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Filtering by Category: news

CAS Dismisses Canadian Appeal in 2022 Olympic Team Event Case

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CAS Media Release

The ranking announced by the ISU on 30 January 2024 is confirmed as follows:

  1. United States of America 65 pts (gold)

  2. Japan 63 pts (silver)

  3. Russia 54 pts (bronze)

The Appellants had sought a ruling from CAS re-ranking the figure skating Team Event as follows: re-ranking the figure skating Team Event, as follows: United States of America (Gold); Japan (Silver); Canada (Bronze).

Following the hearing that took place on 22 July 2024, the Panel of CAS arbitrators in charge of the matter deliberated and concluded that the results of the Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva in the Olympic Figure Skating Team Event were correctly disqualified, without any possibility in the ISU Rules to re-allocate points in favour of Team Canada, following the retroactive disqualification of Kamila Valieva.

The Panel issued the Operative Part of the Arbitral Award. The full award, with the grounds for the Panel’s decision, will be issued as soon as possible.

Skate Canada states that they accept the CAS decision.

The ISU statement regarding the medal ceremony:

the International Olympic Committee (IOC) will award the medals during a special ceremony which will be held at the Champions Park in Paris on August 7, 2024 for the gold and silver medallists. Further to today’s decision, the ISU is in contact with the IOC to determine the next steps for the third place.

Minimum Technical Scores for 2025 ISU Championships

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ISU Communication 2657

Starting in the 2024-25 season, skaters must achieve the following combined (SP+FS) technical element scores in order to participate in the 2025 ISU Championships. Scores are valid from the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons. SP and FS scores used to calculate the combined score may be earned from different competitions.

See also: Skaters who have achieved the technical minimums (“Combined Total Elements Scores for the current & previous season”)

2025 World Championships

  • Men: 104 (previously 34 + 64 = 98)

  • Women: 90 (previously 32 + 53 = 85)

  • Pairs: 88 (previously 29 + 46 = 75)

  • Ice Dance: 94 (previously 35 + 52 = 87)

2025 European & Four Continents Championships

  • Men: 86 (previously 28 + 46 = 74)

  • Women: 75 (previously 25 + 42 = 67)

  • Pairs: 75 (previously 25 + 42 = 67)

  • Ice Dance: 85 (previously 30 + 48 = 78)

2025 Junior World Championships

  • Men: 80 (previously 25 + 44 = 69)

  • Women: 72 (previously 25 + 40 = 65)

  • Pairs: 63 (previously 23 + 34 = 57)

  • Ice Dance: 71 (previously 24 + 38 = 62)

CAS Dismisses ROC Appeal in 2022 Olympic Team Event Case - Canadian Appeal Pending

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CAS Media Release

Lausanne, 25 July 2024 – The CAS Panel in charge of the appeals filed by the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) (CAS 2024/A/10355), the Figure Skating Federation of Russia (CAS 2024/A/10360), and Russian skaters Aleksandr Galliamov, Nikita Katsalapov, Mark Kondratiuk, Anastasia Mishina, Victoria Sinitsina and Kamila Valieva (CAS 2024/A/10356) (collectively, the Appellants) against the re-ranking decision announced by the International Skating Union (ISU) on 30 January 2024 (the Challenged Decision) in relation to the final standings for the Team Event in figure skating at the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022 has issued its decision: the appeals are dismissed.

The Appellants had sought a ruling from CAS re-ranking the figure skating Team Event and awarding the gold medal to the ROC. Following the hearing that took place on 12 June 2024, the Panel deliberated and concluded that the results of Ms Valieva in the Olympic Figure Skating Team Event were correctly disqualified in the Challenged Decision, and that the ROC Skating Team could not be awarded the gold medal. Consequently, the above-mentioned appeals are dismissed. The Panel issued the Operative Part of the Arbitral Award. The full award, with the grounds for the Panel’s decision, will be issued as soon as possible.

The second CAS Panel, different from the first, constituted to resolve the related, but separate, appeal (CAS 2024/A/10354) filed by Canadian skaters Madeline Schizas, Piper Gilles, Paul Poirier, Kirsten Moore-Towers, Michael Marinaro, Eric Radford, Vanessa James and Roman Sadovsky, together with, Skate Canada and the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC) (collectively, the Canadian Appellants), held a hearing at the CAS headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland on 22 July 2024.

The Canadian Appellants also seek a ruling from CAS re-ranking the figure skating Team Event, as follows: United States of America (Gold); Japan (Silver); Canada (Bronze).

The second CAS Panel is now deliberating. It is not possible to indicate at this time when the second Panel’s decision will be issued.


Following the CAS decision on ROC’s appeal, the IOC stated that they would work with the ISU and US/Japanese Olympic Committees to hold a medal ceremony at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

IOC STATEMENT ON CAS DECISION:

This decision comes just in time to still be able to make the medal allocation for gold and silver possible during the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

The IOC will now work with the @ISU_Figure, USOPC and the JOC to bring the athletes to Paris in order to hold the ceremony here in the Champions Park based on the amended results from the ISU.

We are glad that this opportunity can be offered to the athletes and teams who, unfortunately, had to wait for a very long time for their medals due to the ongoing legal case.

