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Tatiana Malinina

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Skating club
  
Alpomish

Retired
  
2002

Began skating
  
1978

Country represented
  
Name
  
Tatiana Malinina

Height
  
1.6 m


Tatiana Malinina httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full name
  
Tatiana Valeryevna Malinina

Born
  
28 January 1973 (age 51) (
1973-01-28
)

Training locations
  

Former choreographer
  

Tatiana malinina uzb 1998 nagano figure skating ladies short program


Tatiana Valeryevna Malinina (Russian: Татьяна Валерьевна Малинина; born 28 January 1973) is a Russian-born figure skater who competed for Uzbekistan. She is the 1999 Grand Prix Final champion, the 1999 Four Continents champion, a two-time (1998, 2001) NHK Trophy champion, and a ten-time (1993–2002) Uzbekistani national champion.

Contents

Tatiana Malinina TATIANA MALININA ARTISTRY ON ICE

Tatiana malinina uzb 1998 nagano figure skating ladies free skate


Personal life

Tatiana Malinina httpsiytimgcomviFrM2vXGrpshqdefaultjpg

Malinina was born on 28 January 1973 in Novosibirsk, Russian SFSR. Her mother was a gymnast and her father a figure skater. The family moved to Tashkent, Uzbek SSR, when she was a teenager. In 1996, Malinina returned to Russia and lived in Yekaterinburg until moving to Dale City, Virginia in 1998. She graduated from the Siberian Academy of Physical Culture in Omsk, Russia.

In January 2000, Malinina married Roman Skorniakov. Their son, Ilia Malinin (born in 2004), is the 2017 U.S. intermediate champion. Their daughter was born in 2014.

Career

Malinina competed at ten consecutive World Championships beginning in 1993. She finished 8th at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.

Malinina began the 1998–1999 Grand Prix season with a 5th-place finish at the 1998 Skate America. Shortly afterward, in November 1998, Malinina and Skorniakov settled in Dale City, Virginia, drawn by better training conditions. In December, Malinina won her first Grand Prix title at the 1998 NHK Trophy and qualified for her first GPF Final. In February 1999, she competed at the inaugural Four Continents Championships and became its first ladies' gold medalist. The following month, she defeated both Maria Butyrskaya and Irina Slutskaya for the gold medal at the Grand Prix Final, held in Saint Petersburg. She finished her season by placing a career-best 4th at the World Championships.

In the 1999–2000 season, Malinina had groin and foot injuries. She finished 18th at the 2000 World Championships. Igor Ksenofontov, the coach of Malinina and Skorniakov, died suddenly in 1999.

Valeri Malinin coached her part-time in the 2000–2001 season. She won bronze medals at her two Grand Prix events, the 2000 Sparkassen Cup on Ice and 2000 NHK Trophy. She was 5th at the Grand Prix Final, 4th at Four Continents and 13th at Worlds.

Malinina and Skorniakov coached each other in the 2001–2002 season. She was 6th at the 2001 Sparkassen Cup on Ice and then won gold at the 2001 NHK Trophy. Malinina withdrew from the 2002 Winter Olympics after the short program due to the flu. She finished 15th at Worlds and then retired from competition as the couple planned to start a family.

Results

Note: Malinina withdrew before the free skate at the 2002 Winter Olympics due to illness, having placed 13th in the short program.

References

Tatiana Malinina Wikipedia


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