Ice dance

Ice dance (sometimes referred to as ice dancing) is a discipline of figure skating that historically draws from ballroom dancing. It joined the World Figure Skating Championships in 1952, and became a Winter Olympic Games medal sport in 1976. According to the International Skating Union (ISU), the governing body of figure skating, an ice dance team consists of one woman and one man.[1][note 1]

Ice dance
Ice dance in 1976, its first year as an official Olympic sport (Irina Moiseeva and Andrei Minenkov)
Highest governing bodyInternational Skating Union
Characteristics
Team membersDuos
Mixed genderYes
EquipmentFigure skates
Presence
OlympicPart of the Winter Olympics from 1976

Ice dance, like pair skating, has its roots in the "combined skating" developed in the 19th century by skating clubs and organizations and in recreational social skating. Couples and friends would skate waltzes, marches, and other social dances. The first steps in ice dance were similar to those used in ballroom dancing. In the late 1800s, American Jackson Haines, known as "the Father of Figure Skating",[2] brought his style of skating, which included waltz steps and social dances, to Europe. By the end of the 19th century, waltzing competitions became popular throughout the world. By the early 1900s, ice dance was popular around the world and was primarily a recreational sport, although during the 1920s, local clubs in Britain and the U.S. conducted informal dance contests. Recreational skating became more popular during the 1930s in England.

The first national competitions occurred in England, Canada, the U.S., and Austria during the 1930s. The first international ice dance competition took place as a special event at the World Championships in 1950 in London. British ice dance teams dominated the sport throughout the 1950s and 1960s, then Soviet teams up until the 1990s. Ice dance was formally added to the 1952 World Figure Skating Championships; it became an Olympic sport in 1976. In the 1980s and 1990s, there was an attempt by ice dancers, their coaches, and choreographers to move ice dance away from its ballroom origins to more theatrical performances. The ISU pushed back by tightening rules and definitions of ice dance to emphasize its connection to ballroom dancing. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, ice dance lost much of its integrity as a sport after a series of judging scandals, which also affected the other figure skating disciplines. There were calls to suspend the sport for a year to deal with the dispute, which seemed to impact ice dance teams from North America the most. Teams from North America began to dominate the sport starting in the early 2000s.

Before the 2010–11 figure skating season, there were three segments in ice dance competitions: the compulsory dance (CD), the original dance (OD), and the free dance (FD). In 2010, the ISU voted to change the competition format by eliminating the CD and the OD and adding the new short dance (SD) segment to the competition schedule. In 2018, the ISU voted to rename the short dance to the rhythm dance (RD). Ice dance has required elements that competitors must perform and that make up a well-balanced skating program. They include the dance lift, the dance spin, the step sequence, twizzles, and choreographic elements. These must be performed in specific ways, as described in published communications by the ISU, unless otherwise specified. Each year the ISU publishes a list specifying the points that can be deducted from performance scores for various reasons, including falls, interruptions, and violations of the rules concerning time, music, and clothing.

History

Beginnings

Jackson Haines, the "father of figure skating"[2]

Ice dance, like pair skating, has its roots in the "combined skating" developed in the 19th century by skating clubs and organizations and in recreational social skating. Couples and friends would skate waltzes, marches, and other social dances together.[3] According to writer Ellyn Kestnbaum, ice dance began with late 19th-century attempts by the Viennese and British to create ballroom-style performances on ice skates.[4] However, figure skating historian James Hines argues that ice dance had its beginnings in hand-in-hand skating, a short-lived but popular discipline of figure skating in England in the 1890s; many of the positions used in modern ice dance can be traced back to hand-in-hand skating.[5][note 2] The first steps in ice dance were similar to those used in ballroom dancing, so unlike modern ice dance, skaters tended to keep both feet on the ice most of the time, without the "long and flowing edges associated with graceful figure skating".[7]

In the late 1800s, American Jackson Haines, known as "the Father of Figure Skating",[2] brought his style of skating to Europe. He taught people in Vienna how to dance on the ice, both singly and with partners.[2] Capitalizing on the popularity of the waltz in Vienna, Haines introduced the American waltz, a simple four-step sequence, each step lasting one beat of music, repeated as the partners moved in a circular pattern.[2] By the 1880s, it and the Jackson Haines waltz, a variation of the American waltz, were among the most popular ice dances.[7] Other popular ice dance steps included the mazurka, a version of the Jackson Haines waltz developed in Sweden, and the three-step waltz, which Hines considered "the direct predecessor of ice dancing in the modern sense".[7]

