2010–11 ISU Junior Grand Prix

For the 2010-2011 Junior Grand Prix Final, see 2010–2011 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final.
2010–11 ISU Junior Grand Prix
Type: ISU Junior Grand Prix
Date: August 25 – December 12, 2010
Season: 2010–11
Location: France Courchevel
Romania Braşov
Austria Graz
Japan Karuizawa
United Kingdom Sheffield
Germany Dresden
Czech Republic Ostrava
China Beijing
Previous:
2009–10 ISU Junior Grand Prix
Next:
2011–12 ISU Junior Grand Prix

The 2010–11 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the 14th season of the ISU Junior Grand Prix, a series of international junior level competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the 2010–11 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, which was for senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singes, pair skating, and ice dancing.

Skaters earned points towards qualifying for the Junior Grand Prix Final at each of the seven Junior Grand Prix events. The top eight skaters/teams in the series from each discipline met at the 2010–11 Junior Grand Prix Final, which was held concurrently with the senior Grand Prix Final.

Competitions

The locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2010–11 season, the series was composed of the following events:

Date Event Location Other notes
August 25–28 2010 JGP Courchevel Courchevel, France No pair competition
September 8–12 2010 JGP Brasov Cup Braşov, Romania No pair competition
September 15–19 2010 JGP Cup of Austria Graz, Austria
September 22–26 2010 JGP SBC Cup Karuizawa, Japan No pair competition
Sept. 29 – Oct. 3 2010 JGP John Curry Memorial Sheffield, England
October 6–10 2010 JGP Pokal der Blauen Schwerter Dresden, Germany
October 13–17 2010 JGP Czech Skate Ostrava, Czech Republic
December 9–12 2010–11 Junior Grand Prix Final Beijing, China

For the third time, the Junior Grand Prix Final was held in conjunction with the senior Grand Prix Final.

Qualifying

Skaters who reached the age of 13 by July 1, 2010 but had not turned 19 (singles and females of the other two disciplines) or 21 (male pair skaters and ice dancers) were eligible to compete on the junior circuit. Unlike the senior ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, skaters for the Junior Grand Prix are entered by their national federations rather than seeded by the ISU. The number of entries allotted to each ISU member federation is determined by their skaters's placements at the previous season's World Junior Figure Skating Championships in each respective discipline.

For the 2010–2011 season, in singles, the three best placed member nations at the 2010 World Junior Figure Skating Championships were allowed to enter two skaters in all seven events. Member nations who placed fourth through sixth were allowed to enter one skater in all seven events. Member nations who placed seventh through twelfth were allowed to enter one skater in six of the seven events. Member nations with a skater who had qualified for the free skate at the World Junior Championships were allowed to enter one skater in five of the events. Member nations who did not qualify for the free skate but placed 25th through 30th in the short program were allowed to enter one skater in four of the events. Member nations who did not qualify for the free skate but placed 31st and lower in the short program were allowed to enter one skater in three of the events. Member nations who had not participated in the 2010 World Junior Championships were allowed to enter one skater in two events. There were provisions for additional entries per member country if another country did not use all of its allotted entries.

In pairs, member nations who placed in the top five at the 2010 World Junior Championships were allowed to enter three entries in all four events in which pairs were contested. Member nations who qualified for the free skate at the World Junior Championships were allowed to enter two entries in all four events. All other member nations were allowed to enter one entry in all four events. The host nation was allowed to enter as many pair teams as it wanted.

In ice dancing, the multiple spots allowance was the same as for singles, through one entry in five events. Member nations who qualified for the original dance but not the free dance at the 2010 World Junior Championships were allowed to enter one team in four of the events. Member nations who placed 31st and lower in the compulsory dance segment were allowed to enter one team in three of the events. Member nations who had not participated in the 2010 World Junior Championships were allowed to enter one team in two events. There were provisions for additional entries per member country if another country did not use all of its allotted entries.

The host country was allowed to enter up to three skaters/teams in singles and dance in their event, and there was no limit to the number of pairs teams.

The general spots allowance for the 2010-2011 Junior Grand Prix events was as follows:

