Shizuka Arakawa

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Olympic medal record
Ladies' Figure Skating
Gold 2006 Turin Singles
Shizuka Arakawa
Shizuka Arakawa at the 2003 Skate Canada.
Personal Info
Country: Flag of Japan Japan
Date of birth: December 29, 1981 (1981-12-29) (age 26)
Residence: Simsbury, Connecticut
Height: 165 cm (5 ft 5 in)
Former Coach: Nikolai Morozov, Evgeni Platov, Nanami Abe, Tatiana Tarasova, Richard Callaghan, Minoru Sano, Kumiko Sato, Hiroshi Nagakubo
Skating Club: Prince Hotel
Retired: May 7, 2006
ISU Personal Best Scores
Short + Free Total: 191.34 2006 Olympics
Short Program: 66.02 2006 Olympics
Free Skate: 125.32 2006 Olympics

Shizuka Arakawa (荒川 静香 Arakawa Shizuka?, born December 29, 1981) is a Japanese figure skater. She is the 2006 Olympic Champion and the 2004 World Champion. Arakawa is the first Japanese figure skater to win the Olympics. After retiring, she now currently works as a skating sportscaster on Japanese television.

Contents

[edit] Personal life

Arakawa was born in Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan, and grew up in Sendai, the largest city in the Tohoku region. She is the only child of Koichi and Sachi Arakawa. She was named Shizuka after Shizuka Gozen.

She enrolled at Waseda University in March 2000, and graduated with a Bachelor's degree in social sciences in 2004, while still competing as a skater. She won her world championship title days after completing her graduation examinations at Waseda.

She lived and trained for a time at the International Skating Center of Connecticut in Simsbury in the United States after the closure of the Konami Sports Ice Rink in Sendai, where she began her career.

Arakawa cites gourmet cooking as one of her hobbies. She collects beanie babies, has a pet shih tzu (named Charo) and hamster (named Juntoki).

[edit] Career

[edit] Early career

When Arakawa was 5 years old, she became interested in skating and entered the Chibikko Skate School.

She started ballet lessons at 7. While still 7, Arakawa had begun training with former Olympian Hiroshi Nagakubo, a pair skater who competed in the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan. She was landing triple-jump salchows at age 8.

In 1994, she began participating in Japanese national skating competitions. She was named the 1994, 1995, 1996 All Japan Junior Figure athlete. Arakawa progressed through the Japanese ranks quickly and was the first skater in Japan to win three consecutive junior national titles.

[edit] Senior career

Arakawa performs a donut spin at the 2003 Skate Canada International.
Arakawa performs a donut spin at the 2003 Skate Canada International.

Arakawa was the senior national Japanese champion in both 1998 and 1999.

Arakawa made her Olympic debut when she represented Japan in the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano at age 16. The Emperor and Empress of Japan attended the ladies' free skate event. She placed 13th at the Nagano Olympics. At this time, she was ranked number 2 in Japan.

In 2002, Arakawa finished second at Japan's national championships and as a result was not named to the Japanese 2002 Winter Olympics team.

During the 2002-2003 skating season, Arakawa won the Asian Winter Games and the Winter Universiade. She took her second consecutive silver medal at the Four Continents Championships. She finished fourth at the ISU Grand Prix Final and took the bronze at the NHK Trophy. Arakawa placed fifth at the Cup of Russia, and later finished third at the Japanese Nationals, marking her fifth medal from this meet, with two golds and two silvers from previous seasons.

In 2004, she won the 2004 World Championships in Dortmund, Germany, after landing seven clean triple jumps. She is the third Japanese woman to win this title after Midori Ito who won in 1989 and Yuka Sato in 1994.

Arakawa had planned to retire after the 2004 World Championships, but her victory there convinced her to change her plans. She struggled with a foot injury, homesickness and motivation, and was beginning to trail behind younger Japanese competitors like Miki Ando and Mao Asada.

Her 9th place finish at the 2005 World Championships was the motivation she needed to stay in the sport and regain top form. She felt she could not quit on such a down note. In November 2005, Arakawa called Belarus figure skater Nikolai Morozov and asked if he would consider coaching her. He agreed.

[edit] 2006 Winter Olympics

Arakawa performs a spiral in 2004.
Arakawa performs a spiral in 2004.

At the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, Arakawa was in third place behind Sasha Cohen (trailing Cohen by only a point) and Irina Slutskaya after the short program. Arakawa skated to Fantasie Impromptu by Chopin for her short program. Although Cohen and Slutskaya were the heavy favorites for the gold medal, both fell during the long program.

