Andrei Bagin

Andrei Vladislavovich Bagin (Russian: Андрей Владиславович Багин, born 18 April 1996) is a Russian ice dancer. With his current partner, Annabelle Morozov, he is the 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb silver medalist.

Andrei Bagin
Bagin with Morozov at the 2018 Rostelecom Cup
Personal information
Native nameАндрей Владиславович Багин
Full nameAndrei Vladislavovich Bagin
Country represented Russia
Born (1996-04-18) April 18, 1996
Moscow, Russia
Home townMoscow
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
PartnerAnnabelle Morozov
Former partnerKristina Baklanova, Eva Khachaturian, Maria Stavitskaia
CoachNikolai Morozov
Former coachLarisa Filina, Oleg Vasiliev, Alexander Zhulin
ChoreographerNikolai Morozov
Former choreographerIrina Kolganova, Sergei Petukhov
Skating clubSambo 70
Training locationsMoscow, Russia
ISU personal best scores
Combined total191.71
2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb
Short dance78.75
2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb
Free dance112.96
2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb

Personal life

Bagin was born on 18 April 1996 in Moscow, Russia. His grandfather, Leonid Khachaturov, is the Chairman of the Coaching Council of the Figure Skating Federation of Russia (FFKKR).[1]

Career

Early years

Bagin started learning to skate in 2006.[2] He began training in ice dancing in 2008, at the age of 12, and competed with his first partner, Kristina Baklanova, for six seasons.[1] Based in Moscow, the two were coached by Larisa Filina before switching to Alexander Zhulin and Oleg Volkov.[3] They debuted on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series in September 2012, finishing 8th in Istanbul, Turkey. A year later, they placed fourth at a JGP event in Košice, Slovakia. It was their final international event together.

Bagin teamed up with his second partner, Eva Khachaturian, in 2014. They trained together for two seasons, under Zhulin and Volkov in Moscow, and finished fourth at two JGP events.[4]

In 2016, Bagin moved up to the senior ranks, partnered with Maria Stavitskaia. They placed 8th at the 2017 Russian Championships and 12th at the 2017 Winter Universiade before parting ways. Later that year, Bagin teamed up with Annabelle Morozov. The two decided to train under her father, Nikolai Morozov, in Moscow.[1]

2017–18 season

Morozov/Bagin only competed domestically during the 2017–18 season and placed 8th at the 2018 Russian Figure Skating Championships.

2018–19 season

Morozov/Bagin made their international and Grand Prix debut during the 2018–19 season by receiving the Russian host pick slot at the 2018 Rostelecom Cup. The couple placed 9th at the event. Later in the season, Morozov/Bagin went on to compete at the 2018 CS Tallinn Trophy and the 2018 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb where they placed 7th and 8th respectively. The team completed their season at home at the 2019 Russian Figure Skating Championships where they again finished 8th.

2019–20 season

Morozov/Bagin began their season at the 2019 CS Ice Star where they placed third in the rhythm dance, but later fell to fourth in the free dance and fourth overall. Nevertheless, the team set new personal bests in all three segments at this event. At their next competition, the 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb, Morozov/Bagin made their first international podium, placing second in both the rhythm dance and the free dance to win the silver medal overall. The team once again set new personal bests in all three segments and surpassed their previous best total score by over 13 points.

In December 2019, Morozov/Bagin earned their highest placement to date at the 2020 Russian Figure Skating Championships, finishing just off the podium in 4th behind bronze medalists Tiffani Zagorski / Jonathan Guerreiro.

Programs

With Morozov

Season Rhythm dance Free dance Exhibition
2019–2020
  • Romans (Ja Tebya Nikogda Ne Zabudu)
    by Ariana ft. Aleksandr Marshal
2018–2019
[2]
Tosca

With Baklanova

Season Short dance Free dance
2013–2014
[5]
2012–2013
[3]
  • Blues
  • Swing: Swing Baby
2011–2012
  • Chilly Cha Cha
    2010–2011

      Competitive highlights

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

      With Morozov

      International[6]
      Event 2017–18 2018–19 2019–20
      GP Rostelecom Cup9th
      CS Golden Spin8th2nd
      CS Ice Star4th
      CS Tallinn Trophy7th
      National[6][1]
      Russian Champ.8th8th4th
      TBD = Assigned

      With Stavitskaia

      International[7]
      Event 2016–17
      Winter Universiade12th
      National[1]
      Russian Championships8th

      With Khachaturian

      International: Junior[8]
      Event 2014–15 2015–16
      JGP Japan4th
      JGP Slovenia4th
      Ice Star1st
      Leo Scheu Memorial3rd
      NRW Trophy2nd
      Toruń Cup3rd
      National[1]
      Russian Junior Champ.6th

      With Baklanova

      International: Junior[9]
      Event 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13 2013–14
      JGP Slovakia4th
      JGP Turkey8th
      NRW Trophy9th
      Santa Claus Cup3rd
      National[1]
      Russian Junior Champ.13th10th6th
      Russian Cup Final2nd J2nd J
      J = Junior level

      Detailed results

      Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships. At team events, medals awarded for team results only. ISU personal bests highlighted in bold.

      With Morozov

      2019–20 season
      Date Event RD FD Total
      24–29 December 2019 2020 Russian Championships 5
      73.67
      4
      115.43
      4
      189.10
      4–7 December 2019 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb 2
      78.75
      2
      112.96
      2
      191.71
      18–20 October 2019 2019 CS Ice Star 3
      75.25
      4
      102.77
      4
      178.02
      2018–19 season
      21–24 December 2018 2019 Russian Championships 8
      65.95
      8
      97.21
      8
      163.16
      5–8 December 2018 2018 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb 10
      54.51
      7
      97.04
      8
      151.55
      26–29 November 2018 2018 CS Tallinn Trophy 7
      56.47
      7
      91.53
      7
      148.00
      16–18 November 2018 2018 Rostelecom Cup 9
      51.69
      9
      81.89
      9
      133.58
      2017–18 season
      19–24 December 2017 2018 Russian Championships 9
      52.32
      7
      85.54
      8
      137.86
      gollark: Which also means we get actually good mobile internet.
      gollark: I mean, the UK seems to mostly have 1-day shipping coverage, being much smaller.
      gollark: They don't do one-day shipping *everywhere*.
      gollark: I probably won't particularly have to worry about getting a house for many years, but I'd also want somewhere where Amazon can ship fast and whatnot.
      gollark: To run your computer and all that.

      References

      This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.