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Figure Skating Drawing Step by Step

Ladies' singles events at the Olympics

Ladies' singles

at the XXII Olympic Winter Games

Korea Kim Yuna Free Sochi 12.jpg

Kim, Sotnikova, Kostner

Venue Iceberg Skating Palace
Sochi, Russia
Dates 19 February 2014 (short program)
20 February 2014 (free skating)
Competitors 30from 20 nations
Winning score 224.59
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Adelina Sotnikova  Russia
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yuna Kim  South Korea
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Carolina Kostner  Italy

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The ladies' single skating competition of the 2014 Winter Olympics was held at the Iceberg Skating Palace in Sochi, Russia. The short program took place on 19 February 2014, and the free skating took place on 20 February.[1] Adelina Sotnikova of Russia controversially won the gold medal.

Records [edit]

For complete list of figure skating records, see list of highest scores in figure skating.

The following ISU season best scores (2013–2014) were set during this competition:

Component Skaters Score Date Ref
Short program  Yuna Kim(KOR) 74.92 19 February 2014 [2]
Free skating  Adelina Sotnikova(RUS) 149.95 20 February 2014 [3]
Total score 224.59 [4]

Schedule [edit]

All dates and times are (UTC+4).

Date Time Round
19 February 2014 19:00 Short program
20 February 2014 19:00 Free skating

Results [edit]

Short program [edit]

The short program (SP) took place on 19 February 2014.[5]

Pl. Name Nation TSS TES PCS SS TR PE CH IN Ded StN
1 Yuna Kim  South Korea 74.92 39.03 35.89 9.04 8.61 9.11 8.89 9.21 0.00 17
2 Adelina Sotnikova  Russia 74.64 39.09 35.55 8.82 8.57 9.11 8.89 9.04 0.00 29
3 Carolina Kostner  Italy 74.12 37.49 36.63 9.00 8.79 9.36 9.25 9.39 0.00 26
4 Gracie Gold  United States 68.63 36.55 32.08 8.04 7.71 8.14 8.04 8.18 0.00 22
5 Yulia Lipnitskaya  Russia 65.23 33.15 33.08 8.43 8.07 8.14 8.43 8.29 –1.00 25
6 Ashley Wagner  United States 65.21 31.43 33.78 8.39 8.11 8.61 8.50 8.61 0.00 27
7 Polina Edmunds  United States 61.04 32.98 28.06 7.11 6.71 7.21 6.93 7.11 0.00 12
8 Akiko Suzuki  Japan 60.97 28.71 32.26 8.18 7.79 8.00 8.11 8.25 0.00 24
9 Maé-Bérénice Méité  France 58.63 30.83 27.80 7.07 6.64 7.04 6.93 7.07 0.00 28
10 Nathalie Weinzierl  Germany 57.63 31.94 25.69 6.50 6.14 6.57 6.36 6.54 0.00 18
11 Li Zijun  China 57.55 30.01 27.54 7.07 6.57 6.96 6.89 6.93 0.00 23
12 Valentina Marchei  Italy 57.02 27.52 29.50 7.32 7.04 7.54 7.36 7.61 0.00 21
13 Kaetlyn Osmond  Canada 56.18 27.51 28.67 7.18 6.96 7.18 7.14 7.39 0.00 8
14 Zhang Kexin  China 55.80 32.68 23.12 6.11 5.61 5.79 5.75 5.64 0.00 7
15 Kanako Murakami  Japan 55.60 26.72 28.88 7.39 6.93 7.25 7.21 7.32 0.00 20
16 Mao Asada  Japan 55.51 22.63 33.88 8.57 8.29 8.14 8.64 8.71 –1.00 30
17 Elene Gedevanishvili  Georgia 54.70 27.51 27.19 6.89 6.50 6.89 6.71 7.00 0.00 16
18 Kim Hae-jin  South Korea 54.37 29.23 25.14 6.54 5.89 6.39 6.11 6.50 0.00 11
19 Gabrielle Daleman  Canada 52.61 28.07 24.54 6.32 5.93 6.11 6.14 6.18 0.00 3
20 Elizaveta Ukolova  Czech Republic 51.87 29.72 22.15 5.64 5.32 5.61 5.61 5.50 0.00 14
21 Nicole Rajičová  Slovakia 49.80 26.63 23.17 5.89 5.50 5.93 5.79 5.86 0.00 13
22 Brooklee Han  Australia 49.32 26.37 22.95 5.82 5.54 5.86 5.68 5.79 0.00 9
23 Park So-youn  South Korea 49.14 25.35 23.79 6.14 5.68 6.00 5.89 6.04 0.00 2
24 Anne Line Gjersem  Norway 48.56 26.13 22.43 5.68 5.36 5.71 5.50 5.79 0.00 15
Did not advance to free skating
25 Jenna McCorkell  Great Britain 48.34 25.34 23.00 5.89 5.36 6.04 5.71 5.75 0.00 5
26 Kerstin Frank  Austria 48.00 26.64 21.36 5.61 5.14 5.39 5.39 5.18 0.00 6
27 Viktoria Helgesson  Sweden 47.84 21.83 27.01 7.11 6.57 6.50 6.82 6.75 –1.00 19
28 Natalia Popova  Ukraine 47.42 24.30 23.12 6.00 5.54 5.82 5.82 5.71 0.00 4
29 Jelena Glebova  Estonia 46.19 22.59 23.60 6.11 5.75 5.89 5.89 5.86 0.00 1
30 Isadora Williams  Brazil 40.37 18.93 21.44 5.39 5.14 5.39 5.39 5.50 0.00 10
  • TSS - Total Segment Score; TES - Technical Element Score; PCS - Program Component Score; SS - Skating Skills; TR - Transitions; PE - Performance/Execution
  • CH - Choreography; IN - Interpretation; Ded - Deduction; StN - Starting Number

