Tiffany Zahorski

Tiffany Anastasia Zahorski (Russian: Тиффани Анастасия Загорски; born 16 August 1994) is an English-Russian ice dancer. Competing with Jonathan Guerreiro for Russia, she is the 2018 NHK Trophy silver medalist, the 2018 Skate America bronze medalist, and a three-time Russian national medalist (2021 silver; 2018, 2020 bronze).

Tiffany Anastasia Zahorski
Zahorski and Guerreiro in 2018
Personal information
Full nameTiffany Anastasia Zahorski
Alternative namesTiffani Zagorski
Country represented Russia (since 2015)
Former country(ies) represented France (until 2014)
 Great Britain (until 2008)
Born (1994-08-16) 16 August 1994
London, England
ResidenceMoscow, Russia
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
PartnerJonathan Guerreiro
Former partnerAlexis Miart, Paul Fieret
CoachSvetlana Alexeeva, Elena Kustarova
Former coachAlexander Zhulin
Romain Haguenauer
Muriel Zazoui
Olivier Schoenfelder
Jimmy Young
Bohdan Zahorski
Former choreographerAlexander Zhulin
Romain Haguenauer
Skating clubMoskvich
Former skating clubLyon CSGL
Training locationsMoscow
Former training locationsLyon, London, Cardiff, Sheffield
Began skating1996
ISU personal best scores
Combined total188.03
2020 European Championships
Short dance75.49
2018 NHK Trophy
Free dance112.93
2020 European Championships

With former partner Alexis Miart, she placed fourth at the 2011 World Junior Championships representing France.

Personal life

Zahorski was born on 16 August 1994 in London, England.[1] She is an only child. Her father, Bohdan Zahorski, trained and subsequently coached at Queens Ice Skating rink in central London until he died on 15 January 2010. One of his early coaches was Gladys Hogg M.B.E.

Her paternal grandfather, Jerzy Dominik Zahorski, was born in Moscow, Russia in 1917[2] and was exiled to England in the wake of World War II, in which he served as an RAF pilot.[3] His sister, Elżbieta Maria Zahorska, was taken prisoner in the battle for Warsaw in 1939, escaped and was recaptured when tearing down German propaganda posters. She was sentenced to death and shot by the Germans - in the Germans' first official execution - for her deliberate act of defiance.[4] [5] As she faced the firing squad her last defiant words were "Poland has not yet perished" - which she said in German "Noch ist Polen nicht verloren". She was posthumously awarded the Polish "Cross of Valour".

In late 2012, Zahorski played the role of Vanessa, an ice skater in a French comedy detective film Je fais le mort directed by Jean-Paul Salome, which was released on December 11, 2013.

Zahorski became a French citizen on 19 June 2013[6] and a Russian citizen in April 2016.[7][8] She speaks English, French, and Russian.

Early career

Zahorski began skating in 1996 at the age of two. She was taught by her father, Bohdan, in both London and Cardiff until the age of ten, when she moved to Sheffield to train with Jimmy Young. Under Young's tutelage, she became the British Novice Solo Dance Champion in 2005, the British Primary Solo Dance Silver medallist in 2006 and the Lake Placid Novice Solo Dance Bronze medallist in 2007. In September 2007, aged just 13, she relocated with her mother to France to train with Muriel Zazoui and Romain Haguenauer.

In April 2008, Zahorski became the French Novice Solo Dance champion and as a result found her first partner Paul Fieret. After only one competition together, the 2008 French Masters, Fieret retired due to injury.

Partnership with Miart

Zahorski was partnered with Alexis Miart by Zazoui in March 2009. They placed fourth at the 2011 World Junior Championships, with a second-place finish in the free dance. They elected to compete in the senior ranks the following season.[9] In early July 2011, Miart sustained a fracture to the right malleolus.[10] Zahorski trained alone for two and a half months while he recuperated.[9] They consequently missed the 2011 fall season, but returned to competition in time for the 2012 French Nationals.[11] After winning the bronze medal there, they were named to the French team to the 2012 European Championships.[12] In the preliminary round at Europeans, an aborted lift and both skaters falling on another lift cost them almost twenty points and qualification to the short dance.[13]

Zahorski/Miart received an assignment to the 2012 Trophée Eric Bompard but withdrew.[14] On 9 November 2012, it was confirmed that their partnership had ended and that Zahorski was searching for a new partner.[15][16]

Partnership with Guerreiro

2014–15 season

In June 2014 Zahorski began training with her partner Jonathan Guerreiro, coached by Alexander Zhulin.[17] In July 2014, the Russian Federation asked the French Skating Federation (FFSG) to release her to skate for Russia.[17] They placed fifth at the 2015 Russian Championships.

2015–16 season

The FFSG released Zahorski in October 2015, three years and nine months after her last competition for France, allowing Zahorski/Guerreiro to appear for Russia internationally.[18] The two made their international debut at the 2015 Santa Claus Cup, winning the gold medal. They finished fifth at the 2016 Russian Championships.