Entries Men Ladies Pairs Ice dancing
3 per event  Canada
 China
 Japan
 Russia
 United States
2 per event  China
 Japan
 Russia
 Japan
 Russia
 United States
 Czech Republic
 Estonia
 Germany
 Hungary
 Russia
 Canada
 United States
1 per event  Canada
 Sweden
 United States
 Canada
 Germany
 Sweden
 Italy
 Ukraine
 France
1 in six events  Belgium
 France
 Germany
 Kazakhstan
 Poland
 Spain
 Denmark
 Estonia
 Finland
 France
  Switzerland
 Turkey
 Germany
 Hungary
 Czech Republic
 Denmark
 United Kingdom
 Spain
1 in five events  Brazil
 Chinese Taipei
 Czech Republic
 Finland
 Belgium
 China
 Italy
 Latvia
 Netherlands
 Ukraine
 Finland
 Slovakia
 Poland
1 in four events  Austria
 Estonia
 Italy
 South Korea
  Switzerland
 Ukraine
 Czech Republic
 Greece
 Norway
 Slovenia
 Slovakia
 Thailand
 Austria
 Uzbekistan
 China
  Switzerland
 Estonia
 Belarus
 Romania
1 in three events  Armenia
 Australia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Belarus
 Bulgaria
 Croatia
 United Kingdom
 Hong Kong
 Hungary
 Ireland
 Latvia
 Lithuania
 Netherlands
 Romania
 Slovakia
 Turkey
 Andorra
 Australia
 Austria
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Brazil
 Bulgaria
 Chinese Taipei
 Croatia
 Georgia
 United Kingdom
 Hong Kong
 Hungary
 Israel
 Kazakhstan
 South Korea
 Lithuania
 Mexico
 Philippines
 Romania
 South Africa
 Spain
 Singapore
 Serbia
 Bulgaria
 Latvia
 New Zealand

All other member nations had one entry per discipline in two of the seven events in singles and ice dancing and one entry in all four events in pairs.

Prize money

The total prize money for the Junior Grand Prix events in the 2010/2011 season was $22,500. Pairs and dance teams split the money. Everything is in US dollars. The breakdown is as follows:

Placement Prize money (Singles) Prize money (Pairs/Dance)
1st $2,000 $3,000
2nd $1,500 $2,250
3rd $1,000 $1,500

The total prize money for the Junior Grand Prix Final in the 2010/2011 season was $105,000. Pairs and dance teams split the money. Everything is in US dollars. The breakdown is as follows:

Placement Prize money (Singles) Prize money (Pairs/Dance)
1st $6,000 $9,000
2nd $5,000 $7,500
3rd $4,000 $6,000
4th $3,000 $4,500
5th $2,000 $3,000
6th $1,000 $1,500

Junior Grand Prix Final qualification and qualifiers

Qualification rules

At each event, skaters/teams who place high enough earn points towards qualification for the Junior Grand Prix Final. Following the 7th event, the top-8 highest scoring skaters/teams advanced to the Final. The points earned per placement was as follows:

Placement Points (Singles/Dance) Points (Pairs)
1st 15 15
2nd 13 13
3rd 11 11
4th 9 9
5th 7 7
6th 5 5
7th 4 4
8th 3 3
9th 2 -
10th 1 -

There were 7 tie-breakers in cases of a tie in overall points:

  1. Highest placement at an event. If a skater placed 1st and 3rd, the tiebreaker is the 1st place, and that beats a skater who placed 2nd in both events.
  2. Highest combined total scores in both events. If a skater earned 200 points at one event and 250 at a second, that skater would win in the second tie-break over a skater who earned 200 points at one event and 150 at another.
  3. Participated in two events.
  4. Highest combined scores in the free skating/free dancing portion of both events.
  5. Highest individual score in the free skating/free dancing portion from one event.
  6. Highest combined scores in the short program/short dance of both events.
  7. Highest number of total participants at the events.

If there is still a tie, the tie is considered unbreakable and the tied skaters all advance to the Junior Grand Prix Final.

Qualifiers

The following skaters qualified for the 2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix Final.[1][2][3][4]

Kiri Baga, the 8th qualifier, withdrew from the event. The first alternate was Li Zijun.

Men Ladies Pairs Ice dancing
1 Canada Andrei Rogozine Russia Adelina Sotnikova Russia Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov Russia Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin
2 China Yan Han Russia Elizaveta Tuktamisheva China Sui Wenjing / Han Cong Russia Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin
3 United States Joshua Farris Japan Risa Shoji China Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang Russia Ekaterina Pushkash/Jonathan Guerreiro
4 United States Keegan Messing Russia Polina Shelepen Japan Narumi Takahashi / Mervin Tran United States Charlotte Lichtman / Dean Copely
5 United States Richard Dornbush United States Christina Gao Canada Natasha Purich / Raymond Schultz Russia Evgenia Kosigina / Nikolai Moroshkin
6 United States Max Aaron United States Yasmin Siraj Russia Anna Silaeva / Artur Minchuk Russia Victoria Sinitsina / Ruslan Zhiganshin
7 Russia Zhan Bush United States Kristiene Gong United States Ashley Cain / Joshua Reagan Ukraine Anastasia Galyeta /Alexei Shumski
8 Russia Gordei Gorshkov United States Kiri Baga Canada Taylor Steele / Robert Schultz Russia Marina Antipova / Artem Kudashev
Alternates
1st Russia Artur Dmitriev Jr China Li Zijun Canada Brittany Jones / Kurtis Gaskell France Tiffany Zahorski/Alexis Miart
2nd United States Jason Brown Belgium Ira Vannut Russia Tatiana Danilova / Andrei Novoselov United States Anastasia Cannuscio/ Colin McManus
3rd Sweden Alexander Majorov Japan Shion Kokubun United States Kylie Duarte / Colin Grafton France Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron

Medals table

The following is the table of total medals earned by each country on the 2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix. It can be sorted by country name, number of gold medals, number of silver medals, number of bronze medals, and total medals overall. The table is numbered by number of total medals.