Free skating [edit]

The Free skating took place on 20 February 2014.[6]

Pl. Name Nation TSS TES PCS SS TR PE CH IN Ded StN
1 Adelina Sotnikova  Russia 149.95 75.54 74.41 9.18 8.96 9.43 9.50 9.43 0.00 21
2 Yuna Kim  South Korea 144.19 69.69 74.50 9.21 8.96 9.43 9.39 9.57 0.00 24
3 Mao Asada  Japan 142.71 73.03 69.68 8.75 8.36 8.79 8.79 8.86 0.00 12
4 Carolina Kostner  Italy 142.61 68.84 73.77 9.14 8.71 9.43 9.21 9.61 0.00 20
5 Gracie Gold  United States 136.90 69.57 68.33 8.57 8.25 8.61 8.64 8.64 –1.00 22
6 Yulia Lipnitskaya  Russia 135.34 66.28 70.06 8.68 8.46 8.68 9.00 8.96 –1.00 19
7 Ashley Wagner  United States 127.99 61.07 66.92 8.46 8.07 8.50 8.36 8.43 0.00 23
8 Akiko Suzuki  Japan 125.35 60.57 65.78 8.36 7.82 8.21 8.29 8.43 –1.00 15
9 Polina Edmunds  United States 122.21 63.02 60.19 7.54 7.29 7.57 7.61 7.61 –1.00 17
10 Valentina Marchei  Italy 116.31 55.56 60.75 7.46 7.18 7.75 7.71 7.86 0.00 16
11 Maé-Bérénice Méité  France 115.90 60.86 56.04 7.11 6.57 7.14 7.07 7.14 –1.00 14
12 Kanako Murakami  Japan 115.38 56.96 58.42 7.54 6.93 7.36 7.32 7.36 0.00 10
13 Kaetlyn Osmond  Canada 112.80 55.97 57.83 7.25 6.96 7.32 7.25 7.36 –1.00 7
14 Li Zijun  China 110.75 55.79 54.96 7.04 6.57 6.82 6.96 6.96 0.00 13
15 Zhang Kexin  China 98.41 49.84 48.57 6.43 5.71 6.11 6.14 5.96 0.00 11
16 Gabrielle Daleman  Canada 95.83 48.40 47.43 6.11 5.75 5.82 6.00 5.96 0.00 3
17 Kim Hae-jin  South Korea 95.11 45.25 50.86 6.61 6.07 6.29 6.50 6.32 –1.00 9
18 Brooklee Han  Australia 94.52 48.71 46.81 6.00 5.43 5.96 5.86 6.00 –1.00 2
19 Park So-youn  South Korea 93.83 48.72 46.11 6.04 5.50 5.82 5.75 5.71 –1.00 1
20 Elene Gedevanishvili  Georgia 92.45 39.85 53.60 6.93 6.32 6.75 6.75 6.75 –1.00 8
21 Nathalie Weinzierl  Germany 89.73 38.47 52.26 6.71 6.39 6.46 6.64 6.46 –1.00 18
22 Anne Line Gjersem  Norway 85.98 41.24 44.74 5.64 5.32 5.61 5.71 5.68 0.00 5
23 Elizaveta Ukolova  Czech Republic 84.55 42.94 43.61 5.61 5.29 5.29 5.68 5.39 –2.00 4
24 Nicole Rajičová  Slovakia 75.20 30.39 45.81 5.82 5.54 5.50 5.89 5.89 –1.00 6
  • TSS - Total Segment Score; TES - Technical Element Score; PCS - Program Component Score; SS - Skating Skills; TR - Transitions; PE - Performance/Execution
  • CH - Choreography; IN - Interpretation; Ded - Deduction; StN - Starting Number
  • Skaters perform in groups of six. After the first two groups (12 skaters), the rink is re-iced.