By the end of the 19th century, the three-step waltz, called the English waltz in Europe, became the standard for waltzing competitions. It was first skated in Paris in 1894; Hines stated that it was responsible for the popularity of ice dance in Europe. The three-step waltz was easy and could be done by less skilled skaters, although more experienced skaters added variations to make it more difficult.[8][9] Two other steps, the killian and the ten-step, survived into the 20th century.[9][10] The ten-step, which became the fourteen-step, was first skated by Franz Schöller in 1889.[10] Also in the 1890s, combined and hand-in-hand skating moved skating away from basic figures to the continuous movement of ice dancers around an ice rink. Hines insists that the popularity of skating waltzes, which depended upon the speed and flow across the ice of couples in dance positions and not just on holding hands with a partner, ended the popularity of hand-in-hand skating.[6] Hines writes that Vienna was "the dancing capital of Europe, both on and off skates"[10] during the 19th century; by the end of the century, waltzing competitions became popular throughout the world.[8] The killian, first skated in 1909 by Austrian Karl Schreiter, was the last ice dance invented before World War I still being done as of the 21st century.[11]

Early years

By the early 1900s, ice dance was popular around the world and was primarily a recreational sport, although during the 1920s, local clubs in Britain and the U.S. conducted informal dance contests in the ten-step, the fourteen-step, and the killian, which were the only three dances used in competition until the 1930s.[4][12] Recreational skating became more popular during the 1930s in England, and new and more difficult set-pattern dances, which later were used in compulsory dances during competitions, were developed.[13] According to Hines, the development of new ice dances was necessary to expand upon the three dances already developed; three British teams in the 1930s—Erik van der Wyden and Eva Keats, Reginald Wilkie and Daphne B. Wallis, and Robert Dench and Rosemarie Stewart—created one-fourth of the dances used in International Skating Union (ISU) competitions by 2006. In 1933, the Westminster Skating Club conducted a competition encouraging the creation of new dances.[14] Beginning in the mid-1930s, national organizations began to introduce skating proficiency tests in set-pattern dances, improve the judging of dance tests, and oversee competitions. The first national competitions occurred in England in 1934, Canada in 1935, the U.S. in 1936, and Austria in 1937. These competitions included one or more compulsory dances, the original dance, and the free dance.[13][15] By the late 1930s, ice dancers swelled memberships in skating clubs throughout the world, and in Hines' words "became the backbone of skating clubs".[12]

The ISU began to develop rules, standards, and international tests for ice dance in the 1950s.[16] The first international ice dance competition occurred as a special event during the 1950 World Figure Skating Championships in London; Lois Waring and Michael McGean of the U.S. won the event, much to the embarrassment of the British, who considered themselves the best ice dancers in the world.[17] A second event was planned the following year, at the 1951 World Championships in Milan; Jean Westwood and Lawrence Demmy of Great Britain came in first place.[18] Ice dance, with the CD and FD segments, was formally added to the World Championships in 1952.[16] Westwood and Demmy won that year, and went on to dominate ice dance, winning the next four World Championships as well.[15][18] British teams won every world ice dance title through 1960.[19] Eva Romanova and Pavel Roman of Czechoslovakia were the first non-British ice dancers to win a world title, in 1962.[20]

1970s to 1990s

Ice dance became an Olympic sport in 1976; Lyudmila Pakhomova and Alexandr Gorshkov from the Soviet Union were the first gold medalists.[16][21][22] The Soviets dominated ice dance during most of the 1970s, as they did in pair skating. They won every Worlds and Olympic title between 1970 and 1978, and won medals at every competition between 1976 and 1982.[23] In 1984, British dancers Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean, who Hines calls "the greatest ice dancers in the history of the sport",[24] briefly interrupted Soviet domination of ice dance by winning a gold medal at the Olympic Games in Sarajevo. Their free dance to Ravel's Boléro[25] has been called "probably the most well known single program in the history of ice dance".[26] Hines asserts that Torvill and Dean, with their innovative choreography, dramatically altered "established concepts of ice dancing".[27]

