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Mark Ladwig

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Height
  
1.78 m

Began skating
  
1985

Education
  
Moorhead High School


Name
  
Mark Ladwig

Role
  
Figure skater

Mark Ladwig File2011 TEB Short 458 Amanda Evora Mark Ladwigjpg

Born
  
May 6, 1980 (age 43) (
1980-05-06
)

Combined total
  
171.922010 Winter Olympics

Short program
  
57.862010 Winter Olympics

Free skate
  
114.062010 Winter Olympics

Former partner
  
Former coach
  
Lyndon Johnston, Allison Smith, James Peterson, Ronald Ludington

Skating club
  
Red River Valley FSC

Country represented
  
United States of America

Former choreographer
  
James Peterson

Amanda evora and mark ladwig figure skating exhibition 12 30


Mark Ladwig (born May 6, 1980) is an American pair skater. He is best known for his partnership with Amanda Evora, with whom he competed at the 2010 Winter Olympics, placing tenth. They won bronze at an ISU Grand Prix event, the 2010 Cup of Russia, and two U.S. national silver medals. He later skated with Lindsay Davis for one season.

Contents

Mark Ladwig Mark Ladwig Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

Mark ladwig demonstrated a figure skating backflip


Personal life

Mark Ladwig Meet Team USA Amanda Evora and Mark Ladwig Figure

Mark Ladwig was born in Fargo, North Dakota to Carol and John, both doctors, and grew up in Moorhead, Minnesota with two siblings, Todd and Erin. He married his wife, Janet, in August 2006. A boy named Holden Everett was born September 13, 2009. A second son, Felix Rye Ladwig, was born July 1, 2014.

Career

Mark Ladwig 6a00d8341c60fd53ef012876e73b95970c500pi

Ladwig skated with Kelsey Sollom until 1999 in Moorhead, Minnesota and then with Keri Blakinger while at the University of Delaware Figure Skating Club in Newark, Delaware. He volunteered at the 2002 Winter Olympics and worked in Salt Lake Olympic Square.

Mark Ladwig webicenetworkcomimages201208174ESyv2yLjpg

In June 2002, Ladwig began skating with Amanda Evora. They finished 12th in their debut at the U.S. Championships and fifth at their first ISU Championship, the 2005 Four Continents. In 2007, Ladwig began serving on the U.S. Figure Skating Athletes Advisory Committee. He was the pairs vice-chair of the 2008–09 Athletes Advisory Committee.

2009–10 was a breakthrough season for Evora/Ladwig. They took at the U.S Championships, their best finish at the event, which led to their selection for the US Olympic team. At the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, they beat their previous personal best by a sizable margin, and finished tenth, making them the top US pair at the Olympics. They later competed at Worlds for the first time in their career, and finished in ninth place.

During 2010–2011 season, Evora/Ladwig were assigned to compete at Cup of China where they finished fifth (151.66 pts) and later earned their first Grand Prix medal, a bronze, at Rostelecom Cup, with a season's best of 110.27 and total score of 162.85. Evora/Ladwig repeated at US Nationals earning their second silver medal, and were selected to compete at Four Continents and Worlds. At Four Continents, Ladwig's left skate heel broke during the short program, but he and Evora were able to resume the program within the allowed three minutes after Canadian Rudi Swiegers lent his own boot to Ladwig. Ladwig was able to repair his skate prior to the free skate, and the pair went on to finish sixth overall. Evora/Ladwig were noted for their longevity as a pair, which is rare in U.S. pair skating. Their partnership ended when Evora retired from competitive skating on April 10, 2012.

Ladwig was elected to the USOC AAC in 2012. In May, he announced that he had teamed up with Lindsay Davis. Davis/Ladwig competed at two Grand Prix events and won the pewter medal at the 2013 U.S. Championships. They confirmed the end of their partnership in February 2013.

References

Mark Ladwig Wikipedia