Overall [edit]

The skaters are ranked according to their overall score.[7]

Rank Name Nation TP SP FS
1st place, gold medalist(s) Adelina Sotnikova  Russia 224.59 2 74.64 1 149.95
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yuna Kim  South Korea 219.11 1 74.92 2 144.19
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Carolina Kostner  Italy 216.73 3 74.12 4 142.61
4 Gracie Gold  United States 205.53 4 68.63 5 136.90
5 Yulia Lipnitskaya  Russia 200.57 5 65.23 6 135.34
6 Mao Asada  Japan 198.22 16 55.51 3 142.71
7 Ashley Wagner  United States 193.20 6 65.21 7 127.99
8 Akiko Suzuki  Japan 186.32 8 60.97 8 125.35
9 Polina Edmunds  United States 183.25 7 61.04 9 122.21
10 Maé-Bérénice Méité  France 174.53 9 58.63 11 115.90
11 Valentina Marchei  Italy 173.33 12 57.02 10 116.31
12 Kanako Murakami  Japan 170.98 15 55.60 12 115.38
13 Kaetlyn Osmond  Canada 168.98 13 56.18 13 112.80
14 Li Zijun  China 168.30 11 57.55 14 110.75
15 Zhang Kexin  China 154.21 14 55.80 15 98.41
16 Kim Hae-jin  South Korea 149.48 18 54.37 17 95.11
17 Gabrielle Daleman  Canada 148.44 19 52.61 16 95.83
18 Nathalie Weinzierl  Germany 147.36 10 57.63 21 89.73
19 Elene Gedevanishvili  Georgia 147.15 17 54.70 20 92.45
20 Brooklee Han  Australia 143.84 22 49.32 18 94.52
21 Park So-youn  South Korea 142.97 23 49.14 19 93.83
22 Elizaveta Ukolova  Czech Republic 136.42 20 51.87 23 84.55
23 Anne Line Gjersem  Norway 134.54 24 48.56 22 85.98
24 Nicole Rajičová  Slovakia 125.00 21 49.80 24 75.20
Did not advance to free skating
25 Jenna McCorkell  Great Britain 48.34 25 48.34 N/A
26 Kerstin Frank  Austria 48.00 26 48.00 N/A
27 Viktoria Helgesson  Sweden 47.84 27 47.84 N/A
28 Natalia Popova  Ukraine 47.42 28 47.42 N/A
29 Jelena Glebova  Estonia 46.19 29 46.19 N/A
30 Isadora Williams  Brazil 40.37 30 40.37 N/A

Judges and officials [edit]

Short Program judges[8]

Free Skating judges[9]

Result and subsequent debate [edit]

Seventeen-year-old Adelina Sotnikova won the gold medal with an overall score of 224.59 points, becoming one of the youngest figure skating Olympic champions. Sotnikova's free skate program was, in terms of base points, more difficult than that of South Korea's Yuna Kim, the defending champion who was in first after the short program, .28 points ahead of Sotnikova.[10] [11] [12] In addition to more triple jumps and more difficult footwork (as determined by the caller), Sotnikova performed a double Axel-triple toe, a challenging combination that Kim did not attempt.[11] [12] [13] However, Sotnikova's routine also featured a relatively significant error—she stepped out of a jumping combination, while Kim's program was executed without any glaring missteps.[14] [15] The judges assessed Kim as having demonstrated greater artistry; her component score was .09 points higher than Sotnikova's.[10] But Sotnikova's base technical score (a measurement of the difficulty of executed moves) was 3.94 points higher than Kim's, and her grade of execution score—based the average technical evaluation of each element, examining whether the proper edge was used, the speed carried into and out of a jump, jump positioning, and more—was scored 1.91 points higher.[10]

