2011 Nebelhorn Trophy
2011 Nebelhorn Trophy | |
---|---|
Type: | Senior International |
Date: | September 21 – 24 |
Season: | 2011–12 |
Location: | Oberstdorf |
Venue: | Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf |
Champions | |
Men's singles: Yuzuru Hanyu | |
Ladies' singles: Mirai Nagasu | |
Pairs: Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov | |
Ice dance: Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue | |
Previous: 2010 Nebelhorn Trophy | |
Next: 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy |
The 2011 Nebelhorn Trophy took place on September 21–24, 2011 at the Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf.[1] It is held annually in Oberstdorf, Germany and is named after the Nebelhorn, a nearby mountain.
It was one of the first international senior competitions of the season. Skaters were entered by their respective national federations and competed in four disciplines: men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The Fritz-Geiger-Memorial Trophy was presented to the team with the highest placements across all disciplines.
Overview
In men's singles, Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan, Stephen Carriere from the United States, and Russian Zhan Bush were the leaders after the short program. Bush was the only skater to land a clean quad jump in this segment of the competition; it was also the first one he had landed in competition.[2] Hanyu finished 1st in the free skate to win the event, while Michal Březina and Carriere won silver and bronze, respectively.[3]
American Mirai Nagasu won the ladies' short program, followed by Georgia's Elene Gedevanishvili, and Germany's Sarah Hecken.[4] Nagasu went on to win the gold, Gedevanishvili the silver, and Sweden's Joshi Helgesson moved up to take the bronze.[5]
Russians Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov, Americans Caydee Denney / John Coughlin, and Germans Maylin Hausch / Daniel Wende were the top three pairs in the short program. Denney and Coughlin were making their international debut together.[6] Volosozhar and Trankov won the free skate and the event, while Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov finished second. Denney and Coughlin were fourth in the long program and finished third overall.[7]
In the ice dance event, Germany's Nelli Zhiganshina / Alexander Gazsi won the short dance, followed by Americans Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue and Canadians Kharis Ralph / Asher Hill. Hubbell and Donohue, skating in their first international competition together,[8] went on to win the free dance and the competition.[9]
Schedule
Date | Time | Event |
---|---|---|
Thursday, 9/22 | 14:00 | Ice dance: Short dance |
Men: Short program | ||
Pairs: Short program | ||
Friday, 9/23 | 10:00 | Ladies: Short program |
Men: Free skating | ||
19:00 | Pairs: Free skating | |
Saturday, 9/24 | 10:00 | Ladies: Free skating |
13:50 | Ice daning: Free dance |
Entries
Results
Men
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yuzuru Hanyu | Japan | 226.26 | 1 | 75.26 | 1 | 151.00 |
2 | Michal Březina | Czech Republic | 215.00 | 4 | 69.77 | 2 | 145.23 |
3 | Stephen Carriere | United States | 207.54 | 2 | 74.51 | 5 | 133.03 |
4 | Javier Fernández | Spain | 204.46 | 6 | 66.87 | 4 | 137.59 |
5 | Max Aaron | United States | 204.17 | 8 | 65.64 | 3 | 138.53 |
6 | Zhan Bush | Russia | 200.58 | 3 | 72.01 | 6 | 128.57 |
7 | Konstantin Menshov | Russia | 194.43 | 7 | 66.49 | 8 | 127.94 |
8 | Jorik Hendrickx | Belgium | 193.25 | 9 | 64.93 | 7 | 128.32 |
9 | Denis Ten | Kazakhstan | 187.25 | 5 | 68.66 | 9 | 118.59 |
10 | Elladj Baldé | Canada | 165.11 | 10 | 60.00 | 10 | 105.11 |
11 | Samuel Morais | Canada | 154.39 | 11 | 56.05 | 14 | 98.34 |
12 | Franz Streubel | Germany | 153.75 | 12 | 56.05 | 15 | 97.70 |
13 | Javier Raya | Spain | 150.53 | 14 | 47.70 | 11 | 102.83 |
14 | Romain Ponsart | France | 147.81 | 13 | 54.26 | 16 | 93.55 |
15 | Ari-Pekka Nurmenkari | Finland | 145.58 | 15 | 46.01 | 12 | 99.57 |
16 | Kim Min-seok | South Korea | 143.03 | 16 | 44.14 | 13 | 98.89 |
17 | Valtter Virtanen | Finland | 125.53 | 18 | 39.88 | 17 | 85.65 |
18 | Mitchell Chapman | Australia | 110.98 | 17 | 41.53 | 19 | 69.45 |
19 | Boyito Mulder | Netherlands | 105.73 | 19 | 35.85 | 18 | 69.88 |
WD | Kevin Alves | Brazil | |||||
WD | Tatsuki Machida | Japan |
Ladies
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mirai Nagasu | United States | 167.46 | 1 | 58.38 | 1 | 109.08 |