Torvill and Dean performing in 2011

During the 1970s, there was a movement in ice dance away from its ballroom roots to a more theatrical style. The top Soviet teams were the first to emphasize the dramatic aspects of ice dance, as well as the first to choreograph their programs around a central theme. They also incorporated elements of ballet techniques, especially "the classic ballet pas de deux of the high-art instance of a man and woman dancing together".[26] They performed as predictable characters, including body positions that were no longer rooted in traditional ballroom holds, and using music with less predictable rhythms.[26][22]

The ISU pushed back during the 1980s and 1990s by tightening rules and definitions of ice dance to emphasize its connection to ballroom dancing, especially in the free dance. The restrictions introduced during this period were designed to emphasize skating skills rather than the theatrical and dramatic aspects of ice dance.[28][29] Kestnbaum argues that there was a conflict in the ice dance community between social dance, represented by the British, the Canadians, and the Americans, and theatrical dance represented by the Russians.[30] Initially the historic and traditional cultural school of ice dance prevailed, but in 1998 the ISU reduced penalties for violations and relaxed rules on technical content, in what Hines describes as a "major step forward"[31] in recognizing the move towards more theatrical skating in ice dance.[31]

At the 1998 Olympics, while ice dance was struggling to retain its integrity and legitimacy as a sport, writer Jere Longman reported that ice dance was "mired in controversies",[32] including bloc voting by the judges that favored European dance teams. There were even calls to suspend the sport for a year to deal with the dispute, which seemed to impact ice dance teams from North America the most. A series of judging scandals in the late 1990s and early 2000s, affecting most figure skating disciplines, culminated in a controversy at the 2002 Olympics.[33]

21st century

Canadian ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir are the most decorated figure skaters in Olympic history.

The European dominance of ice dance was interrupted at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver by Canadians Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir and Americans Meryl Davis and Charlie White. The Canadian ice dance team won the first Olympic ice dance gold medal for North America, and the Americans won the silver. Russians Oksana Domnina and Maxim Shabalin won bronze, but it was the first time Europeans had not won a gold medal in the history of ice dance at the Olympics.[34] The U.S. then began to dominate international competitions in ice dance; at the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Davis and White won the Olympic gold medal.[35] In 2018, at the Olympics in PyeongChang, Virtue and Moir became the most decorated figure skaters in Olympic history after winning the gold medal there.[36]

According to Caroline Silby, a consultant with U.S. Figure Skating, ice dance teams and pair skaters have the added challenge of strengthening partnerships and ensuring that teams stay together for several years; unresolved conflict between partners can often cause the early break-up of a team. Silby further asserts that the early demise or break-up of a team is often caused by consistent and unresolved conflict between partners.[37] Both ice dancers and pairs skaters face challenges that make conflict resolution and communication difficult: fewer available boys for girls to partner with; different priorities regarding commitment and scheduling; differences in partners' ages and developmental stages; differences in family situations; the common necessity of one or both partners moving to train at a new facility; and different skill levels when the partnership is formed.[38] Silby estimates that the lack of effective communication within dance and pairs teams is associated with a six-fold increase in the risk of ending their partnerships. Teams with strong skills in communication and conflict resolution, however, tend to produce more successful medalists at national championship events.[39]

Competition segments

Before the 2010–2011 figure skating season, there were three segments in ice dance competitions: the compulsory dance (CD), the original dance (OD), and the free dance (FD). In 2010, after many years of pressure from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to restructure competitive ice dance to follow the other figure skating disciplines, the ISU voted to change the competition format by eliminating the CD and the OD and adding the new short dance segment to the competition schedule.[40] According to the then-president of the ISU, Ottavio Cinquanta, the changes were also made because "the compulsory dances were not very attractive for spectators and television".[41] This new ice dance competition format was first included in the 2010–2011 season, incorporating just two segments: the short dance (renamed the rhythm dance, or RD in 2018) and the free dance.[40]

Rhythm dance

The RD is the first segment performed in all junior and senior ice dance competitions.[42] It combines many of the elements of the CD and the OD, retaining the characteristic set patterns of the CD, in which each dance team must perform the same two patterns of a set "pattern dance", providing "an essential comparison of the dancers' technical skills".[40] The ice dance team is judged on how well the pattern dance is integrated into the entire RD routine.[43] The RD must also include a short six-second lift, a set of twizzles, and a step sequence.[40][44]

