Irina Slutskaya

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Irina Slutskaya
File:Irina Slutskaya 2006.jpg
Irina Slutskaya in 2006
Personal information
Native name Ири́на Эдуа́рдовна Слу́цкая
Full name Irina Eduardovna Slutskaya
Country represented Russia
Born (1979-02-09) 9 February 1979 (age 45)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Residence Moscow, Russia
Height 1.60 m (5 ft 3 in)
Coach Zhanna Gromova
Choreographer Sergei Petukhov
Skating club Sport Club Moskvitch
Began skating 1984
Retired 2006
ISU personal best scores
Combined total 198.06
2005 Cup of Russia
Short program 70.22
2005 Cup of China
Free skate 130.48
2005 Cup of Russia

Irina Eduardovna Slutskaya (Russian: Ири́на Эдуа́рдовна Слу́цкая Irina Eduardovna Slutskaya Audio file "Ru-Irina Eduardovna Slutskaya.ogg" not found; born 9 February 1979) is a Russian figure skater. She is a two-time World champion (2002, 2005), two-time Olympic medalist (silver in 2002, bronze in 2006), seven-time European Champion (1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006), a four-time Grand Prix Final champion (2000–2002, 2005) and a four-time Russian national champion (2000–2002, 2005). Slutskaya, known for her athletic ability, was the first female skater to land a triple lutz-triple loop combination.[1] She is also known for her trademark double Biellmann spin with a foot change, which she also invented. With her women's record seven-time triumph at the European Championships she is generally considered to be the most successful ladies' singles skater in Russian history.

Career

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Early years

Slutskaya started skating at the age of four, encouraged by her mother.[2] Coached by Zhanna Gromova from the age of six,[2] she first made her mark as a promising junior skater by winning the bronze medal at the 1994 World Junior Championships, held in December 1993 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. This would be the beginning of a twelve-year rivalry with American legend Michelle Kwan, who won gold at this same event.

In the 1994–95 season, Slutskaya continued her rise towards the elite of the sport. After winning the 1995 World Junior title November 1994 in Budapest, she took bronze at Russian Nationals to qualify for her first senior ISU Championship. At the 1995 European Championships, she came back from a fall in the short to skate the third best long program and rose to fifth overall. She qualified for Worlds along with silver medalist Olga Markova, by finishing ahead of Russian champion Maria Butyrskaya (7th). At the 1995 World Championships, Slutskaya again fell in the short but performed six triples in the next segment, resulting in a rank of 5th in the free skate and 7th overall.

1995–96 to 1997–98 seasons

In the 1995–96 season, Slutskaya competed in the inaugural edition of the Champions Series (later renamed the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating), taking bronze at the 1995 Skate America and placing fourth at the 1995 Trophée de France. In January 1996, at the European Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria, she became the first Russian woman to win the European title, performing six triples in the long program to dethrone the five-time defending champion Surya Bonaly. Slutskaya also won the Centennial on Ice, combining with Butyrskaya to hand Kwan her only defeat of the season. At the Champions Series Final, held in Paris in late February 1996, she finished ahead of reigning World champion Chen Lu (4th) and took the silver medal behind Michelle Kwan. In March, she competed at the 1996 World Championships in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Third in the short program, she held onto her position in the next segment after recovering from an early fall to complete six triples. She was awarded the bronze medal and stepped onto her first World podium, alongside Kwan (gold medalist) and Chen (silver).

In 1996–97, Slutskaya began her season by winning her first Champions Series title at the 1996 Skate Canada International, beating rising star Tara Lipinski. She went on to win two more CS events, the 1996 Nations Cup and 1996 Cup of Russia. In January 1997, she repeated as the European champion, landing seven triples (one with a slightly flawed landing). By the Champions Series Final, held in late February and early March 1997, Slutskaya was struggling with jumps and finished third behind Lipinski, the new U.S champion, and Kwan. At the 1997 World Championships in Lausanne, a missed combination left her in 6th place in the short program. She then incurred a back injury from a hard fall in practice the day of the long program. In the free skate, she completed six triples, including a 3S-3Lo combination, and received three first-place votes for the segment. Due to the short program, she finished fourth overall.

