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Polina Shelepen

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Skating club
  
CSKA Moscow

Retired
  
September 16, 2014

Began skating
  
1999

Former coach
  
Eteri Tutberidze

Name
  
Polina Shelepen

Country represented
  
Russia

Height
  
1.67 m


Polina Shelepen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsbb

Full name
  
Polina Sergeyevna Shelepen

Born
  
28 July 1995 (age 28) (
1995-07-28
)
Moscow, Russia

Former choreographer
  
Alex Zheleznyakov, Igor Lutikov, Nikolai Morozov

Combined total
  
162.34 2011–12 JGP Final

Short program
  
59.54 2009-2010 JGP Final

5 polina shelepen rus isu gp and jgp final 2011 junior ladies short program


Polina Sergeyevna Shelepen (Russian: Полина Серге́евна Шелепень; born 28 July 1995) is a figure skater. She is a two-time (2009, 2011) JGP Final silver medalist and a two-time (2011, 2012) Russian national junior silver medalist. She competed for Russia through 2012.

Contents

Polina Shelepen Polina Shelepen Wikiwand

2008 russian nationals ladies fs polina shelepen


Personal life

Polina Shelepen Polina Shelepen Zimbio

Polina Shelepen was born 28 July 1995 in Moscow, Russia.

Career

Polina Shelepen Polina Shelepen Photos 2011 World Junior Figure Skating

Shelepen began skating at the age of four-and-a-half, instructed by her first coach Eteri Tutberidze. She learned her first triple, a Salchow, at eleven years old and would later attempt a quadruple Salchow in practice. In 2011, she told an interviewer that her mother took her to the rink because she "didn't like to go to kindergarten because there everyone had to eat a cream of wheat".

Polina Shelepen Polina SHELEPEN Flickr Photo Sharing

In the 2009–10 season, Shelepen won her two Junior Grand Prix assignments and qualified for the 2009–10 Junior Grand Prix Final where she won silver. She then competed at the 2010 World Junior Championships and finished 4th.

Polina Shelepen Polina Shelepen Photos 2011 World Junior Figure Skating

Ahead of the 2010-11 season, Shelepen grew ten cm, resulting in some coordination problems. She won gold at the JGP in France, bronze in the Czech Republic, and finished 5th at the 2010 Junior Grand Prix Final. At the 2011 Russian Championships, Shelepen finished 7th on the senior level and won silver on the junior level. She finished 7th at the 2011 World Junior Championships.

Polina Shelepen Polina Shelepen Photos ISU Grand Prix Of Figure Skating

In the 2011–12 season, Shelepen continued on the Junior Grand Prix, winning events in Latvia and Romania to qualify for the 2011–12 Junior Grand Prix Final. She won the silver medal at the Final. At the 2012 Russian Championships, she finished 10th on the senior level and won another silver medal on the junior level. Originally the first alternate for the 2012 World Junior Championships, Shelepen was named to replace Elizaveta Tuktamysheva, who withdrew from the competition. At the event, Shelepen ranked 12th in the short program and 4th in the free skate, finishing 6th overall.

In July 2012, Shelepen parted ways from her long-time coach Eteri Tutberidze and began training at the CSKA Moscow ice rink with Svetlana Sokolovskaya. She finished 5th at the 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy and 10th at her first senior Grand Prix assignment, the 2012 Skate Canada. In November, Shelepen withdrew from the 2012 NHK Trophy due to worsening of a long-standing ankle injury. She resumed training in December and competed at the 2012 Golden Spin of Zagreb, finishing 5th. She later withdrew from the 2013 Russian Championships.

On March 23, 2013, Sokolovskaya confirmed that Shelepen had received her Israeli passport and wished to compete for Israel. The Russian skating federation released Shelepen in May 2013. Before she may compete internationally, the International Skating Union requires that she sit out a certain period of time according to the rules for single skaters.

On September 16, 2014, Shelepen announced that she had decided to retire from competitive figure skating and had moved back to Moscow after living in Israel for a year to acquire Israeli citizenship. She stated that the reason for her decision was due to an ankle injury she had been plagued with during the 2012-2013 season and Shelepen had to undergo surgery during her time in Israel. After returning to Russia, Shelepen began coaching younger skaters at the CSKA Moscow with her coach, Svetlana Sokolovskaya, and said that she plans to enroll in the Russian State University of Physical Education to get a license for professional coaching.

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

Detailed results

(Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships.)

References

Polina Shelepen Wikipedia