Julia Sauter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FullnameJulia Franziska Sauter
Born (1997-06-18) 18 June 1997 (age 28)
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Julia Sauter
Julia Sauter at the 2024 World Championships
Personal information
Full nameJulia Franziska Sauter
Born (1997-06-18) 18 June 1997 (age 28)
Home townRavensburg, Germany
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Figure skating career
Country Romania (since 2012)
 Germany (2010–12)
DisciplineWomen's singles
CoachRoxana Hartmann
Christopher Boyadji
Skating clubACS Corona Brașov
Began skating2002
Medal record
Romanian Championships
Gold medal – first place 2014 Brașov Singles
Gold medal – first place 2015 Brașov Singles
Gold medal – first place 2016 Miercurea Ciuc Singles
Gold medal – first place 2017 Bucharest Singles
Gold medal – first place 2019 Otopeni Singles
Gold medal – first place 2022 Miercurea Ciuc Singles
Gold medal – first place 2023 Otopeni Singles
Gold medal – first place 2024 Otopeni Singles
Gold medal – first place 2025 Otopeni Singles
Silver medal – second place 2013 Brașov Singles

Julia Franziska Sauter (married name: Sauter-Czarnik; born 18 June 1997) is a German-Romanian figure skater.[1][2] Representing Romania, she has won twelve senior international medals as well as nine Romanian national titles. She has reached the final segment at four World and four European Championships, with a top-ten result at three European Championships. Sauter represented Romania at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Sauter was born on June 18, 1997 in Weingarten, Württemberg, Germany.

In 2019, while visiting the United States, she met and began dating American ice hockey player Robbie Czarnik. Afterwards, Czarnik moved to Landshut, Germany to be with Sauter. They married in September 2021.[3][4]

In addition to figure skating, Sauter also worked as a children's aide in a school, a part-time waitress, and as a figure skating coach at her training rink in Ravensburg to pay for her figure skating due to a lack of funding from the German Figure Skating Federation.[4] In 2023, her Romanian club was able to provide her with funding, allowing her to quit her part-time jobs, although she continues to coach and choreograph at her rink.[5]

Sauter has expressed interest in becoming a full-time figure skating coach and choreographer after she retires from competitive figure skating.

Her figure skating role models are Kiira Korpi, Yuna Kim, Kaetlyn Osmond, Carolina Kostner, as well as her coach and choreographer, Roxana Hartmann.[4]

Sauter became a Romanian citizen on October 9, 2025.[6]

Career

Early years

Sauter at the 2016 European Championships

Sauter began figure skating in 2002 at the age of four. Her childhood coaches were Diane Eisele and Silvia Jansson before Marius Negrea began coaching her in 2010 at the age of twelve.[4]

Sauter represented Germany at junior international events in 2010 and 2011.

She made the decision to represent Romania in 2011 at the age of fourteen due to not being invited to enter the elite group of figure skaters in Germany because at the time, she was unable to perform specific elements that were required of her. As a result, Sauter had to sit out of competitions for a whole year as is required when figure skaters switch countries. In March 2013, she made her first international appearance for Romania.[7][4] She competed at three consecutive World Junior Championships, from 2014 to 2016, but never made the cut for the free skate.[8]

2018–19 season

Sauter began the season at the 2018 Crystal Skate of Romania, winning the silver medal, fourteenth at the 2018 CS Alpen Trophy, and fifth at the 2018 Warsaw Cup.[8]

At the 2019 European Championships in Minsk, Belarus, Sauter qualified to the final segment of an ISU Championship for the first time in her career. She went on to finish fourteenth overall.[8]

Making her World Championship debut at the 2019 edition in Saitama, Japan, Sauter placed twenty-ninth in the short program and didn't advance to the free skate.[8]

2019–20 season and 2020–21 season

Sauter left longtime coach, Marius Negrea after deciding to move from Ravensburg to Landshut, where her newlywed husband was living. She did not compete during the 2019–20 season, which she later cited was due to a lack of motivation, having achieved her dream of finishing in the top 30 at a World Championships the previous season as well as an ankle injury that kept her off the ice for six weeks. She also missed the 2020–21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic preventing her from getting any ice time to train.

