2012 Nebelhorn Trophy
2012 Nebelhorn Trophy | |
---|---|
Type: | Senior International |
Date: | September 27 – 29 |
Season: | 2012–13 |
Location: | Oberstdorf |
Venue: | Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf |
Champions | |
Men's singles: Nobunari Oda | |
Ladies' singles: Kaetlyn Osmond | |
Pairs: Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov | |
Ice dance: Madison Chock / Evan Bates | |
Previous: 2011 Nebelhorn Trophy | |
Next: 2013 Nebelhorn Trophy |
The 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy was held on September 27–29, 2012 at the Eislaufzentrum Oberstdorf.[1][2] The event is held annually in Oberstdorf, Germany and is named after the Nebelhorn, a nearby mountain.
It is one of the first international senior competitions of the season. Skaters are entered by their respective national federations and compete in four disciplines: men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The Fritz-Geiger-Memorial Trophy is presented to the team with the highest placements across all disciplines.
Entries
[edit]Results
[edit]Men
[edit]Japan's Nobunari Oda returned from injury to win gold at Nebelhorn, while Russia's Konstantin Menshov took silver, and the United States' Keegan Messing took bronze.[3][4]
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nobunari Oda | Japan | 233.33 | 1 | 79.64 | 1 | 153.69 |
2 | Konstantin Menshov | Russia | 212.94 | 2 | 69.30 | 2 | 143.64 |
3 | Keegan Messing | United States | 210.78 | 3 | 68.56 | 4 | 142.22 |
4 | Stephen Carriere | United States | 209.11 | 8 | 65.68 | 3 | 143.43 |
5 | Michal Březina | Czech Republic | 201.71 | 5 | 67.78 | 7 | 133.93 |
6 | Tomáš Verner | Czech Republic | 199.98 | 10 | 60.69 | 5 | 139.29 |
7 | Denis Ten | Kazakhstan | 198.39 | 4 | 67.88 | 8 | 130.51 |
8 | Ivan Bariev | Russia | 196.54 | 11 | 60.05 | 6 | 136.49 |
9 | Andrei Rogozine | Canada | 196.27 | 7 | 67.31 | 9 | 128.96 |
10 | Peter Liebers | Germany | 195.59 | 6 | 67.41 | 10 | 128.18 |
11 | Paul Bonifacio Parkinson | Italy | 179.25 | 12 | 58.93 | 11 | 120.32 |
12 | Alexander Majorov | Sweden | 175.22 | 9 | 61.55 | 14 | 113.67 |
13 | Paolo Bacchini | Italy | 175.04 | 13 | 60.69 | 13 | 118.57 |
14 | Elladj Baldé | Canada | 171.83 | 18 | 54.41 | 12 | 119.82 |
15 | Alexei Bychenko | Israel | 165.59 | 17 | 53.29 | 15 | 112.30 |
16 | Paul Fentz | Germany | 163.15 | 16 | 53.44 | 16 | 109.71 |
17 | Maciej Cieplucha | Poland | 154.95 | 22 | 47.51 | 17 | 107.44 |
18 | Phillip Harris | United Kingdom | 154.80 | 14 | 52.01 | 18 | 100.39 |
19 | Yakov Godorozha | Ukraine | 148.81 | 15 | 51.41 | 19 | 94.47 |
20 | Zoltán Kelemen | Romania | 142.10 | 21 | 48.68 | 20 | 93.42 |
21 | Vitali Luchanok | Belarus | 141.11 | 20 | 48.68 | 21 | 91.43 |
22 | Valtter Virtanen | Finland | 136.97 | 19 | 51.41 | 22 | 85.56 |
23 | Luiz Manella | Brazil | 131.96 | 23 | 47.33 | 23 | 84.63 |
24 | Mark Webster | Australia | 117.05 | 24 | 40.53 | 24 | 76.52 |
Ladies
[edit]Canada's Kaetlyn Osmond won her first senior international title, Russia's Adelina Sotnikova took the silver, and Japan's Haruka Imai won bronze.[3][4]
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kaetlyn Osmond | Canada | 170.19 | 2 | 55.68 | 1 | 114.51 |
2 | Adelina Sotnikova | Russia | 168.23 | 1 | 58.48 | 2 | 109.75 |
3 | Haruka Imai | Japan | 153.64 | 9 | 47.70 | 3 | 105.94 |
4 | Jelena Glebova | Estonia | 152.36 | 3 | 54.26 | 4 | 98.10 |
5 | Polina Shelepen | Russia | 147.59 | 4 | 53.63 | 6 | 93.96 |
6 | Viktoria Helgesson | Sweden | 145.16 | 7 | 48.17 | 5 | 96.99 |
