Maïa Mazzara
Maïa Mazzara (born 5 August 2003) is a French figure skater who currently represents France in ladies singles and formerly represented Switzerland. She is a two-time French national silver medalist.
Maïa Mazzara | |
---|---|
Mazzara at the 2018 World Junior Championships | |
Personal information | |
Country represented | France |
Former country(ies) represented | Switzerland |
Born | Clamart, France | 5 August 2003
Home town | Strasbourg, France |
Height | 1.53 m (5 ft 0 in) |
Coach | Florent Amodio, Françoise Bonnard, Kirill Davydenko |
Former coach | Jean-François Ballester |
Choreographer | Benoît Richaud |
Former choreographer | Pierre-Loup Bouquet, Karine Arribert, Jean-François Ballester, Florentine Houdinière, Sylvia Fontana |
Skating club | Français Volants Paris |
Former skating club | CP La Chaux-de-Fonds |
Training locations | Vaujany, France |
Former training locations | Geneva, Switzerland La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland Megeve, France |
Began skating | 2011 |
ISU personal best scores | |
Combined total | 170.06 2020 Europeans |
Short program | 59.48 2020 Winter Youth Olympics |
Free skate | 112.95 2020 Europeans |
On the junior level, she is the 2019 French junior national champion, the 2019 Master's de Patinage champion, and placed 9th at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics.
Representing Switzerland on the junior level, she is the 2017 Merano Cup silver medalist and the 2017 Swiss junior national champion.
Career
Early years
Mazzara began learning how to skate in 2011 at the age of seven. She began her skating career competing for her native France at the pre-novice level in 2014, but by 2016 had begun representing Switzerland.
2017–18 season: Junior international debut
Mazzara made her international junior debut for Switzerland in November 2017 at the Cup of Nice, where she finished 11th overall. Later on, in the same month, Mazzara won the silver medal in the junior-level ladies event at the Merano Cup in Italy.[1] In January 2018, Mazzara won her first and only Swiss junior national title and was assigned to compete at the 2018 World Junior Championships. There, Mazzara finished 35th in the short program and thus did not advance to the free skate.
2018–19 season
In August 2018, Mazzara made her ISU Junior Grand Prix debut at the 2018 JGP Slovakia in Bratislava where she finished tenth. This was her only international assignment of the season. Later on in the season, Mazzara competed under the Swiss flag as a guest at the 2019 French Championships, finishing seventh at the senior level and second at the junior level. She did not compete at the Swiss Championships.
2019–20 season: Senior international debut
Mazzara returned to representing France in 2019, now coached by Florent Amodio and Françoise Bonnard in Vaujany, France after the passing of her former coach Jean-François Ballester in late 2018.[2] She began her season by placing first in the junior ladies event at the French test competition, Master's de Patinage, and received two Junior Grand Prix assignments: 2019 JGP Russia and 2019 JGP Italy. Mazzara placed 20th and ninth at these events, respectively.
After her junior events, Mazzara made her first senior start at the 2019 Tallinn Trophy where she finished fifth, and later competed at the 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb, her first Challenger event, where she finished ninth. In December 2019, 16-year-old Mazzara won the silver medal behind reigning French champion Maé-Bérénice Méité at the 2020 French Championships.[2] Due to her placement at the event, Mazzara was named to the French team for the 2020 European Championships.