In the 1997–98 season, Slutskaya took silver at the 1997 Nations Cup and gold at the 1997 Cup of Russia. In December, she finished off the podium at the Russian Championships and at the Champions Series Final in Munich before winning the silver medal in January 1998 at the European Championships in Milan. In February, she competed at her first Winter Olympics, in Nagano, Japan. Ranked fifth in the short after her planned combination became a 2Lz-2T, Slutskaya performed five triples in the long program and received two third-place votes (from the U.S. and Hungary) but placed fifth in the segment and overall. The next month, she won silver at the 1998 World Championships, coming back from a fall in the short and successfully landing two triple-triple combinations in the long program.

1998–99 to 2001–02 seasons

During the 1998–99 season, Slutskaya won a silver and two bronze medals on the Grand Prix series to qualify for her fourth Final. In January 1999, she placed fourth at the 1999 Russian Championships, leading to her omission from the Russian teams to the European and World Championships. She took bronze behind Tatiana Malinina and Butyrskaya at the Grand Prix Final, held in Saint Petersburg in March 1999. Slutskaya then considered leaving competition but decided to continue.[3]

Slutskaya made a successful comeback in the 1999–2000 season. In December 1999, she defeated Butyrskaya, the reigning World champion, to win her first Russian national title. The following month, she won the Grand Prix Final, defeating both Butyrskaya and Kwan. In second place behind Kwan ahead of the two-women "super final," Slutskaya landed seven triples in the final segment, including two triple-triple combinations, and became the first woman to perform a 3Lz-3Lo combination in competition. In February, she won her third European title, in Vienna, Austria. At the 2000 World Championships in Nice, France, Slutskaya won her qualifying pool over Kwan and placed second to Butyrskaya in the short program. She completed six triples in the free skate, with a 2S instead of her planned planned 3S-3Lo, and finished second overall behind Kwan.

Slutskaya began the 2000–01 season in dominant fashion. After defeating Kwan to win Skate Canada, she took her fourth European title, in January 2001 in Bratislava, and then defended her Grand Prix Final title, in February in Tokyo. After winning the short program at the 2001 World Championships, in the free skate she became the first woman to land a 3S-3Lo-2T combination. She two-footed her 3Lz-3Lo-2T combination and had problems on two other landings. The judges voted 7–2 to award the gold medal to Kwan while silver went to Slutskaya.

In the 2001–02 season, Slutskaya won all five of her meetings with Kwan, however, she also saw a new challenge from the 2001 World bronze medalist, Sarah Hughes. After winning her first Goodwill Games title, she finished second to Hughes at Skate Canada and then took gold at Cup of Russia. At the Grand Prix Final, Slutskaya performed well to win the first two segments of the event, but her second free skate contained only three clean triples. Three judges placed her third behind Kwan and Hughes but four others placed her first, giving Slutskaya her third GPF title. She then took her third straight Russian national title but lost her European title to Maria Butyrskaya. Third in the short program after a fall, she placed first in the free skate but it was not enough to overcome her deficit. Slutskaya's next event was the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. Kwan and Slutskaya were ranked first and second in the short program, with Cohen and Hughes placing third and fourth, respectively. After Kwan finished below Hughes in the overall standings, Slutskaya had to place first in the free skate in order to win gold but Hughes won the free skate in a 5–4 decision. Hughes performed seven triples and two triple-triple combinations, while Slutskaya did not attempt any triple-triples and had rough landings on two jumps. Russia, still somewhat aggrieved about the outcome of an earlier dispute over the pairs competition, filed a complaint against the result but it was rejected shortly. Slutskaya's silver was the second medal for a Russian competitor in an Olympic ladies' figure skating event (Kira Ivanova took bronze at the 1984 Olympics).