Christine Brennan of USA Today Sports reports that the medal ceremony is planned for August 7, although this is yet to be confirmed with the IOC.

ISU Communication 2656: Singles & Pairs Scale of Values, 2024-2025

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ISU Communication 2656

Base values for quintuple jumps have been added to the Scale of Values. All quint jumps (5T, 5S, 5Lo, 5F, 5Lz) have a base value of 14.00 points. (No value is assigned for a 5A.)

Rules regarding quint jumps:

  • Quints are not permitted in the short program.

  • In the free program, quints are permitted as solo jumps, but not in combinations or sequences.

  • Repetitions: Of all triple, quadruple and quintuple jumps, only two can be executed twice. Of the two repetitions, only one can be a quad or quint jump. If both executions are as solo jumps, the second of these solo jumps will be attributed 70% of its Base Value. Triple, quadruple and quintuple jumps with the same name will be considered as two different jumps. No triple, quadruple or quintuple jump can be attempted more than twice.

2024 Grand Prix Entries

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Entry lists: Men, Women, Pairs, Dance (Alternates)

See also: ISU Grand Prix page, Grand Prix tag

Last Updated: Sept. 15, 2024


SKATE AMERICA (Allen, TX, USA, Oct. 18-20)

Men:

  • Wesley Chiu (CAN)

  • Kevin Aymoz (FRA)

  • Francois Pitot (FRA)

  • Nika Egadze (GEO)

  • Kao Miura (JPN)

  • Koshiro Shimada (JPN)

  • Nozomu Yoshioka (JPN)

  • Deniss Vasiljevs (LAT)

  • Donovan Carrillo (MEX)

  • Ilia Malinin (USA)

  • Maxim Naumov (USA)

  • TBD (USA)

Women:

  • Olga Mikutina (AUT) [Added 8/9]

  • Nina Pinzarrone (BEL)

  • Lea Serna (FRA)

  • Yuna Aoki (JPN)

  • Wakaba Higuchi (JPN)

  • Rinka Watanabe (JPN)

  • Minchae Kim (KOR) [Added 8/9]

  • Haein Lee (KOR) [WD 8/6]

  • Young You (KOR) [WD 8/6]

  • Sofja Stepcenko (LAT)

  • Livia Kaiser (SUI)

  • Isabeau Levito (USA)

  • Bradie Tennell (USA)

  • TBD (USA)

Pairs:

  • Milania Vaananen/Filippo Clerici (FIN)

  • Anastasia Vaipan-Law/Luke Digby (GBR)

  • Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (GEO)

  • Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (HUN)

  • Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (JPN)

  • Alisa Efimova/Misha Mitrofanov (USA)

  • Ellie Kam/Danny O’Shea (USA)

  • TBD (USA)

Ice Dance:

  • Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Soerensen (CAN)

  • Marie-Jade Lauriault/Romain Le Gac (CAN)

  • Katerina Mrazkova/Daniel Mrazek (CZE)

  • Olivia Smart/Tim Dieck (ESP)

  • Lilah Fear/Lewis Gibson (GBR)

  • Diana Davis/Gleb Smolkin (GEO)

  • Elizabeth Tkachenko/Alexei Kiliakov (ISR)

  • Madison Chock/Evan Bates (USA)

  • Leah Neset/Artem Markelov (USA)

  • TBD (USA)


SKATE CANADA (Halifax, NS, CAN, Oct. 25-27)

Men:

  • Vladimir Litvintsev (AZE)

  • Stephen Gogolev (CAN)

  • Aleksa Rakic (CAN)

  • Roman Sadovsky (CAN)

  • Luc Economides (FRA)

  • Mark Gorodnitsky (ISR)

  • Gabriele Frangipani (ITA)

  • Shun Sato (JPN)

  • Sota Yamamoto (JPN)

  • Junhwan Cha (KOR)

  • Jason Brown (USA)

  • Ilia Malinin (USA)

Women:

  • Sara-Maude Dupuis (CAN)

  • Kaiya Ruiter (CAN)

  • Madeline Schizas (CAN)

  • Nella Pelkonen (FIN) [Added 8/7]

  • Rino Matsuike (JPN)

  • Kaori Sakamoto (JPN)

  • Hana Yoshida (JPN)

  • Yelim Kim (KOR)

  • Seoyeong Wi (KOR)

  • Ekaterina Kurakova (POL)

  • Kimmy Repond (SUI)

  • Alysa Liu (USA)

  • Ava Marie Ziegler (USA) [WD 8/6]

Pairs:

  • Anastasia Golubeva/Hektor Giotopoulos Moore (AUS)

  • Kelly Ann Laurin/Loucas Ethier (CAN)

  • Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (CAN)

  • TBD (CAN)

  • Annika Hocke/Robert Kunkel (GER)

  • Lucrezia Beccari/Matteo Guarise (ITA)

  • Daria Danilova/Michel Tsiba (NED)

  • Emily Chan/Spencer Akira Howe (USA)

Ice Dance:

  • Holly Harris/Jason Chan (AUS) [added 6/11]

  • Alicia Fabbri/Paul Ayer (CAN)

  • Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier (CAN)

  • Marjorie Lajoie/Zachary Lagha (CAN)

  • Natalie Taschlerova/Filip Taschler (CZE)