In October 2020, Sauter decided to return to coach, Marius Negrea and worked virtually with him until August 2021 when the ice rink in Ravensburg re-opened.[4] Prior to that, Sauter trained in Atlanta, Georgia from April to July, where her husband's parents live, and worked with Negrea virtually.[4]

2021–22 season

Making her return to competition at the 2021 CS Lombardia Trophy, Sauter finished thirteenth. She went on to place twentieth at the 2021 CS Nebelhorn Trophy, and third at the 2021 Trophée Métropole Nice Côte d'Azur.[8]

At the 2022 Romanian Championships, Sauter won her sixth national title. She then finished fourth at both the 2021 Skate Celje and the 2021 Santa Claus Cup.[8]

Although assigned to compete at the 2022 European Championships, Sauter had to withdraw from the event after testing positive for COVID-19.[4] She then went on to win bronze at both 2022 Skate Helena and the 2022 Dragon Trophy.[8]

Competing at the World Championships for the second time in her career, in Montpellier, France, Sauter qualified for the free skate after placing nineteenth in the short program. She came eighteenth in the free skate, moving up to eighteenth place overall.[8]

2022–23 season

Sauter began the season by finishing eighth at the 2022 Trophée Métropole Nice Côte d'Azur and winning silver at the 2022 Crystal Skate of Romania. She was invited to her first Grand Prix event, the 2022 MK John Wilson Trophy, where she placed tenth. She then won silver medals at the 2023 Bosphorus Cup and 2023 EduSport Trophy. At the EduSport Trophy, Sauter landed her first ever triple lutz in competition at the age of twenty-five.[4][8]

At the 2023 European Championships in Espoo, Finland, Sauter achieved a top ten finish for Romania, which for the first time would allow two Romanian woman to enter the next year.[9] She then went on to win a gold medal at the 2023 Bellu Memorial.[8]

Sauter set up a GoFundMe page to pay for the travel expenses to go to the 2023 World Championships in Saitama, Japan.[10] At the World Championships, Sauter placed twenty-second in the short program and twentieth in the free skate, finishing twentieth overall.[8]

2023–24 season

In her first competition of the season, Sauter was sixth at the 2023 CS Nepela Memorial. She appeared at three other minor internationals, including a second consecutive silver medal at the EduSport Trophy.[8] Sauter was ill before the 2024 European Championships and was only able to resume training two weeks beforehand.[9] She came ninth overall.[11] This was the best result ever for a Romanian women's representative at the European Championships. Sauter said of her result that "It feels pretty good to have made the Top 10 again." and that she was pleased to be competing at the Championships with another Romanian woman.[9]

At the 2024 World Championships, Sauter came in twenty-seventh place with mistakes on two of her jumping passes in the short program, and she did not make the free skate.[12] The result came as a shock and deep disappointment to her, as she felt she was well prepared for the competition.[13]

2024–25 season

Sauter after finishing her short program at the 2025 World Championships

Sauter went to the United States to train during the summer.[13] However, she began to struggle with panic attacks.[14] She also struggled to motivate herself after failing to make the free skate at the World Championships. Although her mental health improved by the end of the summer, she experienced severe inflammation in her shin in September and could not walk.[13]

She began the season by competing on the 2024–25 ISU Challenger Series, finishing sixth at the 2024 CS Budapest Trophy and seventeenth at the 2024 CS Warsaw Cup. Between the two events, Sauter won the 2024 Crystal Skate of Romania.[8] The event doubled as the Romanian Figure Skating Championships, and Sauter won her ninth national title. Sauter returned to her normal training schedule in mid-October.[13]

In December, Sauter decided to part ways with longtime coach, Marius Negrea, and make Roxana Hartmann, who had previously mainly worked as her choreographer, her new head coach.[10] In addition, Sauter also began working with Christopher Boyadji as well as Simona Punga.[13] The following month, she competed at the 2025 European Championships in Tallinn, Estonia, where she placed seventh. This was the best-ever placement for a Romanian woman at the European Championships.[14]

Weeks before the 2025 World Championships, Sauter set up a GoFundMe page to help pay for her and her coaches' travel expenses.[10] She also had issues with her application for Romanian citizenship.[13]

