Jogailė Aglinskytė

Lithuanian figure skater (born 2005) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jogailė Aglinskytė (born 16 November 2005) is a Lithuanian figure skater.

Born (2005-11-16) 16 November 2005 (age 20)
Vilnius, Lithuania
HometownVilnius
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Country Lithuania
Quick facts Personal information, Born ...
Jogailė Aglinskytė
Personal information
Born (2005-11-16) 16 November 2005 (age 20)
Vilnius, Lithuania
Home townVilnius
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Figure skating career
Country Lithuania
DisciplineWomen's singles
CoachRosanna Murante
Tiziana Rosaspina
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She is the two time (2025–2026) Lithuanian national silver medalist.

Personal life

Aglinskytė was born on November 16, 2005 in Vilnius, Lithuania.[1] In 2024, she began studying marketing at Vytautas Magnus University.[2]

Career

Early years

Aglinskytė began learning how to skate in 2011.[1]

2019–2020 season

Aglinskytė made her junior international debut by competing at the 2019 NRW Trophy, where she finished in fourth place. She then competed on the 2019–20 ISU Junior Grand Prix, placing fourteenth at 2019 JGP France and at 2019 JGP Latvia. Aglinskytė subsequently followed up these results by placing fourteenth on the junior at the 2019 IceLab International Cup and fifth on the junior level at the 2019 Tallinn Trophy.[3]

In January, she competed on the junior level at the 2020 Mentor Toruń Cup and the 2020 Dragon Trophy, winning bronze and gold, respectively. Selected to compete at the 2020 Junior World Championships, Aglinskytė closed the season by placing forty-first at the event.[3]

2020–2021 season

Aglinskytė started the season by placing fourth on the junior level at the 2020 Budapest Trophy. She then won gold on the junior level at the 2021 Tallink Hotels Cup, before finishing the season by winning bronze on the junior level at the 2021 Egna Spring Trophy.[3]

2021–2022 season

Aglinskytė broke her left leg in July and did not begin competing until February.[4][3]

Her first competition of the season was the 2022 Sofia Trophy, where she competed on the senior level, finishing in fifth place. She followed this up by placing sixth and fifth at the 2022 Dragon Trophy and the 2022 Tallink Hotels Cup.[3]

She returned to the junior level for the 2022 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival in March. She finished eighth in the short program but fell several times in her free skate, and she finished in ninth place overall. Hers was the highest placement achieved by a Lithuanian athlete at the festival.[5][6] That same month, Aglinskytė shared that she was still struggling to fully control her leg following the injury she had sustained in the summer.[4]

In April, she competed at the 2022 Junior World Championships. She placed twenty-third in the short program and twenty-fourth in the free skate, finishing in twenty-fourth place overall.[7][6]

2022–2023 season

Aglinskytė started the season by finishing twentieth at the 2022 CS Warsaw Cup.[3] She followed this up by winning the bronze medal at the 2023 Lithuanian Championships behind Aleksandra Dolinskė and Daria Afinogenova.[8] She then went on to place ninth at the 2022 Latvia Trophy.[3]

Aglinskytė was to make her European Championships debut at the 2023 European Championships after replacing Aleksandra Dolinskė as the Lithuanian representative; however, two days before the competition, she also withdrew due to experiencing back pain.[9] She subsequently placed eleventh at the 2023 Tallink Hotels Cup, and thirteenth at the 2023 Bellu Memorial, before closing the season with a fourth-place finish at the 2023 Wolmar Cup.[3]

2023–2024 season

Aglinskytė began the season by finishing eighth at the 2023 Jelgava Cup and sixteenth at the 2023 CS Nepela Memorial.[3]

In December, Aglinskytė competed in the Latvia Trophy, where she placed fifth.[10] The week after, she won the bronze medal at the 2024 Lithuanian Championships behind Meda Variakojytė and Aleksandra Dolinskė.[3]

2024–2025 season

Aglinskytė opened the season by placing eleventh at the 2024 CS Nepela Memorial, sixth at the 2024 Volvo Open Cup, sixth at the 2024 NRW Trophy, and eleventh at the 2024 CS Warsaw Cup.[3]

In late November, Aglinskytė won the silver medal at the 2025 Lithuanian Championships behind Meda Variakojytė.[11] The following week, she placed twelfth at the 2024 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb.[3]

In January, Aglinskytė competed at the 2025 Sofia Trophy and the 2025 Winter World University Games, placing fourteenth and twentieth, respectively.[3] She then competed in her first European Championships. In the short program, she had a mistake on her first jump but skated the rest of her program cleanly. She qualified for the free skate, which she said she was "very happy" about.[12] She finished in twenty-fourth place after the free skate, in which she fell. Aglinskytė expressed disappointment with her performance, but she said that she would try to use the experience to improve her preparations for future competitions; she noted that she had focused more on being able to skate her short program, so she could qualify for the free skate, and had probably not worked enough on her free program.[13]