2016–17 season

In the 2016–17 season, Zahorski/Guerreiro won the bronze medal at the 2016 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial after placing third in both segments and earning a new personal best total score of 165.64 points. They received another bronze medal in their next event, the 2016 CS Finlandia Trophy. They then made their Grand Prix series debut at the 2016 Rostelecom Cup where they placed fifth. A few weeks later they won their third Challenger Series medal of the season, the silver at the 2016 CS Warsaw Cup with a personal best score of 173.02 points.

For the third consecutive year, they finished fifth at the Russian Championships. Zahorski competed in the free dance after developing a fever.[19]

In mid-May 2017 Zahorski/Guerreiro changed coaches to Elena Kustarova and Svetlana Alexeeva [20]

2017–18 season: Pyeongchang Olympics

Zahorski/Guerreiro started their season by winning the silver medal at the 2017 CS Minsk-Arena Ice Star. Competing on the Grand Prix series, they placed fourth at the 2017 Cup of China and sixth at the 2017 Skate America.

In December 2017 they won the bronze medal at the 2018 Russian Championships. A month later they placed 6th at the 2018 European Championships after placing eighth in the short dance and sixth in the free dance.

it was announced by the Russian Figure Skating Federation on January 23, 2018 that Ivan Bukin was not invited to the 2018 Winter Olympics.[21] Because of this, Zahorski/Guerreiro were sent instead. Zahorski/Guerreiro placed thirteenth at the 2018 Winter Olympics. Later they placed eighth at the 2018 World Championships with a personal best score of 180.42 points.

2018–19 season

Zahorski suffered from a recurrence of a knee injury over the summer that limited the duo's training time leading up to the new season.[22] Zahorski/Guerreiro started their season at the 2018 Skate America. They ranked third in the rhythm dance and fourth in the free dance, placing third overall. The bronze medal was their first Grand Prix medal. Guerreiro said: "We haven’t had this many free dance run-throughs under our belts, so we just kind of prayed and hoped for the best. Overall, it’s a good start."[23] In early November Zahorski/Guerreiro competed at their second Grand Prix event of the season, the 2018 NHK Trophy, where they won the silver medal with a personal best score of 183.05 points.

With one Grand Prix silver medal and one bronze medal they qualified for the 2018–19 Grand Prix Final, where they finished fifth.

At the 2019 Russian Championships, Zahorski/Guerreiro placed third in the rhythm dance, several points behind the top two teams but more than three points ahead of fourth-place finishers Sofia Evdokimova / Egor Bazin.[24] The team had major problems in the free dance, with Guerreiro's boot laces coming undone early on, and Zahorski making errors on both her twizzles and the one-foot step sequence. Consequently, they dropped to seventh place in the free dance and overall, and were not named to the Russian team to the European Championships.[25]

2019–20 season

Zahorski tore the meniscus in her knee late in the summer, causing the team to lose significant training time.[26]

Zahorski/Guerreiro debuted their programs at the Russian test skates, citing their "Survivor" free dance as having been chosen to differentiate themselves from the prevailing lyrical style of skating.[27] They did not compete a Challenger event, and made their return to the Grand Prix at 2019 Skate America, where they placed fifth.[28][29] They were fifth as well at the 2019 Internationaux de France.[30]

Competing at the 2020 Russian Championships, Zahorski/Guerreiro placed third in the rhythm dance.[31] Third in the free dance as well, they returned to the national podium as bronze medalists. Zahorski said "before this competition, we actually got in training. We had a good two and a half weeks of training, so hopefully, going into Europeans, we’ll add more and it will be much better."[32] At the 2020 European Championships, they placed fourth in the fifth in the rhythm dance, but dropped to sixth place after the free dance.[33][34] They had been assigned to compete at the World Championships in Montreal, but these were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.[35]

2020–21 season

Zahorski contracted a mild case of COVID-19 in the off-season, but the team nevertheless debuted at the senior test skates.[36] They competed in the third stage of the Cup of Russia series in Sochi, beating Khudaiberdieva/Bazin for gold by 4.02 points.[37]

With the Grand Prix assigned based primarily on geographic location, Zahorski/Guerreiro competed at the 2020 Rostelecom Cup, coming second in the short program.[38] They were second in the free dance as well, taking the silver medal.[39]

Two-time defending national champions Sinitsina/Katsalapov sat out the 2021 Russian Championships, making Zahorski/Guerreiro the presumptive silver medalists behind Stepanova/Bukin. They indeed placed second in both programs, taking another silver medal. While the 2021 European Championships had already been cancelled due to the pandemic, and assignments for the 2021 World Championships other than the national champions were withheld pending later domestic results.[40][41]