  • Evgeniia Lopareva/Geoffrey Brissaud (FRA)

  • Darya Grimm/Michail Savitskiy (GER) [WD 6/11]

  • Hannah Lim/Ye Quan (KOR)

  • Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville (USA)

  • Oona Brown/Gage Brown (USA)

  • Emilea Zingas/Vadym Kolesnik (USA)


GRAND PRIX DE FRANCE (Angers, FRA, Nov. 1-3)

Men:

  • Boyang Jin (CHN)

  • Aleksandr Selevko (EST)

  • Luc Economides (FRA)

  • Francois Pitot (FRA)

  • Adam Siao Him Fa (FRA)

  • Nikolaj Memola (ITA)

  • Koshiro Shimada (JPN)

  • Kazuki Tomono (JPN)

  • Mikhail Shaidorov (KAZ)

  • Lukas Britschgi (SUI)

  • Camden Pulkinen (USA)

  • Andrew Torgashev (USA)

Women:

  • Loena Hendrickx (BEL)

  • Nina Pinzarrone (BEL)

  • Lorine Schild (FRA)

  • Lea Serna (FRA)

  • TBD (FRA)

  • Anastasiia Gubanova (GEO)

  • Wakaba Higuchi (JPN)

  • Mai Mihara (JPN)

  • Rion Sumiyoshi (JPN)

  • Chaeyeon Kim (KOR)

  • Livia Kaiser (SUI)

  • Amber Glenn (USA)

Pairs:

  • Lia Pereira/Trennt Michaud (CAN)

  • Cheng Peng/Lei Wang (CHN) [WD 9/13]

  • Camille Kovalev/Pavel Kovalev (FRA)

  • Oceane Piegad/Denys Strekalin (FRA)

  • Aurelie Faula/Theo Belle (FRA) [Added 7/11]

  • Minerva Fabienne Hase/Nikita Volodin (GER)

  • Sara Conti/Niccolo Macii (ITA)

  • Rebecca Ghilardi/Filippo Ambrosini (ITA)

Ice Dance:

  • Marie-Jade Lauriault/Romain Le Gac (CAN)

  • Katerina Mrazkova/Daniel Mrazek (CZE)

  • Marie Dupayage/Thomas Nabais (FRA)

  • Evgeniia Lopareva/Geoffrey Brissaud (FRA)

  • TBD (FRA)

  • Charlene Guignard/Marco Fabbri (ITA)

  • Allison Reed/Saulius Ambrulevicius (LTU)

  • Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville (USA)

  • Leah Neset/Artem Markelov (USA)

  • Eva Pate/Logan Bye (USA)


NHK TROPHY (Tokyo, JPN, Nov. 8-10)

Men:

  • Vladimir Litvintsev (AZE)

  • Stephen Gogolev (CAN)

  • Mark Gorodnitsky (ISR)

  • Gabriele Frangipani (ITA)

  • Daniel Grassl (ITA) [Added 8/6]

  • Matteo Rizzo (ITA)

  • Yuma Kagiyama (JPN)

  • Kao Miura (JPN)

  • Tatsuya Tsuboi (JPN) [Added 9/5]

  • Juheon Lim (KOR)

  • Adam Hagara (SVK) [WD 8/6]

  • Jason Brown (USA)

  • Tomoki Hiwatashi (USA)

Women:

  • Olga Mikutina (AUT) [Added 9/11]

  • Niina Petrokina (EST)

  • Lara Naki Gutmann (ITA)

  • Yuna Aoki (JPN) [Added 9/5]

  • Mone Chiba (JPN)

  • Kaori Sakamoto (JPN)

  • Yelim Kim (KOR)

  • Haein Lee (KOR) [WD 9/2]

  • Seoyeong Wi (KOR)

  • Ekaterina Kurakova (POL)

  • Alysa Liu (USA)

  • Bradie Tennell (USA)

  • Lindsay Thorngren (USA)

Pairs:

  • Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (GEO)

  • Annika Hocke/Robert Kunkel (GER)

  • Lucrezia Beccari/Matteo Guarise (ITA)

  • Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (JPN)

  • Yuna Nagaoka/Sumitada Moriguchi (JPN)

  • Daria Danilova/Michel Tsiba (NED) [Added 8/9]

  • Ellie Kam/Danny O’Shea (USA)

  • Valentina Plazas/Maximiliano Fernandez (USA)

Ice Dance:

  • Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Soerensen (CAN)

  • Yuka Orihara/Juho Pirinen (FIN)

  • Loicia Demougeot/Theo Le Mercier (FRA)

  • Jennifer Janse van Rensburg/Benjamin Steffan (GER)

  • Azusa Tanaka/Shingo Nishiyama (JPN)

  • Utana Yoshida/Masaya Morita (JPN)

  • Allison Reed/Saulius Ambrulevicius (LTU)

  • Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko (USA)

  • Madison Chock/Evan Bates (USA)

  • Caroline Green/Michael Parsons (USA)


GRAND PRIX FINLANDIA TROPHY (Helsinki, FIN, Nov. 15-17)

Men:

  • Aleksandr Selevko (EST)

  • Makar Suntsev (FIN)

  • Valtter Virtanen (FIN)

  • Kevin Aymoz (FRA)