Aglinskytė subsequently closed the season by placing eleventh at the 2025 Maria Olszewska Memorial and seventh at the 2025 Daugava Open Cup.[3]

2025–2026 season

In July, it was announced that Aglinskytė had relocated to Bergamo, Italy, where her new coaches included Kirill Khaliavin and Jūlija Tepliha.[14] She was one of three Lithuanian woman competing for the Lithuanian Olympic quota won by Meda Variakojytė; the Lithuanian federation announced the decision would be based on their results on the ISU Challenger Series as well as at the Lithuanian Championships in December.[15]

In September, it was announced that she had begun working with a new coaching staff, Rosanna Murante and Tiziana Rosaspina.[16] She started the season that same month with a thirteenth-place finish at the 2025 CS Lombardia Trophy. Aglinskytė followed this up by winning silver at the 2025 Diamond Spin and fifteenth at the 2025 Denkova-Staviski Cup. Going on to compete on the 2025–26 Challenger Series, she placed eighth at the 2025 CS Warsaw Cup and twenty-third at the 2025 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb.[3]

At the 2026 Lithuanian Championships in December, she finished in second place. Based on the results of the internal selection, Variakojytė was awarded the Olympic spot.[17] Afterward, Aglinksytė commented that she was proud of her performance at the Championships and that she was happy for Variakojytė, with whom she was friends and previously training mates: "I'm very happy for her, because when we trained together, I saw how hard she tried, how much work she put in. She definitely deserved it 100 percent. When she won that place, it was a historic moment, I hope she will succeed and I'm very happy."[18]

The following month, Aglinskytė competed at the 2026 European Championships in Sheffield, England, United Kingdom, where she finished in twenty-fourth place. One week later, she won the bronze medal at the 2026 EDGE Cup.[3]

Programs

More information Season, Short program ...
Season Short program Free skating
2025–2026
[14][19]
2024–2025
[1]
2023–2024
[20]
2022–2023
[21]
2021–2022
[22]
2020–2021
[23]
2019–2020
[24]
  • She Is Like the Swallow
    by Lucia Micarelli
    choreo. by Valentin Molotov, Nikita Mikhailov, Ingrida Snieskiene
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Competitive highlights

More information Season, 2021–22 ...
Competition placements at senior level[25]
Season 2021–22 2022–23 2023–24 2024–25 2025–26
European Championships 24th 24th
Lithuanian Championships 3rd 3rd 2nd 2nd
CS Golden Spin of Zagreb 12th 23rd
CS Lombardia Trophy 13th
CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial 16th
CS Warsaw Cup 20th 11th 8th
Bellu Memorial 13th
Denkova-Staviski Cup 15th
Dragon Trophy 6th
EDGE Cup 3rd
Jelgava Cup 8th
Latvia Trophy 9th 5th
NRW Trophy 6th
Sofia Trophy 14th
Tallink Hotels Cup 5th 11th
Winter University Games 20th
Volvo Open 6th
Wolmar Cup 4th
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More information Season, 2019–20 ...
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Detailed results

More information Segment, Type ...
ISU personal best scores in the +5/-5 GOE System[3]
Segment Type Score Event
Total TSS151.852025 CS Warsaw Cup
Short program TSS52.682024 CS Nepela Memorial
TES29.872024 CS Nepela Memorial
PCS26.062022 World Junior Championships
Free skating TSS104.492024 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb
TES54.162024 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb
PCS50.592025 CS Warsaw Cup
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Senior level

More information Date, Event ...
Results in the 2025–26 season[3]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Sep 11–14, 2025 Italy 2025 CS Lombardia Trophy 13 50.20 11 99.81 13 150.01
Nov 7–9, 2025 Bulgaria 2025 Denkova-Staviski Cup 21 42.61 12 86.96 15 129.57
Nov 19–23, 2025 Poland 2025 CS Warsaw Cup 8 51.98 8 99.87 8 151.85
Dec 3–6, 2025 Croatia 2025 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb 19 48.54 23 79.80 23 128.34
Dec 13–14, 2025 Lithuania 2026 Lithuanian Championships 2 52.80 2 112.01 2 164.81
Jan 13–18, 2026 United Kingdom 2026 European Championships 24 50.30 24 63.71 24 114.01
27 Jan – 1 Feb 2026 Poland 2026 EDGE Cup 1 58.10 3 97.38 3 155.48
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References

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