4 129.22
5 Lim Eun-soo  South Korea 184.50 8 63.96 5 120.54
6 Wakaba Higuchi  Japan 181.32 3 71.76 6 109.56
7 Amber Glenn  United States 169.63 7 64.71 9 104.92
8 Karen Chen  United States 165.67 6 66.03 10 99.64
9 Yi Christy Leung  Hong Kong 163.68 10 54.25 7 109.43
10 Véronik Mallet  Canada 161.75 9 56.69 8 105.06
11 Stanislava Konstantinova  Russia 143.39 11 48.27 12 95.12
12 Mako Yamashita  Japan 142.40 12 46.21 11 96.19

Pairs

[edit]
Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Peng Cheng / Jin Yang  China 200.89 1 72.73 1 128.16
2 Daria Pavliuchenko / Denis Khodykin  Russia 196.98 2 71.25 3 125.73
3 Haven Denney / Brandon Frazier  United States 192.70 4 65.18 2 127.52
4 Jessica Calalang / Brian Johnson  United States 180.52 5 61.27 4 119.25
5 Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc  United States 177.54 3 68.20 5 109.34
6 Camille Ruest / Andrew Wolfe  Canada 155.16 7 54.63 6 100.53
7 Ekaterina Alexandrovskaya / Harley Windsor  Australia 152.94 6 55.06 7 97.88
8 Zoe Jones / Christopher Boyadji  United Kingdom 138.79 8 47.92 8 90.87

Ice dance

[edit]

The scores for the rhythm dance were initially calculated erroneously, omitting the Grade of Execution points for the man's half of the pattern step. Hours later, the scores were revised to reflect the proper point totals.[6]

Rank Name Nation Total points RD FD
1 Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue  United States 209.55 1 84.97 2 124.58
2 Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin  Russia 206.57 2 81.91 1 124.66
3 Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Nikolaj Sørensen  Canada 197.53 3 79.17 3 118.36
4 Olivia Smart / Adrián Díaz  Spain 191.01 4 76.62 4 114.39
5 Tiffany Zahorski / Jonathan Guerreiro  Russia 181.82 5 71.18 5 110.64
6 Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko  United States 180.55 6 70.41 6 110.14
7 Caroline Green / Michael Parsons  United States 173.03 8 67.97 7 105.06
8 Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac  France 167.14 7 68.23 9 98.91
9 Sofia Shevchenko / Igor Eremenko  Russia 166.51 9 66.79 8 99.72
10 Chen Hong / Sun Zhuoming  China 159.94 10 61.74 10 98.20

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Where to watch ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Series 2019". International Skating Union. October 16, 2019.
  2. ^ "Olympic and World Champions to compete in the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Series 2019/20" (Press release). International Skating Union. June 20, 2019.
  3. ^ "Final Athletes Announced for 2019 Skate America Presented by American Cruise Lines". U.S. Figure Skating. September 10, 2019.
  4. ^ Selenkova, Maria (October 1, 2019). "Серебряные призеры Игр-2018 Забияко и Энберт пропустят серию Гран-при. Партнер приостановил карьеру по рекомендации врачей" [Silver medalists of the 2018 Games Zabiyako and Enbert will miss the Grand Prix series. Enbert suspended his career on the recommendation of doctors]. R-Sport.
  5. ^ Lutz, Rachel (October 20, 2019). "Anna Shcherbakova lands two quad Lutzes to win Skate America in Grand Prix debut". NBC Sports.
  6. ^ ISU Figure Skating [@ISU_Figure] (October 19, 2019). "Thanks for pointing it out. We noticed the problem as well. We are working on it" (Tweet) – via Twitter.