Alexandra Trusova, the Russian 15-year-old, won Rostelecom Cup in Moscow on Saturday to earn a spot in December’s prestigious six-skater Grand Prix Final. And notably, Russia swept all four disciplines on home ice.
Olympic silver medalist Yevgenia Medvedeva, also of Russia, earned the silver. Meanwhile, American Mariah Bell won the third Grand Prix medal of her career, a bronze.
Trusova fell on her opening quadruple Salchow attempt, but landed a quad Lutz and a quad toe, triple toe combination to follow. She also landed a quad toe, Euler, triple Salchow combination but fell on the next jumping combination, a triple Lutz, triple loop attempt.
Despite two falls, Trusova’s free skate earned 160.26 points, giving her enough to leapfrog Medvedeva for the title at 234.47 points. Trusova is into the Grand Prix Final by virtue of her wins in Moscow and at Skate Canada.
“I made some mistakes in short and free program and I’ll continue to work to skate two clean programs next time,” Trusova said via the International Skating Union (ISU). “I would like to compete with the men, because they can do a quad in the short program and we are not allowed to. Also, it would be interesting to compete with skaters that do many quads in the programs,” she added.
Medvedeva skated a clean program to the “Memoirs of a Geisha” soundtrack, including seven triples and two double Axels. The 19-year-old Russian laid her head on coach Brian Orser‘s shoulder and said “I’m tired” with a chuckle as she waited in the Kiss and Cry for her scores to be announced: 148.83 in the free skate for 225.76 total points.
“It is in my plans to learn a quad, I am working on the quad Salchow, but at the same time I need to make sure I stay healthy,” Medvedeva said through the ISU. “I’ll do everything I can for it and I hope to put it out there as soon as possible.”
Bell’s bronze is the third Grand Prix series medal of the her career, and second this season after another bronze at Grand Prix France. She skated without any major errors to K.D. Lang’s “Hallelujah.”
Earlier Saturday in the men’s event, Alexander Samarin, Dmitri Aliev, and Makar Ignatov completed a podium sweep for Russia. The last time three Russian men swept the podium at Rostelecom Cup was 1998, when Alexei Urmanov, Yevgeni Plushenko, and Alexander Abt completed the feat.
Samarin opened his free skate on Saturday with a quad Lutz, triple toe combination and only erred on his triple flip, which was called with an unclear edge. He earned 171.64 points in his free skate for a total score of 264.45 points.
Aliev, though, attempted two quad toes (one in combination) and earned positive Grades of Execution on both. His only major error came from an invalid triple Lutz as part of a jumping sequence in the second half of the program, which scored 169.42 points. He tallied 259.88 total points.
Both Samarin (silver at Grand Prix France) and Aliev (bronze at Skate America) have won medals this season during the Grand Prix series. Entries to December’s Grand Prix Final will be determined after the conclusion of NHK Trophy in Japan next weekend.
Ignatov’s free skate included a quad Salchow and a quad toe, both called clean. He scored 252.87 total points to edge Olympic silver medalist Shoma Uno from Japan for the bronze by 0.63 points.
The lone U.S. men’s entry, Alex Krasnozhon, finished 10th.
The standings in ice dance did not change between the rhythm dance and the free dance. Russia’s Viktoria Sinitsina and Nikita Katsalapov held on to their gold medal position and scored 126.06 points in the free dance for 212.15 total points. As last weekend’s winners at Cup of China, they solidified a berth to the Grand Prix Final.
Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier of Canada finished in second with a free dance score of 125.08 points for 207.64 points. They were surprise winners of Skate Canada, but have not definitively qualified for the Final. Spain’s Sara Hurtado and Kirill Khaliavin finished third with 185.01 total points. The U.S. did not have an ice dance entry.