The rhythms and themes of the RD are determined by the ISU prior to the start of each new season.[40][44][note 3] The RD should be "developed through skating skill and quality", instead of through "non-skating actions such as sliding on one knee"[46] or through the use of toe steps (which should only be used to reflect the dance's character and the music's nuances and underlining rhythm.[46] The RD must have a duration of two minutes and fifty seconds.[47]

The first RD in international competitions was performed by U.S. junior ice dancers Anastasia Cannuscio and Colin McManus, at the 2010 Junior Grand Prix Courchevel.[48] As of 2019, at the NHK Trophy, French ice dancers Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron hold the five highest RD scores, including the highest RD score of 90.03 points.[49]

Free dance

The free dance takes place after the RD in all junior and senior ice dance competitions.[50] The "2019 U.S. Figure Skating Rulebook" defines it as "the skating by the couple of a creative dance program blending dance steps and movements expressing the character/rhythm(s) of the dance music chosen by the couple".[51] The program must be skated on the entire surface of the ice and be well-balanced. It must contain required combinations of elements (spins, lifts, steps, and movements), and choreography that express both the characters of the competitors and their music.[51] It must also display the skaters' "excellent skating technique"[51] and creativity in expression, concept, and arrangement.[43] The free dance's choreography must reflect the music's accents, nuances, and dance character, and the ice dancers must not skate only to the melody alone, but also primarily in time to the music's rhythmic beat.[51] For senior ice dancers, the free dance must have a duration of four minutes; for juniors, three-and-one-half minutes.[43]

As of 2019, at the NHK Trophy, Papadakis and Cizeron hold the five highest free dance scores, including the highest free dance score of 136.58 points.[52][note 4]

Compulsory dance

Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali perform their compulsory dance at the 2009 Cup of China.

Before 2010, the CD was the first segment performed in ice dance competitions. The teams performed the same pattern around two circuits of the rink, one team after another, using the same step sequences and the same standardized tempo chosen by the ISU before the beginning of each season.[54][55] The CD has been compared with compulsory figures; competitors were "judged for their mastery of fundamental elements".[54] Early in ice dance history, the CD contributed 60% of the total score.[56]

The 2010 World Championships was the last event to include a CD (the Golden Waltz); Federica Faiella and Massimo Scali from Italy were the last ice dance team to perform a CD in competition.[57]

Original dance

The OD was first added to ice dance competitions in 1967. It was called the "original set pattern dance"[58] until 1990, when it became known simply as the "original dance". The OD remained the second competition segment (sandwiched between the CD and the free dance) until the end of the 2009–2010 season.[56] Ice dancers were able to create their own routines, but they had to use a set rhythm and type of music which, like the compulsory dances, changed every season and was selected by the ISU in advance. The timing and interpretation of the rhythm were considered to be the most important aspects of the routine, and were worth the highest proportion of the OD score. The routine had a two-minute time limit and the OD accounted for 30% of the overall competition score.[59][60]

Canadian ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir hold the highest OD score of 70.27 points, achieved at the 2010 World Championships.[61]

Competition elements

Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson perform a Curve dance lift.

Ice dance has required elements that ice dancers must perform during a competition to make up a well-balanced skating program, including the dance lift, the dance spin, the step sequence, twizzles, and choreographic elements. They must be performed in specific ways, as described in published communications by the ISU, unless otherwise specified.[62]

  • Dance lift: "a movement in which one of the partners is elevated with active and/or passive assistance of the other partner to any permitted height, sustained there and set down on the ice".[63] The ISU permits any rotation, position, and changes of position during a dance lift.[63] Dance lifts are delineated from pair lifts to ensure that ice dance and pair skating remain separate disciplines.[29] After the judging system changed from the 6.0 system to the ISU Judging System, dance lifts became more "athletic, dramatic and exciting".[64]
  • Dance spin: "a spin skated by the Couple together in any hold".[65] There are two types of dance spins: the spin and the combination spin, which is multiple spins in succession.
  • Step sequence: "a series of prescribed or un-prescribed steps, turns and movements".[66]
  • Twizzle: "a traveling turn on one foot with one or more rotations which is quickly rotated with a continuous (uninterrupted) action".[67]
  • Choreographic elements: "a listed or unlisted movement or series of movement(s) as specified".[68]

Rules and regulations

Skaters must execute the prescribed elements at least once; any extra or unprescribed elements will not be counted in their score. Only the first attempt of an element is scored.[69] In 1974, the ISU published the first judges' handbook describing what judges needed to look for during ice dance competitions.[70] Violations in ice dance include falls and interruptions, time, music, and clothing.

