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Figure skating

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Figure skating
Figure Skater Carolina Kostner
Highest governing bodyInternational Skating Union
NicknamesSkating
First played1742 in Edinburgh, Scotland
Characteristics
Team membersIndividuals, duos, or groups
Mixed sexYes
EquipmentFigure skates
GlossaryGlossary of figure skating terms
Presence
OlympicPart of the Summer Olympics in 1908 and 1920;
Part of the first Winter Olympics in 1924 to today
Figure skating (ice dancing) couple
Figure skating (pair) team
Figure skating woman
Figure skating man

Figure skating is both an art and a sport, in which people skate around on ice, doing jumps and spins. It is done at the Winter Olympics, and it has its own world championships. The name means to make figures or patterns on the ice. People skate with music.

In figure skating, sometimes women or men skate alone, or they skate in couples. Couples dancing includes pairs and ice dancing. Pairs skating has jumps, and sometimes the man lifts the woman in the air. These things are not done in ice dancing. In ice dancing, the woman must be held in the man's arms. Another kind of figure skating is synchronized skating done in groups.

The first ever figure skating club was started in 1742 in Edinburgh, Scotland. World Championships began in 1896 (the first in St. Petersburg, Russia).[1] Before the Winter Olympic Games were started, competitions in figure skating were part of the Summer Olympic Games, in 1908 and 1920.

The International Skating Union (ISU) made the rules.

Singles Skating

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Singles skating is composed of a Short Program and a Free Skate. Both of them have a technical score and a presentation score.

  • The Short Program (SP) must include 2 solo jumps, a jump combination consisting of two jumps, 3 spins and one Step Sequence fully utilizing the ice surface.
  • Free Skate (FS) contains jump elements, jump combinations or jump sequences. The Free Skate also has 3 spins, one Step Sequence fully utilizing the ice surface and a choreographic sequence.

Under the ISU Judging System the Judges focus entirely on evaluating the quality of each element performed (technical aspect) and the quality of the performance. There will be a panel of 9 Judges per segment. Out of these 9 scores, the highest and lowest score of each element or program component are ignored and the average will be taken.

Technical Score

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The score for the element is composed of a “Base Value” of each element and the “Grade of Execution - GOE”. GOE is that the Judge grades the quality of the element on a scale of +5 to -5. The total of all the elements scores gives the Technical Score.

Presentation Score

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The Judges award points on a scale from 0.25 to 10.00 with increments of 0.25 for the Presentation Score to grade the overall presentation of the performance. There are five items in the Presentation Score.

Skating Skills

Over all skating quality

Transitions, Linking Footwork and Movement

The varied and/or intricate footwork, positions, movements, and holds that link all elements. This also includes the entrances and exits of technical elements.

Performance/Execution

The physical and emotional involvement of the skater/couple as they translate the intent of the music and choreography

Choreography/Composition

The arrangement of all movements according to the principles of proportion, space and music

Interpretation

The translation of the music to movement on ice

There are six types of jump that ISU decides to score. The following items are listed in order of the score (difficulty). There are two types of jumps: edge jump and toe jump. The Axel, loop, and Salchow are edge jumps and the lutz, flip and toe loop are toe jumps.

Axel
This is the only jump where a skater takes off while skating forward. It's the most difficult jump of the six.
Lutz
The skater takes off from the back outside edge of the left or right foot and pokes the ice with the opposite toe.
Flip
The skater takes off from the back inside edge of the left or right foot and pokes the ice with the opposite toe.
Loop
The skater takes off from the back outside edge of the right or left foot. This jump is often used in second jump of combination jump.
Salchow
The skater takes off from the back inside edge of the right or left foot.
Toe Loop
The skater takes off from the back outside edge of the right or left foot and pokes the ice with the opposite toe. This is the easiest jump and it is often used in second jump of combination jump.

Spins are classified as Sit spins, Upright spins or Camel spin. Each of them has various variations. Any position which is not basic is a non-basic position.

Sit spin

The position of this spin is that the upper part of the skating leg is at least parallel to the ice.

  • there are 3 categories based on position of free leg
Sit Forward (with leg forward)
Sit Sideways (with leg sideways)
Sit Behind (with the leg behind)

Upright spin

The position of this spin is any position with the skating leg is extended or slightly bent which is not a camel position.

  • there are 4 categories based on position of the torso.
Upright Forward (with torso leaning forward)
Upright Straight or Sideways (with torso straight up or sideways)
Upright Biellmann (in Biellmann position)
Upright Layback

Camel spin

The position of this spin is any position where the free leg backwards and the knee is higher than the hip level, however Layback, Biellmann and similar variations are still considered upright spins.

  • There are 3 categories based on the direction of the belly button.
Camel Forward (with belly button facing forward)
Camel Sideways (with belly button facing sideways)
Camel Upward (with belly button facing upward)

Turns and Steps

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  • Turns
three turns, twizzles, brackets, loops, counters, rockers
Turns must be executed on one foot. If a turn is “jumped ”, it is not counted as performed. 
  • Steps
toe steps, chasses, mohawks, choctaws, change of edge, cross rolls
Steps must be executed on one foot whenever possible.

Some well-known figure skaters

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Women   Men
 

Pairs:

  • Emilie Rotter & Laszlo Szolas (Hungary)
  • Maxi Herber & Ernst Baier (Germany)
  • Barbara Wagner & Robert Paul (Canada)
  • Ludmila Belousova & Oleg Protopopov (USSR)
  • Irina Rodnina & Alexei Ulyanov (USSR)
  • Irina Rodnina & Alexander Zaitsev (USSR)
  • Ekaterina Gordeeva & Sergei Grinkov (USSR)
  • Xue Shen & Hongbo Zhao (China)
  • Tatiana Totmianina & Maxim Marinin (Russia)
  • Dorota Siudek & Mariusz Siudek (Poland)
  • Aljona Savchenko & Robin Szolkowy (Germany)
  • Aljona Savchenko & Bruno Massot (Germany)
  • Sui Wenjing & Han Cong (China)

Ice dance:

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References

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  1. "U.S. Figure Skating History". Archived from the original on January 1, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2011.

Other websites

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