Diana Mukhametzianova

Diana Damirovna Mukhametzianova (Russian: Диана Дамировна Мухаметзянова, born 18 September 2003) is a Russian pair skater. With her partner, Ilya Mironov, she is the 2020 Winter Youth Olympic silver medalist and the 2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final silver medalist.

Diana Mukhametzianova
Mukhametzianova at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics
Personal information
Native nameДиана Дамировна Мухаметзянова
Full nameDiana Damirovna Mukhametzianova
Alternative namesMukhametzyanova
Country represented Russia
Born (2003-09-18) 18 September 2003
Kazan, Russia
Home townMoscow, Russia
Height1.52 m (5 ft 0 in)
PartnerIlya Mironov
CoachVladislav Zhovnirski, Filip Tarasov, Arina Ushakova
Former coachAndrei Khekalo, Rezeda Sibgatullina
ChoreographerTatiana Druchinina
Former choreographerMarianna Maksimova, Alia Makarovskaya, Gulnara Mukhametzyanova
Skating clubVorobievye Gory Moscow
Training locationsMoscow
Began skating2007
ISU personal best scores
Combined total184.37
2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final
Short program64.90
2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final
Free skate119.47
2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final

Personal life

Mukhametzianova was born on 18 September 2003 in Kazan, Russia.

Career

Early years

Mukhametzianova began learning how to skate in 2007. She competed as a single skater in her native Kazan until the 2017–18 season, after which she teamed up with her current partner, Ilya Mironov. For their first two seasons together, Mukhametzianova/Mironov only competed domestically, and finished 6th at the 2019 Russian Junior Figure Skating Championships.

2019–20 season: Winter Youth Olympic and JGP Final silver medalists

Mukhametzianova/Mironov made their junior international debut at the 2019 JGP Russia. They placed third at the event behind fellow Russian competitors Kseniia Akhanteva / Valerii Kolesov and Iuliia Artemeva / Mikhail Nazarychev. At their second assignment, the 2019 JGP Croatia, the team placed second, again behind teammates Artemeva/Nazarychev, and with 24 qualifying points advanced a spot to the 2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final. The pair competed once more before the Final, earning a silver medal in the junior event at the 2019 Volvo Open Cup behind Apollinariia Panfilova / Dmitry Rylov.

At the 2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final, Mukhametzianova/Mironov delivered two clean programs to win the silver medal behind Panfilova/Rylov. The team won the free skate, but were unable to fully make up the margin set by the gold medalists in the short program. They set personal bests in all segments of competition at the event.

Despite qualifying, Mukhametzianova/Mironov elected to sit out of the 2020 Russian Figure Skating Championships due to fatigue from the Junior Grand Prix Final. They next competed at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics, where they again finished second behind Panfilova/Rylov. At the 2020 Russian Junior Figure Skating Championships, Mukhametzianova/Mironov finished just off the podium in fourth and as such narrowly missed being named to the 2020 World Junior Figure Skating Championships.

Programs

With Mironov

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2019–2020

Competitive highlights

JGP: Junior Grand Prix

With Mironov

International: Junior[1]
Event 18–19 19–20
Youth Olympics2nd
JGP Final2nd
JGP Croatia2nd
JGP Russia3rd
Volvo Open Cup2nd
National[2]
Russian Jr. Champ.6th4th
TBD = Assigned; WD = Withdrew

Detailed results

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships.

With Mironov

2019–20 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
4–8 February 2020 2020 Russian Junior Championships Junior 4
70.94
5
120.67
4
191.61
10–15 January 2020 2020 Winter Youth Olympics Junior 2
60.45
2
114.97
2
175.42
4–8 December 2019 2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final Junior 3
64.90
1
119.47
2
184.37
5–10 November 2019 2019 Volvo Open Cup Junior 5
53.04
2
105.34
2
158.38
25–28 September 2019 2019 JGP Croatia Junior 1
63.70
2
113.88
2
177.58
11–14 September 2019 2019 JGP Russia Junior 3
63.04
3
108.84
3
171.88
2018–19 season
1–4 February 2019 2019 Russian Junior Championships Junior 6
60.23
5
116.03
6
176.26

References

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