The next month, Slutskaya won the 2002 World title in Nagano. Ranked first in both the qualifying round and the short program, followed by Fumie Suguri and Michelle Kwan, in theory Slutskaya could place second to Kwan in the free skate and still win the title but she won a majority of the judges' votes in the segment. It was her first World title.

2002–03 to 2005–06 seasons: Illness and comeback

Slutskaya competing in 2005

In the 2002–03 season, Slutskaya took silver at the 2002 NHK Trophy and bronze at the 2002 Cup of Russia before losing her national title to Elena Sokolova at the Russian Championships in December 2002. In January 2003, she defeated Sokolova to win her fifth European title, in Malmö. The following month, she took silver at the Grand Prix Final in Saint Petersburg after placing first in one segment and second to Sasha Cohen in the other two. Slutskaya decided not to compete at the 2003 World Championships after receiving news that her mother had fallen seriously ill, requiring a kidney transplant. The initial transplant was rejected and another one had to be performed.[4] Soon after her mother's condition began improving, however, Slutskaya experienced severe fatigue and swelling in the legs, which several hospitals struggled to correctly diagnose.[4] She missed most of the 2003–04 season. Although doctors told her that she should stay away from the cold, she elected to compete at the 2004 World Championships and finished ninth. She was diagnosed ultimately with vasculitis.[1][5]

In 2005, Slutskaya made a comeback after a long stay at a hospital. The season would be her most dominant ever — for the only time in her career she went undefeated, winning every competition she entered. She thrived under the new scoring system which heavily rewarded her jumps, spins (particularly Biellman spins), difficult footwork, and speed and power. In winning the 2005 European Championships, she matched the record for the most European titles in ladies' singles. At the 2005 World Championships, Slutskaya was first after the short program and skated last in the free skate, in which she performed seven triples, including a 3Lz-3Lo combination, to win her second World title. She said the free skate was "the skate of her life" because "she was in front of her friends and family, and she was skating at home."[citation needed] She also said:

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This is the question they ask: how could you get up after your fall last year? That's not right at all. You can't talk that way. When a person is ill, it's not a fall, it's a misfortune. And no one, unfortunately, is safe from that. I only want to say to those who don't believe in their [own capacity for] recovery: believe, fight...I got up — you can too.

On January 19, 2006, Slutskaya won the European Championships for the seventh time, breaking the record she had shared with Sonja Henie and Katarina Witt to become the most successful ladies' skater at the event. At the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, Slutskaya was considered the odds on favorite to win the gold medal — 15-year-old Mao Asada, who had upset her at that years Grand Prix Final, was barred from the event due to age regulations. She was in second place after the short program by only 0.03, behind Sasha Cohen of the United States. In the long program, Slutskaya doubled a triple flip and then fell on a triple loop jump. She won the bronze medal, behind gold medalist Shizuka Arakawa of Japan and silver medalist Cohen. Slutskaya did not compete at the 2006 World Championships the following month. In November 2006, she denied reports that claimed she was retiring from competitive figure skating, saying the reports were completely false.[6]

Post-competitive career

On 10 April 2007, Slutskaya announced she was returning to Russia from the United States and would not participate on the 2007 Champions on Ice tour since she and her husband, Sergei, were expecting a child.[7] Slutskaya stated that she enjoyed motherhood and had no plans to return to competitive skating. "I don’t see the target," she said. "I don’t know why I have to go there. I have almost all the titles."[8]

She began a career in showbusiness. She presented figure skating reality shows on Russia Channel 1 "Stars on Ice" with co-host Evgeni Plushenko and "Ice Age" with actor Marat Basharov.[9] She has also released a CD.[10] In 2008, she took part in a Russian TV soap opera about figure skating "Hot Ice".[11] She also toured as the lead skater in the Russian version of the show "Winx on Ice".[12]

In November 2008, Slutskaya performed in the "Skate from the Heart" show.[13] In 2009, she was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[14]