  • Daniel Grassl (ITA)

  • Yuma Kagiyama (JPN)

  • Kazuki Tomono (JPN)

  • Sota Yamamoto (JPN)

  • Junhwan Cha (KOR)

  • Vladimir Samoilov (POL)

  • Lukas Britschgi (SUI)

  • Camden Pulkinen (USA)

Women:

  • Loena Hendrickx (BEL)

  • Niina Petrokina (EST)

  • Nella Pelkonen (FIN)

  • Janna Jyrkinen (FIN) [Added 8/29]

  • Olivia Lisko (FIN) [Added 8/29]

  • Lorine Schild (FRA)

  • Rino Matsuike (JPN)

  • Mai Mihara (JPN)

  • Hana Yoshida (JPN)

  • Young You (KOR) [WD 9/2]

  • Isabeau Levito (USA)

  • Sarah Everhardt (USA) [Added 9/11]

  • Lindsay Thorngren (USA)

Pairs:

  • Anastasia Golubeva/Hektor Giotopoulos Moore (AUS)

  • Kelly Ann Laurin/Loucas Ethier (CAN)

  • Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (CAN)

  • Milania Vaananen/Filippo Clerici (FIN)

  • Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (HUN)

  • Rebecca Ghilardi/Filippo Ambrosini (ITA)

  • Emily Chan/Spencer Akira Howe (USA)

  • Naomi Williams/Lachlan Lewer (USA)

Ice Dance:

  • Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier (CAN)

  • Natalie Taschlerova/Filip Taschler (CZE)

  • Yuka Orihara/Juho Pirinen (FIN)

  • Juulia Turkkila/Matthias Versluis (FIN)

  • Lilah Fear/Lewis Gibson (GBR)

  • Hannah Lim/Ye Quan (KOR)

  • Mariia Pinchuk/Mykyta Pogorielov (UKR)

  • Oona Brown/Gage Brown (USA)

  • Eva Pate/Logan Bye (USA)

  • Emilea Zingas/Vadym Kolesnik (USA)


CUP OF CHINA (Chongqing, CHN, Nov. 22-24)

Men:

  • Wesley Chiu (CAN)

  • Yudong Chen (CHN)

  • Boyang Jin (CHN)

  • Daiwei Dai (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Adam Siao Him Fa (FRA)

  • Nika Egadze (GEO)

  • Nikolaj Memola (ITA)

  • Matteo Rizzo (ITA)

  • Shun Sato (JPN)

  • Mikhail Shaidorov (KAZ)

  • Hyungyeom Kim (KOR)

  • Deniss Vasiljevs (LAT)

Women:

  • Madeline Schizas (CAN)

  • Xiangyi An (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Hongyi Chen (CHN)

  • Yi Zhu (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Anastasiia Gubanova (GEO)

  • Mone Chiba (JPN)

  • Rion Sumiyoshi (JPN)

  • Rinka Watanabe (JPN)

  • Chaeyeon Kim (KOR)

  • Minchae Kim (KOR) [Added 8/9]

  • Kimmy Repond (SUI)

  • Amber Glenn (USA)

  • Ava Marie Ziegler (USA) [WD 8/6]

Pairs:

  • Lia Pereira/Trennt Michaud (CAN)

  • Cheng Peng/Lei Wang (CHN) [WD 9/13]

  • Yuchen Wang/Lei Zhu (CHN) [Added 9/13]

  • Yixi Yang/Shunyang Deng (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Siyang Zhang/Ziqi Jia (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Camille Kovalev/Pavel Kovalev (FRA)

  • Minerva Fabienne Hase/Nikita Volodin (GER)

  • Sara Conti/Niccolo Macii (ITA)

  • Valentina Plazas/Maximiliano Fernandez (USA)

Ice Dance:

  • Marjorie Lajoie/Zachary Lagha (CAN)

  • Zixi Xiao/Linghao He (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Junfei Ren/Jianing Xing (CHN) [Added 8/14]

  • Olivia Smart/Tim Dieck (ESP)

  • Juulia Turkkila/Matthias Versluis (FIN)

  • Loicia Demougeot/Theo Le Mercier (FRA)

  • Diana Davis/Gleb Smolkin (GEO)

  • Charlene Guignard/Marco Fabbri (ITA)

  • Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko (USA)

  • Caroline Green/Michael Parsons (USA)

59th ISU Congress: Agenda and Proposals

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The 59th ISU Ordinary Congress will take place in Las Vegas, USA from June 8-14, 2024. ISU Members will discuss and vote on proposals regarding the ISU organization and rules of figure skating (as well as speed skating, short track, and synchronized skating).

The ISU Congress will be livestreamed on the Skating ISU Youtube channel.

Congress Agenda:

Links:


SUMMARY OF FIGURE SKATING PROPOSALS

Below is a summary of some notable proposals related to figure skating that will be discussed at the Congress. See Communication 2629 for a full list of proposals, as well as more details regarding their reasoning and the ISU Council’s recommendations.

Proposals require a 2/3rds supermajority to pass. Technical Rules require a 50% simple majority to pass.


Urgent Matters:

Urgent Proposal 11 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 5): ISU Council - Skaters are allowed to display one manufacturer’s marking on their costume, with a size up to 30 square centimeters. Costumes may also display the skater’s name and ISU Member’s name or logo.