Programs

With Guerreiro

Season Rhythm dance Free dance Exhibition
2019–21
[42][43]
2018–19
[44]
Short dance
2017–18
[45]
  • Samba: Hip Hip Chin Chin
    performed by Club des Belugas
  • Rhumba: Volveras
    performed by Gloria Estefan
  • Samba: Batucada Brasiliera
    performed by Samba Brazilian Batucada Band

Muse medley

2016–17
[46]

2015–16
[47]

2014–15
  • Paso doble

With Miart

Season Short dance Free dance Exhibition
2011–12[1]
2010–11[48]
Original dance
2009–10[49]
  • Folk dance: Flamenco medley

Competitive highlights

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

With Guerreiro for Russia

Zahorski and Guerreiro at the 2016 Rostelecom Cup
International[50]
Event 14–15 15–16 16–17 17–18 18–19 19–20 20–21
Olympics13th
Worlds8thC
Europeans6th6th
GP Final5th
GP Cup of China4th
GP France5th
GP NHK Trophy2nd
GP Rostelecom Cup5th2nd
GP Skate America6th3rd5th
CS Finlandia Trophy3rd
CS Golden Spin6th
CS Minsk-Arena2nd
CS Nepela Memorial3rd
CS Warsaw Cup2nd
Santa Claus Cup1st
Warsaw Cup1st
National[51]
Russian Champ5th5th5th3rd7th3rd2nd
Cup of Russia1st1st1st
TBD = Assigned; WD = Withdrew; C = Event cancelled


With Miart for France

International[52]
Event 2009–10 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13
Europeans9th PR
GP BompardWDWD
Nebelhorn TrophyWD
Trophy of Lyon2nd J.1st
International: Junior[52]
Junior Worlds4th
JGP Belarus10th
JGP Czech Rep.2nd
JGP Romania4th
NRW Trophy5th J.1st J.
National[52]
French Champ.4th J.3rd J.3rd
Masters4th J.3rd J.
Spanish Champ.3rd J. G
A = Alternate; G = Guest; J = Junior level
PR = Preliminary round; WD = Withdrew

Detailed results

Zahorski and Guerreiro at the 2018 European Championships

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships. At team events, medals awarded for team results only.

With Guerreiro

2020–21 season
Date Event RD FD Total
23–27 December 2020 2021 Russian Championships 2
84.02
2
126.92
2
210.94
20–22 November 2020 2020 Rostelecom Cup 2
84.46
2
122.45
2
206.91
2019–20 season
Date Event RD FD Total
20-26 January 2020 2020 European Championships 5
75.10
6
112.93
6
188.03
24–29 December 2019 2020 Russian Championships 3
77.38
3
120.35
3
197.73
1–3 November 2019 2019 Internationaux de France 5
75.05
5
109.39
5
184.44
18–20 October 2019 2019 Skate America 5
71.18
5
110.64
5
181.82
2018–19 season
Date Event RD FD Total
19–23 December 2018 2019 Russian Championships 3
73.37
7
98.39
7
171.76
6–9 December 2018 2018–19 Grand Prix Final 5
72.98
6
111.39
5
184.37
23–25 November 2018 2018 Warsaw Cup 1
74.85
1
112.55
1
187.40
9–11 November 2018 2018 NHK Trophy 1
75.49
4
107.56
2
183.05
19–21 October 2018 2018 Skate America 3
73.30
4
108.08
3
181.38
2017–18 season
Date Event SD FD Total
19–25 March 2018 2018 World Championships 8
72.45
8
107.97
8
180.42
14–25 February 2018 2018 Winter Olympics 13
66.47
14
95.77
13
162.24
15–21 January 2018 2018 European Championships 8
65.35
6
103.10
6
168.45
21–24 December 2017 2018 Russian Championships 3
71.52
4
104.26
3
175.78
6–9 December 2017 2017 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb 6
62.92
6
94.92
6
157.84
24–26 November 2017 2017 Skate America 4
64.20
6
96.08
6
160.28
3–5 November 2017 2017 Cup of China 4
67.62
4
96.79
4
164.41
26–29 October 2017 2017 CS Minsk-Arena Ice Star 2
67.99
2
101.82
2
169.81
2016–17 season
Date Event SD FD Total
20–26 December 2016 2017 Russian Championships 5
69.01
5
100.45
5
169.46
17–20 November 2016 2016 CS Warsaw Cup 2
69.06
2
103.96
2
173.02
4–6 November 2016 2016 Rostelecom Cup 5
64.28
5
92.67
5
156.95
6–10 October 2016 2016 CS Finlandia Trophy 3
62.27
4
90.73
3
153.00
30 September – 2 October 2016 2016 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial 3
68.04
3
97.60
3
165.64
2015–16 season
Date Event SD FD Total
23–27 December 2015 2016 Russian Championships 5
61.30
5
98.30
5
159.60
28–30 November 2015 2015 Santa Claus Cup 1
57.97
1
93.50
1
151.47
2014–15 season
Date Event SD FD Total
24–28 December 2014 2015 Russian Championships 5
59.62
5
85.51
5
145.13

References

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