2022 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships

2022 Four Continents Championships
Type:ISU Championship
Date:January 18 – 23
Season:2021–22
Location:Tallinn, Estonia
Host:Estonian Skating Union
Venue:Tondiraba Ice Hall
Champions
Men's singles:
South Korea Cha Jun-hwan
Women's singles:
Japan Mai Mihara
Pairs:
United States Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov
Ice dance:
United States Caroline Green / Michael Parsons
Navigation
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2020 Four Continents Championships
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2023 Four Continents Championships

The 2022 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships were held from January 18–23, 2022, at the Tondiraba Ice Hall in Tallinn, Estonia. Held annually since 1999 (except for 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic), the competition featured skaters from the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Oceania. Medals were awarded in men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance.

Tianjin, China was announced as the original host in October 2020.[1] The 2022 Four Continents Championships were one of several events cancelled by the Chinese Skating Association during the COVID-19 pandemic. Upon China's withdrawal as host on September 13, 2021, the International Skating Union asked for other non-European ISU members to apply as alternative hosts, with any relocation decision to be determined at the ISU Council meeting on October 1.[2] However, as no other qualified members chose to apply, the ISU asked the Estonian Skating Union, the host of the 2022 European Championships, to host the Four Continents Championships, resulting in the event having a European host for the first time.[3]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

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During the 2020–21 season, the Chinese Skating Association had already cancelled several events due to the country's stringent quarantine requirements – 21 days in isolation for non-residents – and limited flights in and out of the country. Among the cancelled events were the 2021 World Junior Championships and the 2020–21 Grand Prix Final.[4] Less than a month prior to the cancellation of the Four Continents Championships, the CSA cancelled the 2021 Cup of China.[5] Again citing "the complicated epidemic situation," the CSA and the Tianjin Municipal Government informed the ISU of the cancellation of Four Continents on September 13, 2021.[2]

The Four Continents Championships would have been the first ISU Championship event during the 2021–22 season to be cancelled, before being relocated to Tallinn. The ISU and various host federations had already cancelled or relocated several other events earlier in the season, including events on the Junior Grand Prix, Grand Prix, and Challenger Series. After the ISU was able to find a replacement host for the Cup of China, it again asked non-European ISU members to consider applying to host the Four Continents Championships on the originally scheduled dates.[6] After an unsuccessful search, Tallinn was chosen as the replacement host, having just hosted the 2022 European Championships one week prior.[3]

Due to the proximity of the Four Continents Championships, both in terms of geography and time, to the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China's decision to cancel the event prompted further concerns about whether the Winter Olympics would be able to proceed as scheduled, and if so, be conducted in a safe manner.[7][8]

Qualification

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Age and minimum TES requirements

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The competition was open to skaters from all non-European member nations of the International Skating Union. The corresponding competition for European skaters was the 2022 European Championships.

Skaters were eligible for the 2022 Four Continents Championships if they turned 15 years of age before July 1, 2021, and met the minimum technical elements score requirements. The ISU accepts scores if they were obtained at senior-level ISU-recognized international competitions during the ongoing season at least 21 days before the first official practice day of the championships or during the two preceding seasons.[9]

Discipline SP / RD FS / FD
Men 28 46
Women 23 40
Pairs 25 42
Ice dance 28 44
  • SP/RD and FS/FD scores may be attained at different events.

Number of entries per discipline

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Each qualifying ISU member nation could enter up to three skaters or teams per discipline.[9]

Entries

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Member nations began announcing their selections in December 2021. The International Skating Union published a complete list of entries on December 29, 2021.

Country Men[10] Women[11] Pairs[12] Ice dance[13]
 Australia Jordan Dodds
Brendan Kerry
James Min
Victoria Alcantara
Kailani Craine
Holly Harris / Jason Chan
India Nette / Eron Westwood
 Canada Corey Circelli
Joseph Phan
Gabrielle Daleman
Véronik Mallet
Alison Schumacher
Lori-Ann Matte / Thierry Ferland
Deanna Stellato-Dudek / Maxime Deschamps
Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud
Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac
Haley Sales / Nikolas Wamsteeker
Carolane Soucisse / Shane Firus
 Chinese Taipei Ting Tzu-Han
 Hong Kong Harrison Jon-Yen Wong
 India Tara Prasad
 Japan Kao Miura
Sena Miyake
Kazuki Tomono
Rino Matsuike
Mai Mihara
Yuhana Yokoi
Kana Muramoto / Daisuke Takahashi
 Kazakhstan Dias Jirenbayev
Mikhail Shaidorov
 Mexico Eugenia Garza
Andrea Montesinos Cantú
 New Zealand Jocelyn Hong Charlotte Lafond-Fournier / Richard Kang-in Kam
 Philippines Sofia Lexi Jacqueline Frank
 South Korea Cha Jun-hwan
Kyeong Jae-seok
Lee Si-hyeong
Kim Ye-lim
Lee Hae-in
You Young
 United States Tomoki Hiwatashi
Jimmy Ma
Camden Pulkinen
Starr Andrews
Gabriella Izzo
Audrey Shin
Emily Chan / Spencer Akira Howe
Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov
Katie McBeath / Nathan Bartholomay
Emily Bratti / Ian Somerville
Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko
Caroline Green / Michael Parsons