Arakawa skated to Puccini's Violin Fantasy of Turandot for her long program. One of the highlights of the program was when she performed an Ina Bauer and then did a three jump combination. "Ina Bauer" became a household word in Japan as a result. Arakawa skated a clean free-skate program, with no falls. Although she had planned a triple-triple combination for the free skate, she did not perform it. She changed it into a triple salchow-double toe loop combination.

Her free skate earned 191.34 points, almost eight points ahead of the second-place Cohen (183.36), earning her the gold medal. Slutskaya was third at 181.44.

Arakawa's Olympic win was the first in the event for a Japanese skater. Her gold medal gave Japan its first and only medal of the 2006 Winter Olympics, and she became just the second Japanese woman to win a Winter Olympic gold. At age 24, Arakawa is the oldest women's Olympic skating champion in more than 80 years. Florence "Madge" Cave Syers from the United Kingdom was the oldest when she won the Olympic title at age 27 at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom which featured the first Olympic figure skating events[citation needed]. Arakawa also was the second Japanese woman to win a figure skating Olympic medal of any kind, after Midori Ito. Arakawa is the second Japanese woman to win a Winter Olympic gold, after Tae Satoya.

After winning her Olympic title, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi called Arakawa in Turin, Italy to congratulate her. Koizumi said, "I cheered for you with excitement while I watched television. All the Japanese people are rejoicing. I give a perfect score to every bit of your performance."[1].

[edit] Professional career

Arakawa continues to skate in exhibition programs and is a regular skating commentator for Japanese TV. She competed in the 2006 Ice Wars on the World team.

In 2006, Arakawa appeared in a Japanese TV drama, Shichinin no onna bengoshi (7 female lawyers), presented by Asahi TV. She played the role of a cool public prosecutor, Yayoi Shimasaki for the 8th episode.

[edit] Signature moves

Arakawa performs her signature layback ina bauer in 2006.
Arakawa performs her signature layback ina bauer in 2006.

At 5 feet 6 inches, Arakawa is one of the tallest ladies' skaters[citation needed] and is known for her spins and jumping ability, particularly her difficult triple-triple combinations. Arakawa is also able to do triple-triple-triple combinations -- she landed a triple salchow-triple toe-triple loop while practicing at the 2006 Olympics. In 2004, she added a Biellmann spin to her repertoire. She is known also for exceptional skating quality, seemingly effortless cross overs, and gaining speed with ease.

Arakawa is also known for her spirals. Her signature spiral is a "Y-spiral" where she releases her free leg and completes the spiral with her leg still close to her head, without the hand assist.

Her trademark move is the Ina Bauer. Arakawa's interpretation of this move putting her in a full backbend. Due to Arakawa's use of this move during her free skate at the 2006 Olympics, the term "Ina Bauer" became very popular in Japan, and Arakawa's performance of it became iconic. The term Ina Bauer is often referred to in Japan by Arakawa's name.

[edit] Programs

Season Short Program Long Program Exhibition
2005/2006 Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini
Fantasie Impromptu by F. Chopin
Fantasy by Frederic Chopin
Violin Fantasy on the opera Turandot by G. Puccini
You Raise Me Up
2004/2005 Madame Butterfly by Giacomo Puccini Romeo and Juliet Overture by P. I. Tchaikovski
2003/2004 The Umbrellas of Cherbourg by Michel Legrand
Swan Lake by P. Tchaikovski (modern version)
Violin Fantasy on the opera Turandot by G. Puccini
2002/2003 Swan Lake by P. Tchaikovski (modern version) Titanic (soundtrack) by James Horner

[edit] Competitive highlights

[edit] Post-2000

Event/Season 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006
Winter Olympics 1st
World Championships 8th 1st 9th
Four Continents Championships 6th 2nd 2nd
Japanese Championships 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd WD 3rd
Asian Winter Games 1st
Grand Prix Final 4th 3rd 2nd
Cup of China 3rd
Trophee Eric Bompard 9th 6th 2nd 3rd
Cup of Russia 7th 5th 2nd
NHK Trophy 3rd 1st
Skate America 4th 3rd
Skate Canada International 2nd
Winter Universiade 1st

[edit] Pre-2000

Event/Season 1993-1994 1994-1995 1995-1996 1996-1997 1997-1998 1998-1999 1999-2000
Winter Olympics 13th
World Championships 22nd
Four Continents Championships 6th
World Junior Championships 8th 7th 8th
Japanese Championships 2nd 1st 1st 5th
Japanese Junior Championships 1st 1st 1st
Asian Winter Games 2nd
Skate America 9th
Sparkassen Cup 7th 5th
NHK Trophy 7th 6th 8th 5th
Nebelhorn Trophy 2nd 1st
Triglav Trophy 1st N.
  • N = Novice level; WD = Withdrew

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.sanspo.com/torino2006/figureskating/news/fs2006022416.html (Japanese)

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