The results sparked a debate over the judges' objectivity,[16] spurred in part by the composition of the judging panel. The panel included two Russian officials, a Russian judge and a Ukrainian judge.[17] One of the Russian judges was Alla Shekhovtsova—wife of the former president of the Russian Skating Federation—who Sotnikova embraced (amongst others) prior to the flower ceremony.[18] [19] [14] Over one-and-a-half million people signed a petition calling for an investigation into the outcome.[20] The reaction of the skating community was polarized: Katarina Witt, a two-time Olympic champion, stated "I am stunned by this result, I don't understand the scoring."[21] [22] Two-time bronze medalist Michael Weiss attributed Sotnikova's scores to "home-field inflation."[23] But three-time world champion and two-time Olympic silver medalist Elvis Stojko said that the result "was totally fair," as "Kim didn't have enough technical ammunition."[19] And Alexei Mishin, the Russian 1969 world medalist and coach to three Olympic champions, said that "Sotnikova's victory [was] absolutely natural and objective."[24]

Several commentators attributed the result to the revised scoring system that had been adopted in 2006, a system generally thought to "favor mathematics at the expense of artistry."[19] [10] Alice Park, writing for Time, suggested that, contrary to popular belief, Sotnikova's surprising win was a consequence of objectivity rather than subjectivity: Specifically, she argued, the redesigned scoring system heavily rewarded technical difficulty, giving a substantial advantage to those with more challenging starting programs, while de-emphasizing the judge's impression of performers.[12] Bryan Armen Graham, writing for The Atlantic, suggested that the polarized reaction to the result was due to a generational gap brought about by the changed scoring system, saying, "Those who came up watching figure skating under the old 6.0 system are probably accustomed to more leeway in the judging."[15] Some in the skating community also seemed to take this view: While noting that she "personally enjoyed Yuna Kim's performance more," Michelle Kwan, two-time Olympic medalist and five-time World champion, stated, "Under the scoring system, hands down, Adelina won."[25] Similarly, four-time men's champion Kurt Browning said that "Yuna Kim outskated [Sotnikova], but it's not just a skating competition anymore—it's math."[26] And Scott Hamilton, the 1984 Olympic champion, said that, while Sotnikova's skating was not as aesthetically pleasing as Kim's, her athletic style "check[ed] off every box" and "d[id] everything the judges are looking for."[19]

Still, not everyone agreed that Sotnikova was properly graded as outscoring Kim under the revised scoring system. Retired national-level figure skater Tim Gerber wrote a letter to the ISU, asserting several errors by both the technical panel and judging panel.[27] Gerber argued, amongst other things, that the step sequence levels were improperly assigned, that Sotnikova had a wrong-edged takeoff and an under-rotated jump that were not properly reflected, and that her grade of execution scores were inflated.[27]

Official responses [edit]

On 21 February 2014, the International Skating Union (ISU) issued a statement which asserted all rules and procedures were applied during the competition and that no official protest had been filed by any participating nation concerning the results of the competition.[28] Such a protest must be done within 30 minutes of the event.[29] [30]

ISU's 21 February 2014 statement declaring their confidence "in the high quality and integrity of the ISU judging system". Adding "judges were selected by random drawing from a pool of 13 potential judges" and all nine judges on the free skating panel were from different nations.[28]

On 10 April, the Korean Olympic Committee (KOC) and the Korean Skating Union (KSU) filed an official complaint with the ISU Disciplinary Commission (DC) concerning judging. The complaint was regarding "the wrongful constitution of the panel of judges and the unjust outcome of the competition". It requested that the DC conduct a thorough investigation, "take appropriate disciplinary actions against the concerned individuals", and institute corrective actions. On 14 April, the DC ruled the complaint inadmissible because a general request for investigation is not within DC's jurisdiction and the complaint was not addressed at an individual or federation as required.[31] [32] [33]

