Kamilla Gainetdinova

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Kamilla Gainetdinova
2014 ISU Junior Grand Prix Final Kamilla Gainetdinova Sergei Alexeev IMG 2112.JPG
Gainetdinova/Alexeev at the 2014-15 Junior Grand Prix Final
Personal information
Native name Камилла Ралифовна Гайнетдинова
Full name Kamilla Ralifovna Gainetdinova
Country represented Russia
Born (1997-10-12) 12 October 1997 (age 26)
Moscow, Russia
Height 1.50 m (4 ft 11 in)
Partner Sergei Alexeev
Former partner Ivan Bich
Coach Stanislav Morozov
Former coach Natalia Pavlova, Artur Dmitriev, Oksana Kazakova, Eteri Tutberidze, Marina Kudriavtseva
Choreographer Alla Kapranova
Former choreographer Ivan Kozlov, Sergei Komlov
Skating club Vorobievie Gory
Former skating club UOR 4 Moscow
SDUSHOR St. Petersburg
Training locations Moscow
Former training locations Saint Petersburg
Began skating 2004
ISU personal best scores
Combined total 137.31
2014 JGP Estonia
Short program 49.20
2014 JGP Czech Republic
Free skate 91.01
2014 JGP Estonia

Kamilla Ralifovna Gainetdinova (Russian: Камилла Ралифовна Гайнетдинова; born 12 October 1997) is a Russian pair skater. With former partner Ivan Bich, she is the 2013 JGP Belarus champion and a two-time (2012, 2013) Russian junior national bronze medalist.

Personal life

Kamilla Ralifovna Gainetdinova was born 12 October 1997 in Moscow, Russia.[1][2] She is of Tatar descent.[citation needed]

Career

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Gainetdinova initially trained as a singles skater, coached by Marina Kudriavtseva in Moscow.[3]

Partnership with Bich

Deciding to switch to pair skating, she formed a partnership in May 2011 with Ivan Bich, who was also new to the discipline.[4][3] Gainetdinova moved to Saint Petersburg to train with him.[3] They were coached by Oksana Kazakova in their first two seasons together.[4][5]

Gainetdinova/Bich made their international debut at the 2011 Warsaw Cup, winning the junior bronze medal. They won bronze at the 2012 Russian Junior Championships. In the free skate, Gainetdinova/Bich landed SBS 3Lz, receiving 6.70 points for the element.[6] They also included a SBS 3Lo+2A sequence after the halfway point, receiving 5.99 points due to some negative grades of execution.[6] They were assigned to the 2012 World Junior Championships, where they finished 11th.

In their second season, Gainetdinova/Bich debuted on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series. They were 7th at their first event in Lake Placid, New York. At the 2012 JGP Croatia, they landed a SBS 3LZ+2T combination in the free skate, as well as upgrading their twist to a triple for the first time.[7] They are the first pair to land the combination in a junior competition.[8] Gainetdinova/Bich finished 4th at the event. They won bronze at the 2013 Russian Junior Championships with a free skate that included a SBS 3Lz+2T combination at the start of the program and SBS 3T after the halfway mark.[9] They finished 8th at the 2013 World Junior Championships.

In spring 2013, Gainetdinova/Bich moved to Moscow and joined Natalia Pavlova and Artur Dmitriev.[10] Beginning their third season with gold at the 2013 JGP Belarus, the pair then won the bronze medal at the 2013 JGP Czech Republic. Their results qualified them to the JGP Final in Fukuoka, Japan. At the final, Gainetdinova/Bich placed sixth in both segments and overall. Their partnership ended in early 2014.

Partnership with Alexeev

Upon hearing that she was without a partner, Stanislav Morozov invited Gainetdinova to join his group and paired her with Sergei Alexeev, in around May 2014.[11] In early September, Gainetdinova/Alexeev won the bronze medal at their first 2014–15 JGP assignment, in Ostrava, Czech Republic. They took silver in Tallinn, Estonia and qualified for the 2014–15 JGP Final in Barcelona.

Programs

With Alexeev

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2014–2015
[1][11]

With Bich

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2013–2014
[10]
2012–2013
[5]
2011–2012
[4]
  • Die Fledermaus
    by Johann Strauss II

Competitive highlights

With Alexeev

International[12]
Event 2014–15
JGP Final 5th
JGP Czech Republic 3rd
JGP Estonia 2nd
National
Russian Junior 11th
TBD = Entered

With Bich

International[13]
Event 2011–12 2012–13 2013–14
World Junior Champ. 11th 8th
JGP Final 6th
JGP Belarus 1st
JGP Croatia 4th
JGP Czech Republic 3rd
JGP United States 7th
MNNT Cup 1st J.
Warsaw Cup 3rd J.
National[13]
Russian Junior Champ. 3rd 3rd 5th
J. = Junior level

References

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External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons