- European Figure Skating Championships
The European Figure Skating Championships ("Europeans") is an annual
figure skating competition in which figure skaters compete for the title of European Champion. The event is sanctioned by theInternational Skating Union (ISU), and is the oldest of the 4 annual figure skating competitions designated "ISU Championships" (the others are theWorld Figure Skating Championships , theFour Continents Figure Skating Championships , and theWorld Junior Figure Skating Championships ).Skaters compete in the categories of men's singles, ladies singles,
pair skating , andice dancing . The competition is generally held in January. The 2008 Championships were held inZagreb ,Croatia from 21 to 27 January. In 2009 the Championships will take place inHelsinki ,Finland from 19 to 25 January.History
The men's singles European championship first took place in
Hamburg in 1891, while the ladies' singles andpair skating European championships started inVienna in 1930. Theice dancing championship was held for the first time inBolzano in 1954.The skating association of Germany and Austria joined in one club "Deutscher und Österrreichischer Eislaufverband" organised the first European Championships in figure skating as well as in
speed skating inHamburg ,German Empire in 1891 even before theInternational Skating Union (ISU) was found. The ISU decided in 1892 to continue to hold European Championships in figure skating each year. 1895 it was decided to hold World Championships instead of Europeans. Therefore the Europeans were discontinued until 1898.Up until 1948, skaters representing any ISU Member could enter the European Championships. After Canadian
Barbara Ann Scott and AmericanDick Button won the singles titles that year, entries were restricted to skaters representing European countries. At the time, theNorth American Figure Skating Championships existed as a North Americans-only senior-level competition. This competition was contested for the last time in 1971. TheFour Continents Figure Skating Championships was established by the ISU in 1999 as the equivalent competition for skaters from non-European countries.Qualifying
Skaters qualify for the European Championships by belonging to a European Member nation of the ISU. Each country gets one entry in every discipline by default. The most entries a country can have in a single discipline is three. Countries earn a second or third entry for the following year's competition by earning points through skater placement. The points are equal to the sum of the placements of the country's skaters (top two if they have three). Entries do not carry over and so countries must continue to earn their second or third spot every year. If a country only has one skater/team, that skater/team must place in the top ten to earn a second entry and in the top two to earn three entries to next year's championships. If a country has two skaters/teams, the combined placement of those teams must be 13 or less to qualify 3 entries, and 28 or less to keep their two entries. If they do not do so, they only have one entry for the following year.
There are exceptions if a skater is forced to withdraw in the middle of the competition due to a medical emergency or equipment problems.
Which skaters from each country attend the European Championships is at the national governing body's discretion. Some countries rely on the results of their national championships while others have more varied critea. Selections vary by country.
Skaters must be older than fifteen as of July 1st the previous year to compete. The
Four Continents Figure Skating Championships is the corresponding competition for skaters from non-European countries.Multiple spots for 2009 Europeans
The following countries have earned more than one entry to the
2009 European Figure Skating Championships based on performance at the2008 European Figure Skating Championships .Pairs
Ice Dancing
Cumulative medal count
TV coverage
Extended live coverage of the championships is broadcast across Europe on
Eurosport .References
*PDFlink| [http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-147122-164338-54457-0-file,00.pdf ISU Results: Men] |9.90 KB
*PDFlink| [http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-147123-164339-54461-0-file,00.pdf ISU Results: Ladies] |8.97 KB
*PDFlink| [http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-147120-164336-54459-0-file,00.pdf ISU Results: Pairs] |10.9 KB
*PDFlink| [http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-147119-164335-54460-0-file,00.pdf ISU Results: Dance] |9.26 KB
*PDFlink| [http://www.isu.org/vsite/vfile/page/fileurl/0,11040,4844-177760-194978-110492-0-file,00.pdf ISU Constitution & General Regulations 2006 ] |793 KB
*External links
* [http://www.icecalc.com/events/ec2001/results/ 2001 Championships]
* [http://www.icecalc.com/events/ec2002/results/index.htm 2002 Championships]
* [http://www.icecalc.com/events/ec2003/results/index.htm 2003 Championships]
* [http://www.isufs.org/results/ec2004/ 2004 Championships]
* [http://www.isufs.org/results/ec2005/ 2005 Championships]
* [http://www.isufs.org/results/ec2006/ 2006 Championships]
* [http://www.isufs.org/results/ec2007/ 2007 Championships]
* [http://www.isufs.org/results/ec2008/ 2008 Championships]
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