On 30 April, the KOC and KSU filed a second official complaint with the DC. This time the complaint was against Russian judge Alla Shekhovtsova and Figure Skating Federation of Russia (FSFR), specifically citing a hug Shekhovtsova shared with Sotnikova and Shekhovtsova's marriage to the current Director General of the FSFR. On 30 May, the DC dismissed the complaint. It ruled Shekhovtsova "is not responsible for the judging panel's composition", her marriage did not create a conflict of interest, and since Sotnikova initiated the hug, Shekhovtsova did not break any rules by responding.[31] [32] [33]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Figure Skating Schedule and Results". Sochi 2014. SOOC. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
  2. ^ "ISU Judging System - Season Bests Short Program Scores 2013/2014, Ladies". ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  3. ^ "ISU Judging System - Season Bests Free Skating Scores 2013/2014, Ladies". ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  4. ^ "ISU Judging System - Season Bests Total Scores 2013/2014, Ladies". ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  5. ^ "Olympic Winter Games 2014 Ladies Short Program Scores" (PDF). ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  6. ^ "Olympic Winter Games 2014 Ladies Free Skating Scores" (PDF). ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Olympic Winter Games, Sochi 2014, Ladies Result". ISU Results. International Skating Union. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  8. ^ Pilon, Mary. "Panel of Judges". ISU.org . Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  9. ^ Pilon, Mary (20 February 2014). "Who Were the Figure Skating Judges?". The New York Times . Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  10. ^ a b c d Mark Sappenfield (February 20, 2014). "Figure skating judging: How did Adelina Sotnikova beat Kim Yu-na?". Christian Science Monitor.
  11. ^ a b Adam Leib (February 20, 2014). "How Sotnikova Beat Kim, Move by Move". New York Times.
  12. ^ a b c Alice Park (February 21, 2014). "An Olympic First: The Judges Got It Right in Figure Skating". Time.
  13. ^ Brian Cazeneuve (February 20, 2014). "Surprise winner Sotnikova rode the home crowd to gold". Sports Illustrated.
  14. ^ a b Alexander Abad-Santos (February 21, 2014). "Why People Think Adelina Sotnikova's Figure Skating Gold Medal Was Rigged". The Atlantic.
  15. ^ a b Bryan Armen Graham (February 22, 2014). "The Sad, Perfect End of Kim Yuna's Figure-Skating Reign". The Atlantic.
  16. ^ Associated Press. "Adelina Sotnikova won't defend Olympic figure skating gold medal in Pyeongchang". ESPN.
  17. ^ Pilon, Mary (20 February 2014). "Who Were the Figure Skating Judges?". The New York Times . Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  18. ^ Zaccardi, Nick (5 June 2014). "Olympic figure skating judging complaints rejected by ISU". NBC Sports . Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  19. ^ a b c d Jeré Longman (February 20, 2014). "Russian Is Surprise Winner in Women's Figure Skating". New York Times.
  20. ^ Justin McCurry (February 21, 2014). "Sochi 2014: 1.5m sign petition calling for inquiry into figure skating gold". The Guardian.
  21. ^ Sarkar, Pritha (20 February 2014). "Olympics-Figure skating-Sotnikova win raises judging questions". Reuters.
  22. ^ "Judges on thin ice after controversial Russian win". The Irish Times. 20 February 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  23. ^ Maggie Hendricks (February 20, 2014). "Reaction to Adelina Sotnikova's gold medal win over Carolina Kostner and Yuna Kim". USA Today.
  24. ^ Ivanov, Vladimir (21 February 2014). Алексей Мишин: "Некоторые слишком ревностно отнеслись к победам Сотниковой" [Alexei Mishin: "Some reacted too jealously to Sotnikova's victory"]. sport-express.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  25. ^ Schrager, Peter (21 February 2014). "Schrager: Judging controversy no surprise in figure skating". FOX Sports. Archived from the original on 5 January 2015. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  26. ^ Juliet Macur (February 20, 2014). "Adelina Sotnikova's Upset Victory Is Hard to Figure". New York Times.
  27. ^ a b "Letter to ISU office holders: "People deserve to know if a mistake was made"". Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  28. ^ a b "ISU Statement on the ISU Judging System". International Skating Union. 21 February 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-02-21. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  29. ^ Armour, Nancy (4 June 2014). "Skating officials say no bias by Russian judge in Sochi". USA Today . Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  30. ^ "Russia's figure skater Sotnikova's case finally closed". The Voice of Russia. 5 June 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  31. ^ a b "Case No. 2014-03 – Decision of the ISU Disciplinary Commission". International Skating Union. 30 May 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  32. ^ a b Zaccardi, Nick (5 June 2014). "Olympic figure skating judging complaints rejected by ISU". NBC Sports . Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  33. ^ a b Kim, Narae (5 June 2014). "South Korea slip up in Sochi figure skating complaint". Reuters. Seoul. Retrieved 6 June 2014.

External links [edit]

  • Sochi 2014 Figure Skating – Ladies' Singles page
  • Sochi 2014 Figure Skating Results Book
  • 2014 Winter Olympics page at the International Skating Union
  • 2014 Winter Olympics results at the International Skating Union

Figure Skating Drawing Step by Step

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating_at_the_2014_Winter_Olympics_%E2%80%93_Ladies%27_singles

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