During the competitive competition performance, the Gala Exhibition at the end of an event and for the medal award Victory Ceremony, one Manufacturer Identification with a maximum of 30cm2 is allowed on the clothing of Competitors. In all instances where the item contains elastic material (such as synthetic elastic fiber material known as spandex or elastane), the Authorized Identification size shall be measured stretched (e.g. as worn by the Skater). no markings on Skaters costumes are allowed, but only the above-referenced markings on boots and blades. In addition, Skater’s costumes may, however, carry the Skater’s and his ISU Member’s name and/or logo and/or official ISU Member abbreviation. Boots and blades may carry the above-referenced markings.


Constitution & General Regulations:

Proposal 1 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 8): ISU Council - Resolution to empower the ISU Council to undertake preparation of a new Constitutional framework of the ISU and to submit it for discussion and adoption by an Extraordinary ISU Congress in 2025.

Reason: The constitutional framework of the ISU dates back to 1892 and consists of the ISU Constitution and General Regulations. Since 1892, the ISU Constitution and General Regulations have been amended 58 times to address issues on a piecemeal basis, which has led to overloading the Constitution and General Regulations with detailed provisions, thereby destroying its shape as the constitutional framework of the basic governance of an association organized under Swiss law. For example, as it exists today, the ISU Constitution and General Regulations include many detailed sport rules and operations rules which are unrelated to the basic governance framework of the ISU and are more appropriately addressed in other parts of the ISU Statutes, policies, and guidelines.

Proposal 21 [WITHDRAWN, WILL BE RECONSIDERED PER PROPOSAL 1] (pg. 18): USA - Create a Pairs Technical Committee separate from the Singles and Pairs Technical Committee that currently exists. (ISU Council is not in favor due to financial reasons.)

Proposal 27 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 21): Canada - The Technical Committees must publish the following season’s technical requirements by April 15 May 31, to give coaches and skaters time to prepare new programs. (ISU Council is not in favor of piecemeal changes to the Constitution per Proposal 1, but will consider establishing dates for rule publication when formulating their new Constitution.)

Proposal 45 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 27): ISU Council - Change maximum age limits for junior pair skaters to less than 21 for women, and less than 23 for men. Change maximum age limits for junior ice dancers to less than 21 for both partners. (Current age limits in both disciplines are less than 19 for women, and less than 21 for men.) A maximum age gap of 7 years would be allowed between partners in both disciplines. Increase age limits for novice competitors (see below).

Rule 108, paragraph 3:

b) In International Junior Competitions and ISU Junior Championships a Junior is a Skater who has met the following requirements before July 1 preceding the event:

i) has reached at least the age of thirteen;

ii) has not reached the age of nineteen for Women and Men in singles competition; and

iii) has not reached the age of nineteen twenty one for Women and the age of twenty-one twenty-three for Men in Pair Skating. A maximum age gap of 7 years is allowed between the two partners.

iv) has not reached the age of nineteen twenty-one for Women and the age of twenty-one for Men in Pair Skating and Ice Dance competition. A maximum age gap of 7 years is allowed between the two partners.

c) In International Novice Competitions a Novice is a Skater who has met the following requirements before July 1 preceding the competition:

i) Basic Novice – has not reached the age of thirteen fourteen;

ii) Intermediate Novice – has not reached the age of fifteen sixteen;

iii) Advanced Novice – has reached the age of ten and has not reached the age of fifteen sixteen for girls (Singles/Pairs Skating/Ice Dance) and boys (Singles) and seventeen eighteen for boys (Pair Skating/Ice Dance).

Proposal 47 [WITHDRAWN] (pg. 29): USA - Change minimum age limit of senior women in pair skating from 17 to 16. (ISU Council is not in favor, and prefers their own Proposal 45).

Proposals 48 & 49 [WITHDRAWN] (pg. 30): Canada - Change maximum age limit of junior ice dancers to less than 21 for both partners. Change maximum age limit of junior pairs skaters to less than 23 for both partners. (ISU Council is in favor, but prefers their own Proposal 45.)

Proposal 50 [WITHDRAWN, WILL BE RECONSIDERED PER PROPOSAL 1] (pg. 30): Canada - Modify process for a skater to obtain a release from their federation. (ISU Council not in favor, believes current rules are sufficient.)

Rule 109 paragraph 2. c)

A Skater who has competed in any ISU Championships, ISU Event and/or International Competition for any ISU Member and who intends to compete in the future for another ISU Member needs a permit from the last ISU Member he previously represented, which permit shall not unreasonably be denied. In addition, such Skater may compete for the respective ISU Member in International Competitions, ISU Events and ISU Championships only after a waiting period of twelve months since the Skater competed for any other ISU Member in any such competition has elapsed.

A Skater who has competed for an ISU member in an ISU Championship, ISU Event, or International Competition and intends to compete for another ISU Member requires a permit from the last ISU Member the Skater represented. This permit must be issued upon receipt of proper documentation and will be effective following a waiting period of one full season since the Skater represented that ISU member internationally.