In January 2020, Mazzara returned to junior-level competition at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics. She finished ninth overall, and set new personal bests in all three segments, surpassing her previous best total score by nearly seven points. Making her debut at the senior 2020 European Championships, Mazzara placed eleventh, and then finished the season with a seventeenth-place finish at the 2020 World Junior Championships.[3]
2020–21 season
Mazzara was scheduled to make her Grand Prix debut at the 2020 Internationaux de France, but the event was cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] She instead opened her season in early November in Minsk at the 2020 Winter Star where she placed fifth in the short program and third in the free skate to win the bronze medal overall. In February, she won her second straight silver medal at Nationals.[5]
Programs
Season | Short program | Free skating | Exhibition |
---|---|---|---|
2020–2021 |
|
|
|
2019–2020 [6] |
|
|
|
2018–2019 [7] |
|
|
|
2017–2018 [8] |
|
Competitive highlights
For France
International[9] | ||
---|---|---|
Event | 19–20 | 20–21 |
Europeans | 11th | |
GP France | C | |
CS Golden Spin | 9th | |
CS Warsaw Cup | C | |
Challenge Cup | TBD | |
Ice Star | WD | |
Tallinn Trophy | 5th | |
Tallink Hotels Cup | TBD | |
Winter Star | 3rd | |
International: Junior[9] | ||
Youth Olympics | 9th | |
Junior Worlds | 16th | |
JGP Italy | 9th | |
JGP Russia | 20th | |
National | ||
French Champ. | 2nd | 2nd |
French Junior | 1st | |
Masters | 1st J | |
TBD = Assigned; C = Cancelled Levels: J = Junior |
For Switzerland
International: Junior[9] | ||
---|---|---|
Event | 17–18 | 18–19 |
Junior Worlds | 35th | |
JGP Slovakia | 10th | |
Bavarian Open | 6th | |
Cup of Nice | 11th | |
Merano Cup | 2nd | |
National | ||
Swiss Champ. | 1st J |
Detailed results
For France
2020–21 season | |||||
Date | Event | Level | SP | FS | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5–6 February 2021 | 2020 French Championships | Senior | 2 60.96 |
2 102.81 |
2 163.77 |
11–13 December 2020 | 2020 Winter Star | Senior | 5 51.79 |
3 96.86 |
3 148.65 |
2019–20 season | |||||
2–8 March 2020 | 2020 World Junior Championships | Junior | 15 54.22 |
17 95.58 |
16 149.80 |
20–26 January 2020 | 2020 European Championships | Senior | 16 57.11 |
8 112.95 |
11 170.06 |
10–15 January 2020 | 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Team | Junior | – | 4 103.36 |
8T/4P |
10–15 January 2020 | 2020 Winter Youth Olympics | Junior | 8 59.48 |
9 106.68 |
9 166.16 |
19–21 December 2019 | 2019 French Championships | Senior | 3 56.06 |
2 103.91 |
2 159.97 |
4–7 December 2019 | 2019 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb | Senior | 20 45.94 |
8 106.31 |
9 152.25 |
11–17 November 2019 | 2019 Tallinn Trophy | Senior | 8 49.52 |
7 99.25 |
5 148.77 |
2–5 October 2019 | 2019 JGP Italy | Junior | 8 53.81 |
9 96.28 |
9 150.09 |
26–28 September 2019 | 2019 Master's de Patinage | Junior | 1 56.34 |
1 106.31 |
1 162.65 |
11–14 September 2019 | 2019 JGP Russia | Junior | 20 42.90 |
21 74.63 |
20 117.53 |
For Switzerland
2018–19 season | |||||
Date | Event | Level | SP | FS | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
22–24 February 2019 | 2019 French Junior Championships | Junior | 2 49.51 |
1 100.60 |
2 150.11 |
13–15 December 2018 | 2018 French Championships | Senior | 6 49.27 |
7 75.95 |
7 125.22 |
22–25 August 2018 | 2018 JGP Slovakia | Junior | 10 51.39 |
10 88.20 |
10 139.59 |
2017–18 season | |||||
5–11 March 2018 | 2018 World Junior Championships | Junior | 35 40.69 |
- | 35 40.69 |
26–31 January 2018 | 2018 Bavarian Open | Junior | 10 44.76 |
4 93.48 |
6 138.24 |
6–7 January 2018 | 2018 Swiss Junior Championships | Junior | 1 53.92 |
1 86.24 |
1 140.16 |
15–19 November 2017 | 2017 Merano Cup | Junior | 5 44.53 |
2 91.75 |
2 136.28 |
11–15 October 2017 | 2017 Cup of Nice | Junior | 14 43.20 |
9 84.16 |
11 127.36 |
References
- JCE (2017-11-21). "Podiums pour Maïa Mazzara et Tomas Guarino en Italie" [Podiums for Maïa Mazzara and Tomas Guarino in Italy] (in French). ArcInfo. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- JM (2019-12-21). "Maïa Mazzara se révèle à la France" [Maïa Mazzara reveals herself to France] (in French). Le Dauphiné libéré. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- "ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships Results – Junior Ladies". International Skating Union.
- "Grand Prix of France figure skating event canceled due to coronavirus". Olympic Channel. 20 October 2020.
- "Championnat de France ELITE". February 6, 2021.
- "Maia MAZZARA". International Skating Union. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- "Maia MAZZARA". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2019-03-31.
- "Maia MAZZARA". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2018-06-01.
- "Maia MAZZARA: Competition Results". International Skating Union.