Changes to preliminary assignments

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Date Discipline Withdrew Added Notes Ref.
January 5 Pairs Australia Anastasia Golubeva / Hektor Giotopoulos Moore [12]
Ice dance Australia Chantelle Kerry / Andrew Dodds [13]
January 6 Women Japan Satoko Miyahara Japan Yuhana Yokoi Poor physical condition [11][14]
January 10 Men Mexico Donovan Carrillo COVID-19 precaution [10][15]
Women Hong Kong Joanna So [11]
Pairs Australia Maria Chernyshova / Harley Windsor [12]
January 15 Men South Africa Matthew Samuels [10][16]
January 17 Canada Wesley Chiu Positive COVID-19 test (coach)

Medal summary

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Medalists

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Medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest overall placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men South Korea Cha Jun-hwan Japan Kazuki Tomono Japan Kao Miura
Women Japan Mai Mihara South Korea Lee Hae-in South Korea Kim Ye-lim
Pairs United States Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov United States Emily Chan / Spencer Akira Howe Canada Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud
Ice dance United States Caroline Green / Michael Parsons Japan Kana Muramoto / Daisuke Takahashi United States Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko

Small medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest short program or rhythm dance placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men South Korea Cha Jun-hwan Japan Kazuki Tomono Japan Kao Miura
Women Japan Mai Mihara South Korea Lee Hae-in South Korea Kim Ye-lim
Pairs United States Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov Canada Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud United States Emily Chan / Spencer Akira Howe
Ice dance United States Caroline Green / Michael Parsons Japan Kana Muramoto / Daisuke Takahashi United States Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko

Small medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest free skating or free dance placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men South Korea Cha Jun-hwan Japan Kazuki Tomono Japan Kao Miura
Women Japan Mai Mihara South Korea Lee Hae-in Japan Rino Matsuike
Pairs United States Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov United States Emily Chan / Spencer Akira Howe Canada Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud
Ice dance United States Caroline Green / Michael Parsons Japan Kana Muramoto / Daisuke Takahashi United States Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko

Medals by country

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Table of medals for overall placement:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States2114
2 Japan1214
3 South Korea1113
4 Canada0011
Totals (4 entries)44412

Results

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Men

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Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Cha Jun-hwan  South Korea 273.22 1 98.96 1 174.26
2 Kazuki Tomono  Japan 268.99 2 97.10 2 171.89
3 Kao Miura  Japan 251.07 3 88.37 3 162.70
4 Sena Miyake  Japan 240.02 5 79.67 4 160.35
5 Mikhail Shaidorov  Kazakhstan 234.67 8 75.96 5 158.71
6 Brendan Kerry  Australia 227.57 4 81.12 8 146.45
7 Lee Si-hyeong  South Korea 223.18 6 79.13 11 144.05
8 Tomoki Hiwatashi  United States 222.37 7 77.51 10 144.86
9 Joseph Phan  Canada 220.85 10 69.70 6 151.15
10 Jimmy Ma  United States 215.12 9 69.98 9 145.14
11 Corey Circelli  Canada 213.02 11 69.57 12 143.15
12 Camden Pulkinen  United States 204.39 14 57.58 7 146.81
13 Dias Jirenbayev  Kazakhstan 192.92 12 66.92 13 126.00
14 Kyeong Jae-seok  South Korea 187.97 13 63.78 14 124.19
15 James Min  Australia 155.02 15 54.35 15 100.67
16 Jordan Dodds  Australia 139.15 16 47.47 16 91.68
WD Harrison Jon-Yen Wong  Hong Kong withdrew 17 43.95 withdrew from competition