Proposal 55 [REJECTED, WILL BE RECONSIDERED PER PROPOSAL 1] (pg. 32): Austria - Forbid ISU officials from performing as judges during their period in office. (ISU Council is in favor, but thinks that the rule should be incorporated into the ISU’s Code of Ethics instead of the Constitution.)

Rule 121, paragraph 3.l) new

l) ISU Member Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Directors General, General Secretaries, CEOs, Executive Directors, Sport Directors or equivalent, shall not officiate as a Judge at any ISU Championships, any ISU Senior Grand Prix event, ISU Grand Prix Final Junior and Senior, Winter Youth Olympic Games, or Olympic Winter Games during the entire time of his or her elected/appointed period of service.


Special Regulations, Single & Pair Skating and Ice Dance:

Proposal 177 [REJECTED] (pg. 75): Japan - Events should not begin before 9.00 a.m. and should be planned to finish by 10:00 p.m. (Previously 11:00PM)

Proposal 182 [REJECTED] (pg. 76): Netherlands - Remove the -1.0 point deduction for falls. For falls that occur on an element, the base value of the element would be reduced by 50%.

Proposal 185 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 77): ISU Council - Entries for ISU Championships must be received by the ISU 28 days before the first official practice day at the competition (previously 21 days).

Proposal 188 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 77): Austria - Remove the qualifying round from future World Championships. (The qualifying round had been approved at the previous ISU Congress, and would have started at the 2025 World Championships.)


Technical Rules, Single & Pair Skating and Ice Dance:

Proposal 227 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 95): Amend definitions of Program Component Scores:

  • Composition: Remove “Connections between and within elements” and “Pattern and ice coverage”

  • Presentation: Remove “Unison”

  • Skating Skills: Add “Unison” for pairs and ice dance

Proposal 230 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 96): Remove the order draw for free skates at ISU competitions. The starting order of the free skates will be in reverse order of the rankings after the short program.

Proposal 234 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 100): The Euler will no longer be a listed jump, and will have no base value.

An Euler (half-loop) is considered a non-listed jump, it will have no value when used in a jump combination between two listed jumps becomes and it will not be counted in the number of the allowed jumps of the concerned jump combination with the value indicated in the Scale of Value. An Euler jump cannot be included in the jump combination of the Short Program. An Euler (half-loop) can be executed, in between two listed jumps, only once in Free Skating.

Proposal 235 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 100): A jump sequence can have up to 3 jumps in singles skating, but only 2 jumps in pairs skating. An Euler is allowed in the jump sequence.

A jump sequence consists of two or three jumps in Single Skating or two jumps in Pair Skating of any number of revolutions in which the second and/or the third jump is an Axel type jump with a direct step from the landing curve of the first/second jump into the take-off curve of the Axel jump. […] An Euler (half-loop) is considered a non-listed jump, it will have no value when used in a jump sequence between two listed jumps becomes and it will not be counted in the number of the allowed jumps of the concerned jump sequence with the value indicated in the Scale of Value. After the execution of an Euler (half- loop) no change of foot before the next jump is allowed. An Euler (half-loop) can only be executed once, in between two listed jumps, in Free Skating.

Proposal 236 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 100): Somersault-type jumps such as backflips would no longer be illegal moves.

Proposal 239 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 102): Reduce the number of jumping passes in the singles free skate from 7 to 6. Replace one leveled spin in the singles free skate with a choreographic spin.

A well-balanced Free Skating program for Men/Women must contain:

  • maximum of seven six jump elements (one of which must be an Axel type jump);

  • maximum of three spins, one of which must be a spin combination, one a flying spin or a spin with a flying entrance and one a spin with only one position and one choreographic spin;

  • maximum of one step sequence; [Seniors only]

  • maximum of one choreographic sequence.

Proposal 240 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 103): Reduce the number of jump combinations/sequences in the singles free skate from 3 to 2.

A jump combination and a jump sequence may consist of the same or another single, double, triple or quadruple jump. There may be up to three two jump combinations or two one jump combinations without using an Euler (half-loop) and one jump sequence in the Free Skating. One jump combination or one jump sequence may consist of up to three jumps, the other two one of up to two jumps each. An Euler (half-loop) can only be executed once in Free Skating.

Proposal 241 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 103): The same type of jump cannot be included more than 3 times in the singles free skate, regardless of number of revolutions. +REP base value deduction changed from 70% to 80%. Additionally, define choreographic spin.

The same type of jump independent of the number of revolutions can be included not more than three times in the Free Skating program.

Any double jump (including double Axel) cannot be included more than twice in a Single’s Free Skating program (as a Solo Jump or a part of a Jump Combination / Sequence).

Of all triple and quadruple jumps only two can be executed twice. Of the two repetitions only one can be a quadruple jump. If at least one of these executions is in a Jump Combination/ Sequence, both executions are attributed their full numerical value according to the Scale of Value and calculation process described in Rule 353, 1.h), i) and ii.

If both executions are as solo jumps, the second of these solo jumps will be attributed 70% 80% of its numerical value according to the Scale of Value. Triple and quadruple jumps with the same name will be considered as two different jumps. No triple jump or quadruple jump can be attempted more than twice.