At the World Championships, Sauter placed sixteenth in the short program, which both qualified her for the free skate and won an Olympic quota for Romania. In the free skate, she dropped to nineteenth place overall. Following the event, Sauter shared that she was proud to have won the quota for Romania.[15]

2025–26 season: Milano Cortina Olympics

Sauter opened the season by finishing eleventh at the 2025 CS Nebelhorn Trophy. She then went on to place fifth at the 2025 Swiss Open and fourth at the 2025 Cup of Innsbruck. In December, she won gold at the 2025 Skate Fehervar. One month later, Sauter competed at the 2026 European Championships in Sheffield, England, United Kingdom, where she earned personal best free skate and combined total scores, finishing in eleventh place overall.[16] That same month, it was announced that Sauter and ski jumper, Daniela Toth, were selected as flag bearers for Romania in the upcoming Olympic opening ceremony.[17]

In February, Sauter made her Olympic debut. She placed 16th in both program segments and concluded the event in 17th overall. Sauter scored a personal best, and her placement was the highest thus far for a Romanian women's singles competitor at the Olympics. She credited her success to improving her mental training.[18]

One month following the Olympics, Julia competed at the 2026 World Championships. Before her short program, she experienced a panic attack leading her to single her opening triple Lutz jump, “Before my short program, I had a panic attack. Suddenly, I didn’t know what was happening or where I was. But everything happens for a reason. I’m glad that I still qualified for the free skate".[19] Following her free skate she shared, "The Olympics were my high, and the last four weeks I really had to push myself through it. It was hard, and I’m really proud of what I achieved. I mean, I made it through to the final, that was the first goal.” [20] She finished in 22nd place overall. [21]

Programs

Sauter during the free skate at the 2025 World Championships
Sauter in 2015
Sauter at the 2018 European Championships
Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2025–2026
[22]
  • Who I Am
    by Wyn Starks

2024–2025
[23][24]

  • Inspiration
    by Florian Christl & The Modern String Quintet
    choreo. by Dasa Grm
2023–2024
[25]
  • Inspiration
    by Florian Christl & The Modern String Quintet
    choreo. by Dasa Grm
2022–2023
[3]
2021–2022
[26]
2018–2019
[27]
2017–2018
[28]
2015–2017
[29][30]
2014–2015
[31]
2013–2014
[32]

Competitive highlights

Competition placements at senior level[16]
Season 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17 2017–18 2018–19 2021–22 2022–23 2023–24 2024–25 2025–26
Winter Olympics 17th
World Championships 29th 18th 20th 27th 19th 22nd
European Championships 35th 27th 25th 29th 14th WD 10th 9th 7th 11th
Romanian Championships 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st
GP Wilson Trophy 10th
CS Budapest Trophy 6th
CS Golden Spin of Zagreb WD
CS Inge Solar 14th
CS Lombardia Trophy 13th
CS Nebelhorn Trophy 11th WD 20th 11th
CS Nepela Memorial WD 6th
CS Warsaw Cup 17th
Balkan Games 1st
Bavarian Open 10th 11th WD
Bellu Memorial 1st
Bosphorus Cup 2nd
Challenge Cup WD
Coupe du Printemps 5th
Cup of Innsbruck 4th
Cup of Nice 18th 3rd 8th
Dragon Trophy 6th 3rd 2nd WD
EduSport Trophy WD 2nd 2nd
Egna Spring Trophy 3rd
Golden Bear of Zagreb 18th
Merano Cup 9th WD
Santa Claus Cup 3rd 3rd 9th
Skate Celje 4th
Skate Fehervar 1st
Skate Helena 3rd
Sofia Trophy 3rd
Swiss Open 5th
Tallinn Trophy 4th
Tirnavia Ice Cup 1st
Warsaw Cup 5th
Competition placements at junior level[16]
Season 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16
World Junior Championships 34th 25th 32nd
Romanian Championships 1st 1st 1st
JGP Croatia 21st
Bavarian Open 9th
Coupe du Printemps 4th
Crystal Skate 1st
Dragon Trophy 1st
Mentor Toruń Cup 7th

For Germany

International: Junior[8]
Event 2010–11 2011–12
Bavarian Open15th
Santa Claus Cup10th
National[8][7]
German Youth Champ.15th J21st J

Detailed results

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI