Clara Peters

Irish figure skater (born 1991) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clara Peters (born 19 July 1991) is an Irish figure skater. She is the first figure skater to represent Ireland in ISU competition.[1]

Born (1991-07-19) 19 July 1991 (age 34)
Essen, Germany
HometownDublin, Ireland
Height1.59 m (5 ft 3 in)
Country Ireland
Quick facts Personal information, Born ...
Clara Peters
Peters at the 2012 World Championships
Personal information
Born (1991-07-19) 19 July 1991 (age 34)
Essen, Germany
Home townDublin, Ireland
Height1.59 m (5 ft 3 in)
Figure skating career
Country Ireland
CoachKaren Ludington, Jeff DiGregorio
Skating clubDundalk Ice Skating Club
Began skating1999
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Personal life

Peters was born in Germany because her parents were working there at the time.[2] She moved to Ireland when she was 18 months old and was raised in Dublin.[2]

Career

Peters began skating in Dublin around the age of seven.[3] After her rink closed in 2000, she travelled two and a half hours to one in Belfast, Northern Ireland.[4][5] In January 2006, Peters moved to Florida to be coached by Kerry Leitch.[5] After Leitch retired in 2008, she moved to Delaware to train with Ronald Ludington and his wife Karen.[2][5] The Republic of Ireland has no permanent rink.[6]

Peters initially competed in domestic events in Great Britain, placing ninth at the 2007 British novice championships. She began competing internationally for Ireland beginning in the 2008–09 season, when Ireland became a provisional member of the International Skating Union.

Peters placed 38th at the 2009 European Championships. At the event, she became the first skater to represent Ireland at an ISU Championships.[4] Peters placed 52nd at the 2009 World Championships, and 47th at the 2010 World Championships. She improved to 27th at the 2011 Europeans, but did not advance beyond the preliminary round at the 2011 World Championships. In 2012, Peters finished 28th at her fourth Europeans and improved significantly upon her past results by coming in 29th at Worlds; Peters stated that qualifying for the short program was "a huge deal" and meant that all her hard work had paid off.[7][8]

Programs

More information Season, Short program ...
Season Short program Free skating
2015–16
2014–15 unknown
2013–14
[9]
2012–13
2011–12
[10]
2010–11
[11]
2009–10
[2]
  • The Last Rose of Summer
    by Erich Künzel, Timothy Lees
2008–09
[12]
  • Fantasia 2000
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Results

JGP: Junior Grand Prix

More information International, Event ...
International[13]
Event 08–09 09–10 10–11 11–12 12–13 13–14 14–15 15–16
Worlds52nd47th21st P29th
Europeans38th36th27th28th
Crystal Skate10th
Cup of Nice22nd22nd28th
DS Cup8th10th
Challenge Cup20th
FBMA Trophy3rd
Istanbul Cup9th
Merano Cup19th24th
Nebelhorn32nd19th33rd
Printemps11th
Seibt Memorial29th
Skate Down Under3rd
Toruń Cup7th
Triglav Trophy9th12th
Ukrainian Open6th
US Classic14th12th
International: Junior[13]
JGP Czech Rep.31st
JGP Spain33rd
National[13]
Irish Champ.1st1st1st1st1st1st
P = Preliminary round
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References

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