Falls and interruptions

According to ice dancer and commentator Tanith White, unlike in other disciplines wherein skaters can make up for their falls in other elements, falls in ice dance usually mean that the team will not win. White argues that falls are rare in ice dance, and since falls constitute interruptions, they tend to have large deductions because the mood of their program's theme is broken.[71] The ISU defines a fall as the "loss of control by a Skater with the result that the majority of his/her own body weight is on the ice supported by any other part of the body other than the blades; e.g. hand(s), knee(s), back, buttock(s) or any part of the arm".[72] The ISU defines an interruption as "the period of time starting immediately when the Competitor stops performing the program or is ordered to do so by the Referee, whichever is earlier, and ending when the Competitor resumes the performance".[73] Injuries to the lower body (the knee, ankle, and back) are the most common for both ice dancers and single skaters. A study conducted during a U.S. national competition including 58 ice dancers recorded an average of 0.97 injuries per athlete.[74]

In ice dance, teams can lose one point for every fall by one partner, and two points if both partners fall. If there is an interruption while performing their program, ice dancers can lose one point if it lasts more than ten seconds but not over twenty seconds. They can lose two points if the interruption lasts twenty seconds but not over thirty seconds, and three points if it lasts thirty seconds but not more than forty seconds. They can lose five points if the interruption lasts three or more minutes.[75] Teams can also lose points if a fall or interruption occurs during the beginning of an elevating moment in a dance lift, or as the man begins to lift the woman.[76]

Time

Judges penalize ice dancers one point up to every five seconds for ending their pattern dances too early or too late. Dancers can also be penalized one point for up to every five seconds "in excess of [the] permitted time after the last prescribed step" (their final movement and/or pose) in their pattern dances.[77] If they start their programs between one and thirty seconds late, they can lose one point.[75] Restrictions for finishing the rhythm and free dance are similar to the requirements of the other disciplines in figure skating. They can complete these programs within plus or minus ten seconds of the required times; if they cannot, judges can deduct points for finishing their program up to five seconds too early or too late. If they begin skating any element after their required time (plus the required ten seconds they have to begin), they earn no points for those elements. If the program's duration is "thirty (30) seconds or more under the required time range, no marks will be awarded".[78]

If a team performs a dance lift that exceeds the permitted duration, judges can deduct one point.[79] White argues that deductions in ice dance, in the absence of a fall or interruption, are most often due to "extended lifts",[71] or lifts that last too long.[71]

Music

The ISU defines interpretation of the music and timing in ice dance as "the personal, creative, and genuine translation of the rhythm, character and content of music to movement on ice".[80] Judges take the following things into account when scoring ice dances: timing (steps and movement in time to the music); the expression of the character and/or feeling and rhythm of the music, when they can be identified clearly; the use of finesse;[note 5] the relationship between the dancers' ability to reflect the rhythm and character of the music; if the dancers skate primarily to the rhythmic beat during their rhythm dance; and if they can keep a "good balance" between skating to the melody and beat during their free dance.[80]

Violations against the music requirements have a two-point deduction, and violations against the dance tempo requirements have a one-point deduction.[79] Judges can deduct one point per program if the ice dancers break choreography restrictions.[75] The ISU has allowed vocals in the music used in ice dance since the 1997–1998 season,[81] most likely because of the difficulty in finding suitable music without words for certain genres.[82][note 6]

Clothing

As for the other disciplines of figure skating, the clothing worn by ice dancers at ISU Championships, the Olympics, and international competitions must be "modest, dignified and appropriate for athletic competition—not garish or theatrical in design".[83] Rules about clothing tend to be more strict in ice dance; Juliet Newcomer from U.S. Figure Skating has speculated limits in the kind of costumes ice dancers chose were pushed farther during the 1990s and early 2000s than in the other disciplines, resulting in stricter rules.[84] Clothing can, however, reflect the character of ice dancers' chosen music. Their costumes must not "give the effect of excessive nudity inappropriate for the discipline".[83]