[…]

A Choreographic Spin is a spin which enhances the choreography of the program and matches the music. Choreographic Spin must have minimum 3 consecutive revolutions executed on one or two blades, with any basic or non-basic positions allowed. Change of foot is optional and can be done several times during the spin. The Technical Panel identifies the Choreographic Spin and it will be confirmed once the 3 consecutive revolutions have been completed. If the Choreographic Spin cannot be identified by the Technical panel, the third performed spin will be considered as the Choreographic Spin (Choreographic Spin confirmed). This element has a fixed base value and will be evaluated by the judges in GOE only.

Proposal 242 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 104): Twist lifts in pairs no longer required to land on a backward outside edge.

The Woman must be caught in the air at the waist by the Man prior to landing and be assisted to a smooth landing on the ice on a backward outside edge on one foot.

Proposal 245 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 106): In the pairs free skate - Replace one leveled lift with a choreographic lift (seniors only). Replace the leveled pair spin with a choreographic pair spin. Remove the choreographic sequence.

2. A Senior Well-Balanced Program must contain:

  • maximum of three two lifts, not all both from the same group, with full extension of the lifting arm/s;

  • maximum of one choreographic lift

  • maximum of one twist lift;

  • maximum of two different throw jumps;

  • maximum of one solo jump;

  • maximum of one jump combination or jump sequence;

  • maximum of one pair spin combination;

  • maximum of one choreographic pair spin

  • maximum of one death spiral different from the death spiral of the Short Program;

  • maximum of one choreographic sequence.

3. A Junior Well-Balanced Program must contain:

  • maximum of two lifts, not all from the same group with full extension of the lifting arm/s;

  • maximum of one twist lift;

  • maximum of two different throw jumps;

  • maximum of one solo jump;

  • maximum of one jump combination or sequence;

  • maximum of one pair spin combination;

  • maximum of one choreographic pair spin

  • maximum of one death spiral;

  • maximum of one choreographic sequence.

Proposal 246 [ACCEPTED, POSTPONED TO 2026-27] (pg. 106): Define choreographic pair spin and choreographic lift as follows:

A Choreographic Lift is a lift which enhances the choreography of the program and matches the music. Choreographic Lift must be ascending and descending whilst moving across the ice surface. It must have a minimum of 1 rotation. The Choreographic Lift does not have any limitations regarding the hold on entry or at any point during the lift. The lifting partner must have straight or almost straight arm(s) above the head at some point during the lift. If the Choreographic Lift is not identifiable to the panel, the third performed lift will be taken as the Choreographic Lift (Choreographic Lift confirmed). This element has a fixed base value and will be evaluated by the judges in GOE only.

A Choreographic Pair Spin is a spin which enhances the choreography of the program and matches the music. A Choreographic Pair Spin must have a minimum of 3 consecutive revolutions executed on one or two blades at least by one partner, with any basic or non-basic positions allowed. Change of foot is optional and can be done several times during the spin. Lifting of partners is optional but should not consist of any lifting movement with full extension of the arm(s) if the lifted position is higher than a shoulder level. The Technical Panel identifies the Choreographic Pair Spin and it will be confirmed once the 3 consecutive revolutions have been completed. This element has a fixed base value and will be evaluated by the judges in GOE only.

Proposal 251 [ACCEPTED] (pg. 108): Define the minimum duration of an ice dance lift to be 3 seconds. Remove definitions of the duration for short lifts and combination lifts; these will be defined in each season’s technical communications going forward. (Note: The 2024-2025 Ice Dance Technical Rules increased the maximum duration of a short lift from 7 to 8 seconds, and a combination lift from 12 to 13 seconds.)

ISU Announces Reallocation of Placements Due to Valieva's Disqualification

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Full ISU Statement

2022 Olympic Team Event: The new ranking is as follows:

  • 1st place: USA (65 points)

  • 2nd place: Japan (63 points)

  • 3rd place: ROC (54 points)

  • 4th place: Canada (53 points)

  • 5th place: China (50 points)

Valieva’s 20 points from the Team Event were removed from ROC’s total, but the remaining women’s scores were not changed.

2022 Olympic Women’s Event: Valieva disqualified from 4th place.

2022 European Championships: Valieva disqualified from 1st place. The new podium ranking is as follows:

  • 1st place: Anna Shcherbakova

  • 2nd place: Alexandra Trusova

  • 3rd place: Loena Hendrickx

ROC Response: Following the ISU statement, the Russian Olympic Committee announced that it would appeal the ISU decision on the Team Event to CAS, on the grounds that sanctions against an individual athlete should not be the basis for reviewing results for a team event.

Skate Canada Response: Skate Canada disagrees with the ISU’s decision on the Team Event and will consider an appeal. They cite Rule 353 of the ISU’s Special Regulations and Technical Rules, which states that “Disqualified Competitors will lose their placements and be officially noted in the intermediate and final results as disqualified (DSQ). Competitors having finished the competition and who initially placed lower than the disqualified Competitor(s) will move up accordingly in their placement(s).”

If the women in the Team Event who placed below Valieva were moved up one placement and given 2 additional points for the short program and free skate, the final Team Event ranking would have Canada in third place (55 points) instead of ROC (54 points).

