Stanislava Konstantinova

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nativename
Станислава Андреевна Константинова (Russian)
FullnameStanislava Andreyevna Konstantinova
Born (2000-07-14) 14 July 2000 (age 25)
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Stanislava Konstantinova
Personal information
Native name
Станислава Андреевна Константинова (Russian)
Full nameStanislava Andreyevna Konstantinova
Born (2000-07-14) 14 July 2000 (age 25)
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Figure skating career
CountryRussia Russia
CoachViktoria Butsaeva
Skating clubSports school of the Olympic reserve "Moskvich" (Moscow)
Began skating2006
RetiredJanuary 20, 2023
Medal record
Representing  Russia
Figure skating: Ladies' singles
Winter Universiade
Bronze medal – third place2019 KrasnoyarskLadies' singles

Stanislava Andreyevna Konstantinova (Russian: Станислава Андреевна Константинова; born 14 July 2000) is a retired Russian figure skater. She is the 2019 Winter Universiade bronze medalist, 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki silver medalist, a two-time CS Tallinn Trophy champion (2016, 2017) and the 2017 CS Warsaw Cup silver medalist.

On the junior level, she is the 2016 JGP Russia silver medalist, the 2017 JGP Belarus bronze medalist, the 2015 Tallinn Trophy champion, and the 2017 Russian junior national silver medalist.

Konstantinova was born on 14 July 2000 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.[1] Her mother trained in rhythmic gymnastics and track and field and her father in karate.[2] Her sister, Kristina, is eleven years younger.[2]

Career

Konstantinova began learning to skate in 2006.[1] Valentina Chebotareva became her coach when she was nine years old.[2] She made her international debut in November 2012 at the 2012 Tallinn Trophy, where she won the junior gold medal.[3] In the 2015–16 season she won second gold medal at the 2015 Tallinn Trophy. In 2016–17 season she made her Junior Grand Prix debut. She won silver medal at the JGP Russia, she then placed fourth at the JGP Germany.

Konstantinova made her international senior debut at the 2016 CS Tallinn Trophy where she won gold medal with a personal best score of 186.97 points. Placing first in both programs, she won the gold medal by a margin of more than 9 points over silver medalist Serafima Sakhanovich.

2017–18 season

Konstantinova at the 2017 World Junior Figure Skating Championships

In November 2017 Konstantinova competed the 2017 CS Tallinn Trophy where she won the gold medal. This was her second consecutive victory at Tallinn Trophy. Two weeks later she won the 2017 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb with a personal best score of 199.68 points.

In December 2017 she placed fourth at the 2018 Russian Championships after placing tenth in the short program and third in the free skate. She then competed at the 2018 Russian Junior Championships where she won the bronze medal.[2]

In March 2018 Konstantinova competed at the 2018 Junior Worlds where she placed fourth after placing sixth in the short program and fifth in the free skate. She was subsequently called up to replace Evgenia Medvedeva at the 2018 World Championships in Milan. She was later described as having "more or less bombed" the competition, placing sixteenth in the short program and twentieth in the free skate, for nineteenth place overall. Konstantinova would admit to being "really down after that." She described herself as "very grateful to my family that they supported me in this difficult time, thankful to the fans that didn’t turn away from me and continued to support me. I healed my soul through work and I drew a lot of conclusions for myself."[4]

2018–19 season

Konstantinova (left) alongside medalists Alina Zagitova (centre) and Kaori Sakamoto (right) at 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki

Konstantinova started her season by competing at two ISU Challenger Series events. In mid September she won the bronze medal at the 2018 CS Ondrej Nepela Trophy and two weeks later she placed fourth at the 2018 CS Finlandia Trophy, fractions of a point behind Finnish skater Viveca Lindfors. In early November she made her Grand Prix debut at 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki where she won the silver medal behind her teammate Alina Zagitova. In late November she finished fifth at the 2018 Internationaux de France.

Konstantinova performing her gala at the 2018 Grand Prix de France

At the 2019 Russian Championships, Konstantinova initially placed fourth in the short program.[5] In the free skate, she popped an Axel and underrotated a triple Lutz, placing fifth in the free skate and fourth overall. Konstantinova was the highest-ranked international senior skater in the competition, 0.89 points ahead of Alina Zagitova. Speaking afterward, she said she was "not too happy with my free as I made mistakes, but I proved that I am competitive in this field."[6]

Konstantinova was assigned to the 2019 European Championships along with Zagitova and Sofia Samodurova, the other top senior qualifiers at the Russian Championships. In the short program, Konstantinova doubled her attempted triple Lutz and underrotated her triple flip, as a result placing eleventh. She placed second in the free skate, behind only Samodurova, and finished in fourth place overall, behind Samodurova, Zagitova, and Lindfors.[7] Competing next at the domestic Russian Cup Final, she placed second in the short program, behind only Medvedeva, but fell to sixth in the free, and was again fourth overall. Although initially submitted as one of Russia's three entries for the 2019 World Championships, she was subsequently withdrawn and replaced by Medvedeva.[8]

2019–20 season

Konstantinova at the 2019 Skate America

Beginning the season at the 2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial, Konstantinova placed seventh. At her first Grand Prix assignment, 2019 Skate America, she had several falls and popped jumps, finishing eleventh out of twelve skaters.[9][10] She was eleventh as well at the 2019 Rostelecom Cup. Konstantinova finished the season at the 2020 Russian Championships.

2020–21 season

With the COVID-19 pandemic affecting the international season, Konstantinova competed on the domestic Cup of Russia series, placing fifth at the second stage in Moscow and ninth at the fourth stage in Kazan.[11] As a result, she qualified for the 2021 Russian Figure Skating Championships. She placed sixteenth at the national championships. On January 13, Konstantinova announced that she'd be leaving coaches Alexander Volkov to train under Viktoria Butsaeva.

On July 29, 2022, it was reported that Stanislava Konstantinova had finished her career,[12] but the figure skater herself denied this information, saying that she had temporarily suspended her career and would miss the new season.[13]

Retirement

Not competing during season 2021–2022, Konstantinova has announced her retirement from competitive skating on her Instagram and mentioned that she stays in figure skating now as a coach and choreographer.

Programs

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2020–2021
2019–2020
[14]
  • February
    by Leonid Levashkevich
    choreo. by Olga Zotova
2018-2019
[15]

Anna Karenina

  • Unavoidable
  • She Is of the Heavens
  • Curtain
  • Anna's Last Train
    by Dario Marianelli
    choreo. by Olga Kliushnichenko

2017-2018
[16]
2016–2017
[1]
2015–2016
2014–2015
2013–2014

Competitive highlights

Konstantinova (left) with Alina Zagitova (center) and Kaori Sakamoto (right) at the 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki podium.

GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

International[17]
Event 14–15 15–16 16–17 17–18 18–19 19–20 20-21
Worlds19th
Europeans4th
GP Finland2nd
GP Skate America11th
GP France5th
GP Rostelecom Cup11th
CS Finlandia4th
CS Golden Spin1stWD
CS Ondrej Nepela3rd7th
CS Tallinn Trophy1st1st
CS Warsaw Cup2nd
Winter Universiade3rd
International: Junior[17][18]
Junior Worlds6th4th
JGP Belarus3rd
JGP Germany4th
JGP Russia2nd
Ice Challenge1st
Tallinn Trophy2nd1st
National[18]
Russian Champ.6th4th4th13th16th
Russian Junior Champ.17th8th2nd3rd
Russian Cup Final5th J1st JWD4th

Detailed results

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI