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Maria Butyrskaya

Maria Viktorovna Butyrskaya (Russian: Мария Викторовна Бутырская, born 28 June 1972) is a Russian retired figure skater. She is the 1999 World champion and a three-time European champion — becoming the oldest skater and the first Russian to win the World ladies' title and the oldest skater to win the European ladies' title (2002 at age 29). Butyrskaya placed fourth at the 1998 Winter Olympics and sixth at the 2002 Winter Olympics. She won the Russian national title six times.

Maria Butyrskaya
Butyrskaya in 2010
Full nameMaria Viktorovna Butyrskaya
Born (1972-06-28) 28 June 1972 (age 51)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Height1.60 m (5 ft 3 in)
Figure skating career
Country Russia
Began skating1977
Retired2002
Medal record
Representing  Russia
Figure skating: Ladies' singles
World Championships
1999 Helsinki Ladies' singles
1998 Minneapolis Ladies' singles
2000 Nice Ladies' singles
European Championships
1998 Milan Ladies' singles
1999 Prague Ladies' singles
2002 Lausanne Ladies' singles
2000 Vienna Ladies' singles
2001 Bratislava Ladies' singles
1996 Sofia Ladies' singles
Grand Prix Final
1998–99 St. Peters.. Ladies' singles
1997–98 Munich Ladies' singles
1999–2000 Lyon Ladies' singles

Personal life edit

Maria Butyrskaya was born on 28 June 1972 in Moscow.[1] Her parents divorced after the birth of her younger brother.[2]

In summer 2006, Butyrskaya married an ice hockey player, Vadim Khomitsky.[3] As of 2010, he plays in Russia for Khimik's successor team Atlant Moscow Oblast.[4] They have three children together.[5]

Career edit

Early career edit

As a child, Butyrskaya was coached by Irina Nifontova for eight years.[6] After she decided to retire, Butyrskaya had a couple of coaches, one of whom told her she had no talent, and then contacted Vladimir Korolov.[6] He improved her compulsory figures but they were then dropped from competitions.[6] After Korolov moved to Greece, Butyrskaya was coached by Viktor Kudriavtsev for several years until he told her that she was strong technically but he could not help her mentally.[6] Her coach then became Elena Tchaikovskaia.[6]

Butyrskaya competed for the Soviet Union until its dissolution and then began representing Russia. She first showed promise with a victory ahead of veterans Josée Chouinard and Tonya Harding at the 1992 Skate Canada International, with her free skate including five triples, and then placed 5th in her European Championship debut. At the 1993 World Championships, Butyrskaya did not advance past the qualifying round, which resulted in Russia having no entry in ladies' singles at the 1994 Olympics. In the 1993–94 season, she finished second behind Olga Markova at the Russian Nationals and 4th behind Markova at that year's Europeans. Markova thus received Russia's lone berth to the 1994 World Championships.

Seasons: 1994–95 to 1997–98 edit

Butyrskaya regained her Russian national title in the 1994–95 season. At the 1995 European Championships, she was third after the short program but her long program dropped her to 7th, behind teammates Olga Markova (2nd) and Irina Slutskaya (5th). She again missed a berth to the World Championships.

Butyrskaya re-emerged as a contender in the 1995–96 season, winning a silver behind Michelle Kwan at the 1995 Nations Cup. She qualified for the first-ever Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, where she finished seventh. She was one of two women to beat Kwan that year at Centennial on Ice, taking silver behind Slutskaya in front of her home fans. Butyrskaya won her first European medal, a bronze, at the 1996 European Championships. At the 1996 World Championships in Edmonton, she missed a triple loop late in her free skate and finished 4th, losing the bronze to Slutskaya.

The 1996–97 would see Butyrskaya maintain her status as one of the World's top skaters, but struggle with consistency of her triple lutz, which she failed to land cleanly in any of her long programs of the season. After finishing 10th at the 1996 Skate America, she rebounded with a silver medal at the 1996 Trophée Lalique, finishing second to Kwan but ahead of rising star Tara Lipinski. Second in the short program at the Grand Prix Final, she dropped to fourth overall after missing her triple lutz in the free skate. At the 1997 European Championships, her 9th-ranked short program kept her off the podium despite placing second in the long program. At the 1997 World Championships in Lausanne, she placed third in the short program but her performance in the free skate dropped her to 5th overall.