Additional Note: In an ISU document detailing the qualification process for the 2022 Olympics dated December 2019, it is stated that for the Team Event, “The ISU Judging System as described in the 2020 ISU Special Regulations Single and Pair Skating/Ice Dance shall apply, in particular but not limited to Rule 352 and Rule 353.” However, no direct mention is made of how a disqualified athlete may affect the final scores and ranking in the Team Event.


Feb. 9, 2024 Update

The ISU has released another statement regarding the Team Event placements. Excerpt as follows:

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) decision announced on January 29 that the retroactive application of Kamila Valieva’s disqualification is the responsibility of the sports organization concerned, notably the ISU. The ISU has remained resolved to ensure that the applicable rules and principles as well as the CAS decision are correctly followed, and that any changes to the results were applied accordingly. 

The decision of the ISU Council with regard to the consequences to the official results of the Team event of Beijing 2022, clearly expressed in the ISU Statement of January 30, 2024, was based on a comprehensive evaluation from legal experts. This evaluation was, in turn, founded on the applicable rules and principles that are specific to this OWG Team event and is, therefore, the only decision that complies with the CAS Panel’s award.  For the sake of clarity Rule 353 para 4 in the ISU Special Regulations is not applicable in this case.

In any complex and extraordinary situation like this, the reallocation of points could negatively affect the relative team ranking, adversely impacting teams that had nothing to do with the incident in question.  Therefore, we have to abide by the rules and principles.  In light of this case, we will further clarify the rules and principles moving forward to ensure any such cases are dealt with more efficiently in the future. 

The CAS decision itself may be subject to appeal, therefore the ISU will not be discussing this matter in further detail in public at this stage. 


Feb. 26, 2024 Update

CAS has officially registered four appeals of the ISU’s decision regarding the Team Event placements, one from the Canadian team/Skate Canada/Canadian Olympic Committee, and three from the ROC team/Figure Skating Federation of Russia/Russian Olympic Committee. Canada seeks the bronze medal, while Russia seeks to keep the gold medal. Proceedings have begun, but there is no indication of when a hearing may take place (if any).

Court of Arbitration for Sport Decision on Kamila Valieva Case

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  • Ms Valieva is found to have committed an Anti-Doping Rule Violation (ADRV) under Clause 4.1 of the All-Russian Anti-Doping Rules of 24 June 2021 (the Russian ADR).

  • A period of four (4) years ineligibility is imposed on Ms Valieva, starting on 25 December 2021.

  • All competitive results of Ms Valieva from 25 December 2021 are disqualified, with all the resulting consequences (including forfeiture of any titles, awards, medals, profits, prizes, and appearance money).

[…]

The consequences linked to the retroactive disqualification of Ms Valieva from past events, including from the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, were not within the scope of this arbitration procedure and will have to be examined by the sports organisations concerned.

Full CAS release

ETA: Full report of the case proceedings

Team USA for 2024 ISU Championships

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World Championships

  • Men: Ilia Malinin, Jason Brown, Camden Pulkinen (Alt: Maxim Naumov, Andrew Torgashev, Jimmy Ma)

  • Women: Amber Glenn, Isabeau Levito (Alt: Ava Ziegler, Elyce Lin-Gracey, Starr Andrews)

  • Pairs: Emily Chan/Spencer Akira Howe, Ellie Kam/Danny O’Shea, Valentina Plazas/Maximiliano Fernandez (Alt: Chelsea Liu/Balazs Nagy, Isabelle Martins/Ryan Bedard*)

  • Ice Dance: Madison Chock/Evan Bates, Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko, Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville (Alt: Caroline Green/Michael Parsons, Eva Pate/Logan Bye, Emilea Zingas/Vadym Kolesnik)

Four Continents Championships (announced before Nationals)

  • Men: Tomoki Hiwatashi, Camden Pulkinen (WD), Andrew Torgashev (Alt: Maxim Naumov, Liam Kapeikis, Jimmy Ma)

  • Women: Amber Glenn (WD), Lindsay Thorngren, Ava Ziegler (Alt: Elyce Lin-Gracey, Audrey Shin, Starr Andrews)

  • Pairs: Ellie Kam/Danny O’Shea, Chelsea Liu/Balazs Nagy, Valentina Plazas/Maximiliano Fernandez (Alt: Isabelle Martins/Ryan Bedard, Maria Mokhova/Ivan Mokhov)

  • Ice Dance: Madison Chock/Evan Bates (WD), Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko, Caroline Green/Michael Parsons (Alt: Emilea Zingas/Vadym Kolesnik, Oona Brown/Gage Brown, Eva Pate/Logan Bye)

Junior World Championships

  • Men: Daniel Martynov, Jacob Sanchez (Alt: Beck Strommer, Taira Shinohara, Lucius Kazanecki)

  • Women: Josephine Lee, Sherry Zhang (Alt: Logan Higase-Chen, Sarah Everhardt, Elyce Lin-Gracey)

  • Pairs: Olivia Flores/Luke Wang, Naomi Williams/Lachlan Lewer, Adele Zheng/Andy Deng

  • Ice Dance: Leah Neset/Artem Markelov, Elliana Peal/Ethan Peal, Yahli Pedersen/Jeffrey Chen (Alt: Jenna Hauer/Benjamin Starr, Caroline Mullen/Brendan Mullen, Olivia Ilin/Dylan Cain)

*Pending TES minimums

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5