Coupe du Printemps

The ISU Coupe du Printemps (French for Spring Cup) is an annual figure skating competition held in March in Kockelscheuer, Luxembourg. The competition may include men's singles, women's singles, and pair skating from senior to novice levels, and is recognized by the International Skating Union (ISU), the world's highest instance of skating. The event also serves as the Luxemburgish Figure Skating Championships [1]

Rika Hongo, Takahito Mura and Shoma Uno, 2017 Coupe du Printemps

Senior medalists

Men

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2012Belgium Jorik HendrickxRomania Zoltán KelemenGermany Franz Streubel[2]
2013Belgium Jorik HendrickxJapan Tatsuki MachidaRomania Zoltán Kelemen[3]
2014Japan Daisuke MurakamiJapan Ryuju HinoFrance Charles Tetar[4]
2015Japan Daisuke MurakamiFrance Kévin AymozGermany Alexander Bjelde[5]
2016Belgium Jorik HendrickxKazakhstan Denis TenJapan Takahito Mura[6]
2017Japan Shoma UnoJapan Takahito MuraArmenia Slavik Hayrapetyan[7]
2018Sweden Alexander MajorovJapan Kazuki TomonoFrance Romain Ponsart[8]
2019Japan Sena MiyakeMonaco Davide Lewton BrainAustria Maurizio Zandron[9]
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022Japan Kazuki TomonoJapan Tatsuya TsuboiFrance Landry Le May[10]
2023United States Jimmy MaJapan Koshiro ShimadaCanada Matthew Newnham[11]

Women

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2012Germany Sarah HeckenItaly Francesca RioFrance Maé-Bérénice Méité[2]
2013Sweden Joshi HelgessonGermany Nathalie WeinzierlJapan Risa Shōji[3]
2014Japan Mariko KiharaNorway Anine RabeSwitzerland Myriam Leuenberger[4]
2015Sweden Joshi HelgessonJapan Riona KatoGermany Nicole Schott[5]
2016Sweden Joshi HelgessonJapan Rin NitayaItaly Giada Russo[6]
2017Japan Rika HongoLatvia Angelīna KučvaļskaHungary Ivett Tóth[7]
2018Japan Mai MiharaJapan Kaori SakamotoJapan Yuna Shiraiwa[8]
2019Sweden Josefin TaljegårdNetherlands Caya ScheepensUnited Kingdom Bethany Powell[9]
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022Japan Rinka WatanabeJapan Rion SumiyoshiNew Zealand Jocelyn Hong[10]
2023Japan Mone ChibaUnited States Starr AndrewsUnited States Ava Ziegler[11]

Pairs

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2013Ukraine Elizaveta Usmantseva / Roman TalanBelarus Maria Paliakova / Nikita BochkovSweden Ronja Roll / Gustav Forsgren[3]

Junior medalists

Men

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2012France Alexi DalrympleFrance Simon HocquauxItaly Antonio Panfili[2]
2013France Simon HocquauxFrance Charles TetarJapan Sei Kawahara[3]
2014Japan Sota YamamotoGermany Panagiotis PolizoakisJapan Taichi Honda[4]
2015France Adrien TessonJapan Kazuki TomonoItaly Marco Zandron[5]
2016Canada Antony ChengSweden Nikolaj MajorovCanada Conrad Orzel[6]
2017Japan Yuto KishinaJapan Tatsuya TsuboiSwitzerland David Gouveia[7]
2018Japan Tatsuya TsuboiJapan Kazuki HasegawaSweden Nikolaj Majorov[8]
2019Czech Republic Filip ScerbaFrance Tom BouvartFrance Theo Belle[9]
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022Spain Pablo GarciaGermany Denis GurdzhiGermany Tim England[10]
2023United States Jacob SanchezJapan Seigo TauchiJapan Tsudoi Suto[11]

Women

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2012Italy Giada RussoGermany Anne ZetzscheSweden Josefin Taljegard[2]
2013Japan Riona KatoFinland Liubov EfimenkoFinland Nelma Hede[3]
2014Japan Yura MatsudaFrance Lola EsbratSwitzerland Shaline Ruegger[4]
2015Finland Anni JärvenpääNetherlands Kyarha van TielBelgium Loena Hendrickx[5]
2016Sweden Cassandra JohanssonSweden Anita ÖstlundCanada Maya Lappin[6]
2017Japan Rino KasakakeEstonia Annely VahiItaly Chenny Paolucci[7]
2018Austria Olga MikutinaItaly Alessia TornaghiFinland Linnea Ceder[8]
2019Japan Rinka WatanabeFinland Mai HelskeNetherlands Lenne Van Gorp[9]
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022Japan Ami NakaiBelgium Nina PinzarroneHungary Vivien Papp[10]
2023Japan Ami NakaiJapan Yo TakagiCanada Aleksa Volkova[11]

Pairs

Year Gold Silver Bronze Details
2013Russia Lina Fedorova / Maxim MiroshkinRussia Arina Cherniavskaia / Antonio Souza-KordeyruItaly Alessandra Cernuschi / Filippo Ambrosini[3]

References

  1. "Tests Nationaux (Cadre Test)" [National Tests (Test Framework)] (in Luxembourgish). 19 September 2023. Archived from the original on 20 September 2023.
  2. "2012 Coupe du Printemps". March 2012. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. "2013 Coupe du Printemps". March 2013. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013.
  4. "2014 Coupe du Printemps". March 2014. Archived from the original on 15 March 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. "2015 Coupe du Printemps". 15 March 2015. Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
  6. "Coupe Du Printemps 2016". skating.lu. 13 March 2016. Archived from the original on 4 November 2016.
  7. "Coupe du Printemps 2017". skating.lu. March 2017.
  8. "Coupe du Printemps 2018". skating.lu. March 2018.
  9. "Coupe du Printemps 2019". skating.lu. March 2019.
  10. "Coupe du Printemps 2022". skating.lu. March 2022.
  11. "Coupe du Printemps 2023". skating.lu. March 2023.
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