All men must wear trousers. Female ice dancers must wear skirts. Accessories and props on the costumes of both dancers are not allowed. The decorations on costumes must be "non-detachable";[83] judges can deduct one point per program if part of the competitors' costumes or decorations fall on the ice.[83] If there is a costume or prop violation, the judges can deduct one point per program. If competitors do not adhere to these guidelines, the judges can deduct points from their total score, if most of the panel, including the referee, thinks a team's outfit is inappropriate or non-compliant.[83][84] However, costume deductions are rare. According to Newcomer, by the time skaters get to a national or world championship, they have received enough feedback about their costumes and are no longer willing to risk losing points.[84]

Footnotes

  1. Women are referred to as "Ladies" in ISU regulations and communications.
  2. The Oxford Skating Society published a description and explanation of figures for hand-in-hand skating in 1836, well before it became popular.[6]
  3. The set pattern dance for the 2019–2020 season, for example, was quickstep, blues, march, polka, or foxtrot for senior teams.[45]
  4. FD scores prior to the 2010–11 season are published separately by the ISU, due to the competition format change in 2010.[53]
  5. "Finesse" is defined as "the Skater's refined, artful manipulation of music details and nuances through movement".[80] Each team has a unique finesse and demonstrates their inner feelings for the composition and the music.[80] "Nuances" are "the personal ways of bringing subtle variations to the intensity, tempo, and dynamics of the music made by the composer and/or musicians".[80]
  6. The use of vocals was expanded to all disciplines starting in 2014.[81]