Also Saturday, Aleksandra Boikova and Dmitriy Kozlovskiy of Russia won the pairs event after scoring 149.34 in the free skate to tally 229.48 points overall. Russia’s Yevgenia Tarasova and Vladimir Morozov (two-time European champions and three-time World medalists) captured the silver medals with 216.77 total points. Russia sat in first, second, and third after the short program, but the third Russian pair in the field, Ksenia Stolbova and Andrei Novoselov, fell from third to fifth overall.
Germany’s Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nolan Seegert took the bronze with 186.16 total points, rising from sixth place after the short.
The last time one nation swept all four disciplines at a Grand Prix was Russia at this competition in 2005.
Rostelecom Cup Results
Women
1. Alexandra Trusova (RUS) -- 234.47
2. Yevgenia Medvedeva (RUS) -- 225.76
3. Mariah Bell (USA) -- 205.67
4. Satoko Miyahara (JPN) -- 192.42
5. Ekaterina Ryabova (AZE) -- 187.77
6. Yuhana Yokoi (JPN) -- 182.68
7. Alexia Pagani (SUI) -- 179.69
8. Chen Hongyi (CHN) -- 175.77
9. Nicole Schott (GER) -- 172.08
10. Yuna Shiraiwa (JPN) -- 170.03
11. Stanislava Konstantinova (RUS) -- 156.94
12. Emmi Peltonen (FIN) -- 152.50
Men
1. Alexander Samarin (RUS) -- 264.45
2. Dmitri Aliev (RUS) -- 259.88
3. Makar Ignatov (RUS) -- 252.87
4. Shoma Uno (JPN) -- 252.24
5. Nam Nguyen (CAN) -- 246.20
6. Deniss Vasiljevs (LAT) -- 241.09
7. Morisi Kvitelashvili (GEO) -- 237.59
8. Kazuki Tomono (JPN) -- 237.54
9. Michal Brezina (CZE) -- 236.47
10. Alex Krasnozhon (USA) -- 216.28
11. Vladimir Litvintsev (AZE) -- 209.07
WD. Daniel Samohin (ISR) -- 56.94 (Short program only)
Pairs
1. Aleksandra Boikova/Dmitriy Kozlovskiy (RUS) -- 229.48
2. Yevgenia Tarasova/Vladimir Morozov (RUS) -- 216.77
3. Minerva Fabienne Hase/Nolan Seegert (GER) -- 186.16
4. Miriam Ziegler/Severin Kiefer (AUT) -- 182.02
5. Ksenia Stolbova/Andrei Novoselov (RUS) -- 177.51
6. Evelyn Walsh/Trennt Michaud (CAN) -- 168.96
7. Rebecca Ghilardi/Filippo Ambrosini (ITA) -- 162.76
8. Audrey Lu/Misha Mitrofanov (USA) -- 153.61
Ice Dance
1. Victoria Sinitsina/Nikita Katsalapov (RUS) -- 212.15
2. Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier (CAN) -- 207.64
3. Sara Hurtado/Kirill Khaliavin (ESP) -- 185.01
4. Natalia Kaliszek/Maksym Spodyriev (POL) -- 178.70
5. Allison Reed/Saulius Ambrulevicius (LTU) -- 175.43
6. Anastasia Shpilevaya/Grigory Smirnov (RUS) -- 172.93
7. Marjorie Lajoie/Zachary Lagha (CAN) -- 169.90
8. Adelina Galyavieva/Louis Thauron (FRA) -- 164.79
9. Anastasia Skoptcova/Kirill Aleshin (RUS) -- 164.64
10. Jasmine Tessari/Francesco Fioretti (ITA) -- 154.44
As a reminder, you can watch the events from the 2019-20 figure skating season live and on-demand with the ‘Figure Skating Pass’ on NBC Sports Gold. Go to NBCsports.com/gold/figure-skating to sign up for access to every ISU Grand Prix and championship event, as well as domestic U.S. Figure Skating events throughout the season. NBC Sports Gold gives subscribers an unprecedented level of access on more platforms and devices than ever before.
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