Vasilisa Davankova

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Other namesVasilisa Davankova Morozova
Born (1998-05-02) 2 May 1998 (age 27)
Moscow, Russia
Height1.59 m (5 ft 3 in)
Country Russia
Vasilisa Davankova
Davankova in 2020
Personal information
Other namesVasilisa Davankova Morozova
Born (1998-05-02) 2 May 1998 (age 27)
Moscow, Russia
Height1.59 m (5 ft 3 in)
Figure skating career
Country Russia
CoachNikolai Morozov
Skating clubVorobievie Gory Moscow
Began skating2003
Retired2017
Medal record
Representing  Russia
Figure skating: Pairs
World Junior Championships
Bronze medal – third place2012 MinskPairs
Junior Grand Prix Final
Silver medal – second place2012–13 SochiPairs

Vasilisa Alexandrovna Davankova (Russian: Василиса Александровна Даванкова; born 2 May 1998) is a Russian YouTuber and a former ice dancer and pair skater. With former partner Andrei Deputat, she was the 2012 World Junior bronze medalist, the 2012–13 JGP Final silver medalist, and the 2012 Russian Junior champion. She then briefly teamed up with Alexander Enbert but ended their partnership in 2015.

Vasilisa Davankova was born on 2 May 1998 in Moscow.[1] She has a younger brother, Nikita, born in 2001.[2] She is a quarter Greek.[3] In May 2016, Davankova married her coach Nikolai Morozov, right after she turned 18.[4] In July 2019 during an interview, Davankova revealed that she and Morozov were divorced.[5]

Career

Early years

Davankova began skating at age seven, following her younger brother Nikita.[2] As a singles skater, she was coached by Elena Alexandrova.[2] Her next coaches were Alexei Ryabov and Ekaterina Ryabova.[3] After switching to pairs, Davankova joined Sergei Dobroskokov's group and skated with Semion Kazantsev during the 2010–11 season.[2]

Partnership with Deputat

Davankova and Ukrainian pair skater Andrei Deputat skated in the same group before teaming up in May 2011.[2] In December 2011, they competed on the senior level at the 2012 Russian Championships. They were seventh in the short program but finished fifth overall, receiving the highest TES in the free skate ahead of the gold medalists Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov. In February 2012, they won the gold medal at the 2012 Russian Junior Championships after placing first in both the short and free segments. Deputat was released by Ukraine to represent Russia.[6] Davankova/Deputat won the bronze medal in their international debut at the 2012 World Junior Championships.[3]

In the 2012–13 season, Davankova/Deputat won silver at their first JGP event in Lake Placid, New York. At their second event, in Zagreb, Croatia, they took the bronze and qualified for the JGP Final in Sochi, Russia, where they won the silver medal behind Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin.[7][8] By that time, Davankova had grown to 1.55 m.[7] Davankova/Deputat finished seventh in their second appearance at the 2013 Russian Championships. In January 2013, Davankova injured her leg at a training session, resulting in the pair withdrawing from the 2013 Russian Junior Championships.[9] She was on crutches for two weeks.[10] In late March, Deputat injured his right leg and decided to undergo a meniscus operation.[10]

In 2013–14, Davankova/Deputat began their season by winning bronze at the 2013 JGP Belarus. A silver medal at the 2013 JGP Estonia qualified them to the JGP Final in Fukuoka, Japan. At the final, Davankova/Deputat placed fifth in both segments and overall. At the Russian Championships, the pair finished fifth on the senior level and then won the bronze medal on the junior level. Davankova/Deputat were assigned to the 2014 World Junior Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria, where they finished fourth after placing third in the short program and fifth in the free skate. Their partnership ended because Deputat was struggling with elements as Davankova grew taller.[11]

Partnership with Enbert

Davankova considered a junior-level partnership with Maxim Bobrov, skating with him for three weeks, before receiving a proposal from more experienced pair skater Alexander Enbert and coach Nina Mozer.[12][13] On 30 April 2014, Mozer announced that Davankova/Enbert had teamed up and would be coached by her in Moscow.[14][15] Davankova said they would begin training on 12 May.[12] The pair performed an exhibition a few weeks later at a charity gala in Luzhniki.[13] In 2015, it was announced that Davankova had broken up with Enbert and he will skate with a new partner, Natalia Zabiiako.

Partnership with Shibnev

In summer 2016 it became known that Davankova had decided to switch divisions from pair skating to ice dance, and would start skating with Anton Shibnev as her partner. In 2017 Shibnev started skating with a new partner.

After skating: career on YouTube

After finishing her skating career, Davankova began posting content to YouTube. She is now one of the most popular Russian bloggers, with over 1 million subscribers on YouTube and almost 300,000 followers on Instagram. She calls herself 'the most fearless blogger of Russian YouTube'.[citation needed]

Programs

With Shibnev

Season Short dance Free dance
2016–2017

Blues:

With Enbert

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2014–2015
[1]
  • Ave Maria
    performed by Shirley Bassey

With Deputat

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2013–2014
[16]
2012–2013
[17]
2011–2012
[18]
  • Flamenco
    by Didulia

Competitive highlights

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

Ice dance career with Shibnev

International
Event 2016–17
Winter Universiade5th
National[19]
Russian Championships7th

Pair skating career with Enbert

International[20]
Event 2014–15
GP Rostelecom CupWD
CS Autumn Classic International6th
National[19]
Russian Championships6th
WD = Withdrew

Pair skating career with Deputat

Davankova/Deputat won bronze at the 2012 World Junior Championships
International[21]
Event 2011–12 2012–13 2013–14
Cup of Nice4th
International: Junior[21]
World Junior Champ.3rd4th
JGP Final2nd5th
JGP Belarus3rd
JGP Croatia3rd
JGP Estonia2nd
JGP United States2nd
National[19]
Russian Champ.5th7th5th
Russian Junior Champ.1stWD3rd
WD = Withdrew

Detailed results

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI