Elena Ivanova

Elena Ivanova (Russian: Елена Иванова; born 8 November 1979) is a Russian former competitive figure skater. She is the 1995 Finlandia Trophy champion, 1998 Nebelhorn Trophy silver medalist, and 1996 World Junior champion.

Elena Ivanova
Native nameЕлена Иванова
Born (1979-11-08) 8 November 1979 (age 44)
Nevinnomyssk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Figure skating career
CountryRussia
Retired2000
Medal record
Representing  Russia
Figure skating: Ladies' singles
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place1996 BrisbaneLadies' singles
Silver medal – second place1998 Saint JohnLadies' singles
Silver medal – second place1995 BudapestLadies' singles
Bronze medal – third place1997 SeoulLadies' singles

Life and career

Ivanova was born in Nevinnomyssk.[1] When she was six years old, figure skating coach Nina Ruchkina visited her kindergarten in search of talented youth and noticed her.[2] Ivanova's parents approved of the activity and she began skating under Ruchkina. At the age of 10, she became Master of Sports of the USSR and gained the nickname "Iron Felix" because of her calmness on the ice.[2] At the age of 15, she moved from Nevinnomyssk to Samara and graduated from Samara's GUOR (figure skating faculty).[3]

Ivanova represented Russia at four World Junior Championships, winning silver in 1995 (Budapest, Hungary), gold in 1996 (Brisbane, Australia), bronze in 1997 (Seoul, South Korea), and silver in 1998 (Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada). She finished sixth in her Champions Series (Grand Prix) debut, at the 1997 Trophée Lalique.

She retired from competition due to injury and became a skating coach in Vitebsk, Belarus. Around 2005, she relocated to Daugavpils, Latvia.[2][4]

Results

GP: Champions Series / Grand Prix

International[1]
Event93–9494–9595–9696–9797–9898–99
GP NHK Trophy11th
GP Trophée Lalique6thWD
Centennial on Ice5th
Finlandia Trophy1st
Nebelhorn Trophy5th3rd2nd
Schäfer Memorial4th
Skate Israel1st1st
St. Gervais1st
Ukrainian Souvenir2nd
International: Junior[5]
Junior Worlds2nd1st3rd2nd
RUS Crystal Skate7th J
National[6]
Russian Champ.4th16th7th
J: Junior level; WD: Withdrew

References