2 | Elene Gedevanishvili | Georgia | 146.92 | 2 | 50.56 | 2 | 96.36 |
3 | Joshi Helgesson | Sweden | 138.73 | 5 | 47.91 | 3 | 90.82 |
4 | Shion Kokubun | Japan | 134.66 | 4 | 49.07 | 5 | 85.59 |
5 | Viktoria Helgesson | Sweden | 133.52 | 9 | 43.36 | 4 | 90.16 |
6 | Sarah Hecken | Germany | 128.04 | 3 | 49.07 | 8 | 78.97 |
7 | Joelle Forte | United States | 122.74 | 7 | 45.80 | 9 | 76.94 |
8 | Francesca Rio | Italy | 120.49 | 12 | 39.72 | 6 | 80.77 |
9 | Sonia Lafuente | Spain | 120.10 | 11 | 39.81 | 7 | 76.94 |
10 | Nathalie Weinzierl | Germany | 116.88 | 10 | 40.58 | 10 | 76.30 |
11 | Yrétha Silété | France | 111.83 | 8 | 45.41 | 17 | 66.42 |
12 | Park Youn-joon | South Korea | 109.11 | 14 | 38.16 | 12 | 70.95 |
13 | Kerstin Frank | Austria | 107.11 | 13 | 39.66 | 15 | 67.45 |
14 | Adriana DeSanctis | Canada | 105.34 | 19 | 33.07 | 11 | 72.27 |
15 | Karen Kemanai | Japan | 104.51 | 18 | 34.19 | 13 | 70.32 |
16 | Irina Movchan | Ukraine | 104.41 | 15 | 37.19 | 16 | 67.22 |
17 | Victoria Muniz | Puerto Rico | 103.36 | 17 | 35.57 | 14 | 67.79 |
18 | Isabelle Pieman | Belgium | 97.20 | 16 | 36.64 | 19 | 60.56 |
19 | Clara Peters | Ireland | 91.27 | 21 | 29.96 | 18 | 61.31 |
20 | Manouk Gijsman | Netherlands | 84.32 | 20 | 30.49 | 21 | 53.83 |
21 | Marina Seeh | Serbia | 83.57 | 22 | 28.81 | 20 | 54.76 |
WD | Ksenia Makarova | Russia | 6 | 45.95 | |||
WD | Tiffany Packard Yu | Hong Kong |
Pairs
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov | United States | 183.65 | 1 | 57.91 | 1 | 125.74 |
2 | Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov | Russia | 165.23 | 4 | 52.50 | 2 | 112.73 |
3 | Caydee Denney / John Coughlin | United States | 162.73 | 2 | 57.56 | 4 | 105.17 |
4 | Maylin Hausch / Daniel Wende | Germany | 159.30 | 3 | 53.40 | 3 | 105.90 |
5 | Paige Lawrence / Rudi Swiegers | Canada | 141.24 | 5 | 48.97 | 5 | 92.27 |
6 | Jessica Dubé / Sébastien Wolfe | Canada | 135.64 | 6 | 47.17 | 7 | 88.47 |
7 | Tiffany Vise / Don Baldwin | United States | 132.65 | 7 | 43.59 | 6 | 89.06 |
8 | Mari Vartmann / Aaron Van Cleave | Germany | 123.93 | 9 | 37.28 | 8 | 86.65 |
9 | Danielle Montalbano / Evgeni Krasnapolski | Israel | 106.27 | 8 | 37.30 | 9 | 68.97 |
Ice dance
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SD | FD | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue | United States | 139.01 | 2 | 54.82 | 1 | 84.19 |
2 | Nelli Zhiganshina / Alexander Gazsi | Germany | 137.66 | 1 | 55.03 | 2 | 82.63 |
3 | Kharis Ralph / Asher Hill | Canada | 133.94 | 3 | 52.03 | 3 | 81.91 |
4 | Cathy Reed / Chris Reed | Japan | 125.54 | 5 | 47.90 | 4 | 77.64 |
5 | Isabella Tobias / Deividas Stagniūnas | Lithuania | 125.24 | 4 | 49.06 | 5 | 76.18 |
6 | Anastasia Olson / Jordan Cowan | United States | 119.42 | 6 | 45.84 | 6 | 73.58 |
7 | Sara Hurtado / Adrián Díaz | Spain | 117.61 | 7 | 44.89 | 7 | 72.72 |
8 | Tarrah Harvey / Keith Gagnon | Canada | 114.70 | 8 | 43.84 | 8 | 70.86 |
9 | Kira Geil / Tobias Eisenbauer | Austria | 111.10 | 10 | 42.30 | 9 | 68.80 |
10 | Louise Walden / Owen Edwards | United Kingdom | 106.45 | 9 | 43.83 | 12 | 62.62 |
11 | Alisa Agafonova / Alper Uçar | Turkey | 104.28 | 11 | 41.11 | 10 | 63.17 |
12 | Gabriela Kubová / Dmitri Kiselev | Czech Republic | 102.09 | 12 | 40.95 | 13 | 61.14 |
13 | Olesia Karmi / Max Lindholm | Finland | 98.41 | 14 | 35.61 | 11 | 62.80 |
14 | Henna Lindholm / Ossi Kanervo | Finland | 96.46 | 13 | 36.25 | 14 | 60.21 |
References
- ^ "Nebelhorn Trophy Announcement" (PDF). German Skating Union. 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 23, 2011). "Hanyu wins Men's short at Nebelhorn Trophy". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 23, 2011). "Yuzuru Hanyu skates off with Nebelhorn gold". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 23, 2011). "Nagasu leads Ladies after short program". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 24, 2011). "Nagasu skates to gold at Nebelhorn Trophy". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 23, 2011). "Controversial short program victory for Volosozhar and Trankov". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 23, 2011). "Volosozhar and Trankov take gold with strong skate at Nebelhorn". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 22, 2011). "Zhiganshina and Gazsi dance to lead at Nebelhorn". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 22, 2011.
- ^ Flade, Tatjana (September 24, 2011). "Hubbell and Donohue capture gold at Nebelhorn Trophy". GoldenSkate. Retrieved September 24, 2011.