References

  1. S&P/ID 2018, p. 9
  2. Blakemore, Erin (12 December 2017). "The Man Who Invented Figure Skating Was Laughed Out of America". History.com. A&E Television Networks. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  3. Kestnbaum, pp. xiv, 102
  4. Kestnbaum, p. 221
  5. Hines (2006), p. 36
  6. Hines (2006), p. 119
  7. Hines (2006), p. 120
  8. Hines (2006), p. 121
  9. Hines (2011), p. 61
  10. Hines (2006), p. 122
  11. Hines (2006), p. 123
  12. Hines (2006), p. 124
  13. Kestnbaum, p. 222
  14. Hines (2006), pp. 123–124
  15. Hines (2011), p. 102
  16. Kestnbaum, p. 223
  17. Hines (2006), pp. 173–174
  18. Hines (2006), p. 174
  19. Hines (2011), p. 120
  20. Hines (2011), p.xxxi
  21. Hines (2011), p. xxvi
  22. Russell, Susan D. (5 January 2013). "Lyudmila Pakhomova and Aleksandr Gorshkov: The Heroes of Olympic Ice Dance". International Figure Skating. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  23. Hines (2006), pp. 217–218
  24. Hines (2006), p. 240
  25. "1984: British ice couple score Olympic gold". BBC. 14 February 1984. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  26. Kestnbaum, p. 228
  27. Hines (2006), p. 239
  28. Kestnbaum, pp. 239–240
  29. Reiter, Susan (1 March 1995). "Ice dancing: a dance form frozen in place by hostile rules". Dance Magazine. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  30. Kestnbaum, p. 244
  31. Hines (2006), p. 242
  32. Longman, Jere. "The XVIII Winter Games: Figure Skating; Ice Dancers Battle It Out In Quest for Credibility". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  33. Hersh, Philip (18 February 1998). "Too Often, Ice Dance Judges Deserve Seats On Bench". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  34. Fowler, Geoffrey A.; Phred, Dvorak (23 February 2010). "Canada's Virtue, Moir Win Ice Dance Gold". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  35. "The US has become the world power in ice dance". Fox Sports. 6 December 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  36. "Canada's Tessa Virtue, Scott Moir become most decorated figure skaters in Olympic history". ESPN.com. Associated Press. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  37. Silby, p. 92
  38. Silby, pp. 92–93
  39. Silby, p. 93
  40. "Partnered Ice Dancing Events". Ice Skating Information & Resources. San Diego Figure Skating Communications. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  41. Kany, Klaus-Reinhold (9 July 2011). "The Short Dance Debate". International Figure Skating Magazine (August 2011). Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  42. S&P/ID 2018, pp. 9–10
  43. "Dance Format 2011" (PDF). Havířov, Czech Republic: Kraso Club of Havířov. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  44. Zuckerman, Esther (14 February 2014). "A Quick GIF Guide to Ice Dance". The Atlantic Monthly. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  45. ISU No. 2239, p. 3
  46. S&P/ID 2018, p. 141
  47. ISU No. 2239, p. 5
  48. Brown, Mickey (28 August 2010). "Team USA scores four medals at JGP opener". icenetwork.com. Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  49. "Progression of Highest Score: Ice Dance Rhythm Dance Score". isuresults.com. International Skating Union. 10 December 2019. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  50. Rulebook, p. 238
  51. Rulebook, p. 243
  52. "Progression of Highest Score: Ice Dance Free Dance Score". isuresults.com. International Skating Union. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  53. "Statistics Personal & Season's Best". International Skating Union. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  54. "Skate America: Tanith Belbin, Ben Agosto second after compulsory dance". The Seattle TImes. 24 October 2008. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  55. Dimanno, Rosie (24 March 2010). "Virtue and Moir happy to say ciao to compulsory dance". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  56. Hines (2011), p. 12
  57. "ISU Congress News". Ice Dance.com. 20 June 2010. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  58. Hines (2011), p. 91
  59. "Skating: Ice dancing". BBC.com. 11 November 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  60. Wehrli-McLaughlin, Susi (2009). "Figure Skating". In Hanlon, Thomas W. (ed.). The Sports Rules Book (3rd ed.). Champlaign, Illinois: Human Kinetics. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-7360-7632-6.
  61. "Progression of Highest Score, Ice Dance, Original Dance Score". isuresults.com. International Skating Union. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  62. S&P/ID, p. 144
  63. S&P/ID 2018, p. 127
  64. Brannen, Sarah S. (13 July 2012). "Dangerous drama: Dance lifts becoming 'scary'". icenetwork.com. Archived from the original on 6 November 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  65. S&P/ID 2018, p. 126
  66. S&P/ID 2018, p. 120
  67. S&P/ID 2018, p. 125
  68. Rulebook, p. 249
  69. S&P/ID 2018, p. 16
  70. Hines (2011), p. xxv
  71. Lutz, Rachel (2 February 2018). "How to be a better and smarter figure skating fan". NBC Olympics.com. NBC Universal. Archived from the original on 18 February 2018. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  72. S&P/ID 2018, pp. 79–80
  73. S&P/ID 2018, p. 90
  74. Fortin, Joseph D.; Roberts, Diana (2003). "Competitive Figure Skating Injuries" (PDF). Pain Physician. 6 (3): 313, 314. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
    Cited in Vescovi, Jason D.; VanHeest, Jaci L. (2018). "Epidemiology of injury in figure skating". In Vescovi, Jason D.; VanHeest, Jaci L. (eds.). The Science of Figure Skating. New York: Routledge. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-138-22986-0.
  75. S&P/ID 2018, p. 18
  76. "Communication No. 2315". International Skating Union. 21 April 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  77. S&P/ID 2018, p. 17
  78. S&P/ID 2018, p. 79
  79. S&P/ID 2018, p. 19
  80. S&P/ID 2018, p. 83
  81. Hersh, Philip (23 October 2014). "Figure skating taking Cole Porter approach: Anything goes". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  82. Clarey, Christopher (18 February 2014). "'Rhapsody in Blue' or Rap? Skating Will Add Vocals". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  83. S&P/ID 2018, p. 78
  84. Yang, Nancy (21 January 2016). "What not to wear: The rules of fashion on the ice". MPR News. Retrieved 11 January 2020.

Works cited

  • "The 2020 Official U.S. Figure Skating Rulebook". (Rulebook) Colorado Springs, Colorado: U.S Figure Skating. July 2019. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  • "Communication No. 2239: Ice Dance" (PDF). (ISU No. 2239) International Skating Union. 15 April 2019. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  • Hines, James R. (2006) Figure Skating: A History. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-07286-4.
  • Hines, James R. (2011). Historical Dictionary of Figure Skating. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6859-5.
  • Kestnbaum, Ellyn (2003). Culture on Ice: Figure Skating and Cultural Meaning. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0819566411.
  • Silby, Caroline (2018). "Mental skills training". In Vescovi, Jason D.; VanHeest, Jaci L. (eds.). The Science of Figure Skating. New York: Routledge. pp. 85–97. ISBN 978-1-138-22986-0.
  • "Special Regulations & Technical Rules Single & Pair Skating and Ice Dance 2018". (S&P/ID 2018) International Skating Union. 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2019.

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