Women

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Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Mai Mihara  Japan 218.03 1 72.62 1 145.51
2 Lee Hae-in  South Korea 213.52 2 69.97 2 143.55
3 Kim Ye-lim  South Korea 209.91 3 68.93 4 140.98
4 Audrey Shin  United States 203.86 5 67.20 5 136.66
5 Rino Matsuike  Japan 202.21 8 60.16 3 142.05
6 You Young  South Korea 198.56 4 67.86 7 130.70
7 Yuhana Yokoi  Japan 185.34 12 53.93 6 131.41
8 Gabriella Izzo  United States 180.06 7 63.19 8 116.87
9 Starr Andrews  United States 173.01 6 66.60 12 106.41
10 Gabrielle Daleman  Canada 172.98 9 59.01 9 113.97
11 Alison Schumacher  Canada 168.42 11 57.36 10 111.06
12 Kailani Craine  Australia 164.02 10 57.46 11 106.56
13 Véronik Mallet  Canada 151.87 13 53.77 13 98.10
14 Jocelyn Hong  New Zealand 145.62 18 48.60 14 97.02
15 Ting Tzu-Han  Chinese Taipei 145.57 17 49.15 14 96.42
16 Sofia Lexi Jacqueline Frank  Philippines 139.26 14 52.74 17 86.52
17 Victoria Alcantara  Australia 138.26 16 49.73 16 88.53
18 Andrea Montesinos Cantú  Mexico 133.03 19 47.36 18 85.67
19 Eugenia Garza  Mexico 128.73 15 51.16 20 77.57
20 Tara Prasad  India 127.93 20 43.31 19 84.62

Pairs

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Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Audrey Lu / Misha Mitrofanov  United States 189.10 1 68.35 1 120.75
2 Emily Chan / Spencer Akira Howe  United States 180.94 3 64.47 2 116.47
3 Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud  Canada 179.70 2 65.42 3 114.28
4 Deanna Stellato-Dudek / Maxime Deschamps  Canada 172.71 5 59.07 4 113.64
5 Katie McBeath / Nathan Bartholomay  United States 168.18 4 59.54 5 108.64
6 Lori-Ann Matte / Thierry Ferland  Canada 163.60 6 55.40 6 108.20

Ice dance

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Rank Name Nation Total points RD FD
1 Caroline Green / Michael Parsons  United States 200.59 1 80.62 1 119.97
2 Kana Muramoto / Daisuke Takahashi  Japan 181.91 2 72.43 2 109.48
3 Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko  United States 175.67 3 69.35 3 106.32
4 Carolane Soucisse / Shane Firus  Canada 172.45 4 69.15 4 103.30
5 Emily Bratti / Ian Somerville  United States 169.54 6 67.72 5 101.82
6 Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac  Canada 166.89 5 68.66 6 98.23
7 Haley Sales / Nikolas Wamsteeker  Canada 160.99 7 62.95 7 98.04
8 Holly Harris / Jason Chan  Australia 157.00 8 59.07 8 97.93
9 Charlotte Lafond-Fournier / Richard Kang-in Kam  New Zealand 141.11 9 57.31 9 83.80
10 India Nette / Eron Westwood  Australia 113.15 10 40.89 10 72.26

References

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  1. ^ "Cancellation of ISU Four Continents Championships 2021 and Provisional allotments of ISU Championships 2022 and 2023". International Skating Union. October 16, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "ISU Four Continents Figure Skating Championships 2022, Tianjin/China – cancellation/relocation". International Skating Union. September 13, 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Communication No. 2431: Decisions of the Council". International Skating Union. October 4, 2021.
  4. ^ "Update on ISU Event Calendar season 2020/21". International Skating Union. November 24, 2020.
  5. ^ "China cancels as host of figure skating's Four Continents Championships". NBC Sports. September 13, 2021.
  6. ^ "ISU seeking host for 4 Continents 2022 event in January". Associated Press. September 13, 2021.
  7. ^ Iveson, Ali (September 13, 2021). "Major figure skating event in China two weeks before Winter Olympics axed over COVID-19". Inside the Games.
  8. ^ "China cancels everything… except the Beijing 2022 Games". Francs Jeux. September 14, 2021.
  9. ^ a b "Communication No. 2406: Entries for ISU Figure Skating and Synchronized Skating Championships 2022". International Skating Union. July 6, 2021. Archived from the original on October 4, 2021. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  10. ^ a b c "ISU Four Continents Championships 2022: Men". International Skating Union. December 29, 2021.
  11. ^ a b c "ISU Four Continents Championships 2022: Women". International Skating Union. December 29, 2021.
  12. ^ a b c "ISU Four Continents Championships 2022: Pairs". International Skating Union. December 29, 2021.
  13. ^ a b "ISU Four Continents Championships 2022: Ice Dance". International Skating Union. December 29, 2021.
  14. ^ "宮原知子が4大陸選手権欠場 体調不良が理由 代わりに横井ゆは菜が出場" [Satoko Miyahara misses the Four Continents Championships because of poor physical condition, Yuhana Yokoi participates instead]. Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). January 14, 2021.
  15. ^ Acosta, Gabriela (January 10, 2022). "Beijing 2022: Donovan Carrillo llevará en su maleta los sueños de los mexicanos" [Beijing 2022: Donovan Carrillo will carry the dreams of Mexicans in his suitcase]. Publimetro (in Spanish).
  16. ^ Anything GOEs [@anythinggoe] (January 19, 2022). "🇨🇦 We have received notification from Skate Canada that Wesley Chiu withdrew from #4ContsFigure due to a member of his coaching team testing positive for coronavirus" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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