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Russia 13 8 5 26
2  United States 5 11 3 19
3  China 4 1 3 8
4  Japan 1 3 4 8
5  Canada 2 0 4 6
6  France 0 1 2 3
7  Ukraine 0 1 1 2
8  Kazakhstan 0 0 1 1
8  Belgium 00 1 1
8  Sweden 00 1 1

Medalists

Men

2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix
Men's medalists
Competition Gold Silver Bronze Details
JGP France Canada Andrei Rogozine United States Jason Brown United States Max Aaron
JGP Romania United States Keegan Messing United States Joshua Farris Japan Keiji Tanaka
JGP Austria China Yan Han Russia Artem Grigoriev Russia Zhan Bush
JGP Japan Canada Andrei Rogozine United States Max Aaron Kazakhstan Abzal Rakimgaliev
JGP England United States Joshua Farris Russia Zhan Bush Canada Liam Firus
JGP Germany United States Richard Dornbush Russia Gordei Gorshkov Japan Ryuichi Kihara
JGP Czech Rep. China Yan Han Russia Artur Dmitriev Jr Sweden Alexander Majorov
JGP Final United States Richard Dornbush China Yan Han Canada Andrei Rogozine

Ladies

2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix
Ladies' medalists
Competition Gold Silver Bronze Details
JGP France Russia Polina Shelepen United States Yasmin Siraj Russia Rosa Sheveleva
JGP Romania Russia Elizaveta Tuktamysheva United States Kristiene Gong Japan Shion Kokubun
JGP Austria Russia Adelina Sotnikova United States Christina Gao China Li Zijun
JGP Japan Japan Risa Shoji United States Kiri Baga China Kexin Zhang
JGP England Russia Adelina Sotnikova United States Yasmin Siraj Japan Yuki Nishino
JGP Germany Russia Elizaveta Tuktamysheva United States Christina Gao Belgium Ira Vannut
JGP Czech Rep. United States Vanessa Lam Japan Risa Shoji Russia Polina Shelepen
JGP Final Russia Adelina Sotnikova Russia Elizaveta Tuktamysheva China Li Zijun

Pairs

2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix
Pairs' medalists
Competition Gold Silver Bronze Details
JGP France No pairs competition held
JGP Romania No pairs competition held
JGP Austria Russia Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov China Sui Wenjing / Han Cong China Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang
JGP Japan No pairs competition held
JGP England Russia Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov Japan Narumi Takahashi / Mervin Tran Canada Natasha Purich / Raymond Schultz
JGP Germany China Sui Wenjing / Han Cong Japan Narumi Takahashi / Mervin Tran Russia Anna Silaeva / Artur Minchuk
JGP Czech Rep. China Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang United States Ashley Cain / Joshua Reagan Canada Natasha Purich / Raymond Schultz
JGP Final Japan Narumi Takahashi / Mervin Tran Russia Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov China Yu Xiaoyu / Jin Yang

Ice dancing

2010–2011 Junior Grand Prix
Ice dancing medalists
Competition Gold Silver Bronze Details
JGP France Russia Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin United States Anastasia Cannuscio/ Colin McManus Russia Evgenia Kosigina / Nikolai Moroshkin
JGP Romania Russia Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin Ukraine Anastasia Galyeta / Alexei Shumski United States Lauri Bonacorsi / Travis Mager
JGP Austria United States Charlotte Lichtman / Dean Copely Russia Victoria Sinitsina / Ruslan Zhiganshin France Gabriella Papadakis / Guillaume Cizeron
JGP Japan Russia Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin Russia Ekaterina Pushkash / Jonathan Guerreiro France Geraldine Bott / Neil Brown
JGP England Russia Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin Russia Victoria Sinitsina / Ruslan Zhiganshin Canada Nicole Orford / Thomas Williams
JGP Germany Russia Evgenia Kosigina/ Nikolai Moroshkin Russia Marina Antipova / Artem Kudashev United States Charlotte Lichtman / Dean Copely
JGP Czech Rep. Russia Ekaterina Pushkash / Jonathan Guerreiro France Tiffany Zahorski / Alexis Miart Ukraine Anastasia Galyeta / Alexei Shumski
JGP Final Russia Ksenia Monko / Kirill Khaliavin Russia Victoria Sinitsina / Ruslan Zhiganshin Russia Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin

References

External links

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