In 2011, Slutskaya also participated in 2010 Winter Olympic champion Kim Yuna ice show All That Skate Summer. In October 2012, Slutskaya competed in the first Medal Winner's Open, an event for Olympic and World medalists. She placed third in the ladies' field.[15][16] She was an ambassador for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.[17]

Personal life

Slutskaya was born in 1979 in Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union, the only child of a Russian mother and Jewish father. Slutskaya was raised in the Russian Orthodox faith and was known to cross herself in most of her competitions.[18] Her mother was a former cross-country skier for the Soviet Union.[19]

Slutskaya married her boyfriend, Sergei Mikheev, in August 1999.[20] They met each other three years earlier at a summer camp near Moscow, where Mikheev was a physical education instructor. She gave birth to a son, Artem, in November 2007 in Moscow.[21] An only child who longed for siblings, she said she would like another baby.[21] In October 2010, she gave birth to their second child, a daughter named Varvara.[22][23][24]

Records and achievements

  • Invented the double Biellmann spin with foot change
  • First Russian woman to win European title (1996)
  • First woman to land triple lutz-triple loop combination in competition (2000 Grand Prix Final)
  • First woman to land a triple salchow-triple loop-double toe loop combination (2001 World Championships)
  • First Russian woman skater to win a silver medal at the Olympics (2002 Salt Lake City)
  • Four-time Russian Nationals champion
  • Record holder for most Grand Prix Final titles won by a woman. Record later tied by Mao Asada.
  • First (and only) woman ever to win seven European titles (2006)

Results

International[25]
Event 1992–93 1993–94 1994–95 1995–96 1996–97 1997–98 1998–99 1999–00 2000–01 2001–02 2002–03 2003–04 2004–05 2005–06
Olympics 5th 2nd 3rd
Worlds 7th 3rd 4th 2nd 2nd 2nd 1st WD 9th 1st
Europeans 5th 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st WD 1st 1st
GP (CS) Final 2nd 3rd 4th 3rd 1st 1st 1st 2nd 1st 2nd
GP Cup of China 1st 1st
GP Cup of Russia 1st 1st 3rd 1st 1st 1st 3rd 1st 1st
GP Nations/Spark. 1st 2nd 3rd
GP NHK Trophy 2nd 1st 2nd
GP Skate America 3rd 3rd
GP Skate Canada 1st 3rd 1st 2nd
GP Trophée de France 4th
Goodwill Games 6th 5th 1st
Finlandia 1st
Nebelhorn 1st 1st
Universiade 2nd
International: Junior[25]
Junior Worlds 8th 3rd 1st
National[25]
Russian Champ. 3rd 3rd 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 1st 1st 1st 2nd WD 1st
Russian Jr. Champ. 1st
GP = Grand Prix (Champions Series 1995–1997); WD = Withdrew

Programs

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2005–2006
[1]
  • Mario Takes a Walk
    by Jesse Cook
  • Rhumba
  • Flamenco
    by Didulia
2004–2005
[26]

  • Catwoman
2003–2004
[27]
2002–2003
[20]
  • Shine
2001–2002
[28]

  • Never Be the Same Again


2000–2001
[29]


  • Timeless
1999-2000
  • Free Yourself
1998–1999
  • Ballet For Carolyn Carlson
1997–1998
  • Piano Waltz
  • Ah, Nastasia
    by Ossipov Balalaika Ensemble

  • Russian folk dance
  • Gauglione
1996–1997
  • Il Bel Canto
    (from The Phantom of the Opera on Ice)
    by Roberto Danova
  • Overture (Dance of the Four Muses)
    (from The Phantom of the Opera on Ice)
    by Roberto Danova
  • Tico Tico

1995–1996
  • Broadway show tunes
  • New York, New York
1994–1995
  • The Heart of Budapest
  • Csárdás
  • Heire Kati
    by Vidor, Monti, Hubay
1993–1994

See also

References

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External links


World record holders
Preceded by Ladies' Total Score
26 November 2005 – 2 December 2006
Succeeded by
Japan Mao Asada

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