7 | Nathalie Weinzierl | Germany | 142.96 | 5 | 49.64 | 7 | 93.32 |
8 | Brooklee Han | Australia | 142.02 | 6 | 49.08 | 8 | 92.94 |
9 | Juulia Turkkila | Finland | 137.36 | 8 | 47.70 | 9 | 89.66 |
10 | Sarah Hecken | Germany | 125.66 | 11 | 43.12 | 11 | 82.54 |
11 | Isadora Williams | Brazil | 124.91 | 12 | 41.96 | 10 | 82.95 |
12 | Caroline Zhang | United States | 124.13 | 10 | 45.43 | 12 | 78.70 |
13 | Kerstin Frank | Austria | 114.35 | 13 | 41.60 | 16 | 72.75 |
14 | Reyna Hamui | Mexico | 114.03 | 14 | 40.04 | 15 | 73.99 |
15 | Fleur Maxwell | Luxembourg | 110.92 | 17 | 36.10 | 14 | 74.82 |
16 | Eliška Březinová | Czech Republic | 109.42 | 20 | 34.22 | 13 | 75.20 |
17 | Carol Bressanutti | Italy | 105.26 | 15 | 39.16 | 17 | 66.10 |
18 | Marina Seeh | Serbia | 102.68 | 16 | 37.11 | 18 | 65.57 |
19 | Nea Viiri | Finland | 99.31 | 19 | 35.02 | 19 | 64.29 |
20 | Rosaliina Kuparinen | Finland | 97.45 | 18 | 35.12 | 20 | 62.33 |
21 | Lejeanne Marais | South Africa | 91.10 | 22 | 29.64 | 21 | 61.46 |
22 | Dominika Murckova | Slovakia | 83.84 | 21 | 30.76 | 22 | 53.08 |
Pairs
[edit]Russia's Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov repeated as Nebelhorn champions, while the United States' Caydee Denney / John Coughlin took silver and France's Vanessa James / Morgan Cipres won bronze, their first international medal.[3][4] There were two withdrawals following the short program – Russia's Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov withdrew due to a recurrence of an jury to Bazarova's right hip, while Germany's Mari Vartmann picked into her right foot when she fell on a throw triple loop during the short and was unable to put on her skate the next day due to swelling.[3]
Rank | Name | Nation | Total points | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov | Russia | 196.55 | 1 | 65.24 | 1 | 131.31 |
2 | Caydee Denney / John Coughlin | United States | 178.90 | 2 | 57.29 | 2 | 121.61 |
3 | Vanessa James / Morgan Ciprès | France | 151.52 | 3 | 55.00 | 4 | 96.52 |
4 | Gretchen Donlan / Andrew Speroff | United States | 145.35 | 6 | 43.21 | 3 | 102.14 |
5 | Daria Popova / Bruno Massot | France | 132.68 | 5 | 47.44 | 5 | 85.24 |
6 | Danielle Montalbano / Evgeni Krasnopolski | Israel | 110.31 | 8 | 34.68 | 6 | 75.63 |
7 | Ronja Roll / Gustav Forsgren | Sweden | 94.48 | 9 | 34.49 | 7 | 59.99 |
WD | Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov | Russia | 4 | 52.43 | |||
WD | Mari Vartmann / Aaron Van Cleave | Germany | 7 | 37.50 |
Ice dance
[edit]Madison Chock / Evan Bates of the United States won their first international title, while Julia Zlobina / Alexander Sitnikov of Azerbaijan took the silver, and Germany's Nelli Zhiganshina / Alexander Gazsi dropped from first after the short dance to finish third overall.[3][4]
References
[edit]- ^ "Nebelhorn Trophy Announcement". International Skating Union. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
- ^ a b "Full event protocol" (PDF). Deutsche Eislauf-Union. 2012. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 23, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e Flade, Tatjana (September 30, 2012). "2012 Nebelhorn Trophy". Golden Skate.
- ^ a b c d Felton, Renee (September 29, 2012). "U.S. collects colorful medal haul from Nebelhorn". Icenetwork.
External links
[edit]- Entries at the International Skating Union
- 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy results
- 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy at Deutsche Eislauf-Union