Butyrskaya won her first European title at the 1998 European Championships. Ranked fifth in the short program, she completed seven triples in the long program to dethrone two-time defending champion Irina Slutskaya. She also beat that year's Grand Prix Final silver medalist, Tanja Szewczenko (3rd), who had beaten her twice that season. Butyrskaya was selected to represent Russia at the 1998 Winter Olympics and finished 4th in Nagano, finishing behind bronze medalist Chen Lu by a narrow margin. She went on to take her first World medal, bronze, at the 1998 World Championships. She finished behind silver medalist Slutskaya on a 5–4 split after a late fall at the end of a strong performance.

Seasons: 1998–99 to 2001–02 edit

In the 1998–99 season, Butyrskaya repeated as the European champion. She took silver behind Uzbekistan's Tatiana Malinina at that year's Grand Prix Final after falling twice in the long program. Butyrskaya then won gold at the 1999 World Championships, finishing ahead of defending World champion Michelle Kwan. She received all first place ordinals in both the short and the long programs at the event, landing seven triples in her long program and receiving seven 5.9s for presentation.

Butyrskaya's car exploded outside her Moscow apartment on 23 December 1999.[7][8] She said, "I don't see any other reason for it than jealousy, pure human jealousy."[9] Tchaikovskaya stated "In my 40 years of coaching I have never seen anything like it. I guess it's this crime wave that has taken over our cities and lives lately."[9] Entering the Russian Championships as the five-time defending champion, Butyrskaya finished second to Irina Slutskaya and then placed 3rd at the Grand Prix final behind Slutskaya and Kwan. At the 2000 European Championships, Butyrskaya was fourth in the short program but came away with a silver medal after a long program containing six triples, including a triple-triple sequence. At the 2000 World Championships, she placed first in the short program, scoring ten 5.9s. In 2000, the New York Times described her short program (Sarah Brightman's Scene d'Amour) as "flowing, lyrical skating...a performance of rare elegance and beauty." She dropped to third overall after missing two triple salchows in her long program and was awarded the bronze, her third World medal. Had she placed first or even second in the long program behind Kwan, she would have successfully defended her title.

In the 2000–01 season, Butyrskaya began attempting the triple flip jump in her short programs and won both the 2000 Sparkassen Cup on Ice and 2000 Trophée Lalique. After a narrow loss to Slutskaya at the 2000 NHK Trophy, she would initially not stand on the podium and finished fourth at the Grand Prix Final, completing only five out of 14 planned triples over the three segments. Butyrskaya took bronze at the Russian Nationals and silver at the 2001 European Championships, finishing behind Slutskaya at both events. At the 2001 World Championships, her performance in the qualifying round kept her out of the final flight in the short program. Although she placed third in the free skate with six triples and three 5.9s for presentation, she finished fourth overall, narrowly edged for the bronze by Sarah Hughes.

In the 2001–02 season, Butyrskaya was the only woman to win both of her Grand Prix assignments and entered the Grand Prix Final as the top qualifier but finished fourth. She won her third European title at the 2002 European Championships, defeating Slutskaya in a major event for the first time in three years. She finished sixth at her second Olympics and ended her amateur career at the 2002 World Championships, withdrawing from the competition after skating poorly in the qualifying round.

Butyrskaya performed a combination spin that involved clasping her arms and hands behind her back while transitioning to back camel, sit and scratch spins. She often participated in choreographing her programs and in designing her costumes.

Later career edit

After retiring from competition, Butyrskaya began coaching, working primarily with young skaters.[3] She is based at the Olympic Reserve Skating School in Moscow.[10]

Programs edit

Season Short program Free skating
2001–2002
[1][11]

2000–2001
[12]
1999–2000
1998–1999
1997–1998
1996–1997
1995–1996
  • Beyond Cool
    by Lucky Peterson
1994–1995
  • Beyond Cool
    by Lucky Peterson
1993–1994
1992–1993
1991–1992
  • Selecciones De De Caro
    by Mariano Mores

Results edit

GP: Champions Series / Grand Prix

International[13]
Event 89–90 90–91 91–92 92–93 93–94 94–95 95–96 96–97 97–98 98–99 99–00 00–01 01–02
Winter Olympics 4th 6th
World Champ. 29th 4th 5th 3rd 1st 3rd 4th WD
European Champ. 5th 4th 7th 3rd 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st
GP Final 7th 4th 3rd 2nd 3rd 4th 4th
GP Lalique 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st
GP Nations/Spark. 2nd 3rd 1st 1st 1st
GP NHK Trophy 5th 1st 2nd 1st 2nd
GP Skate America 10th 1st
GP Skate Canada 2nd
Finlandia Trophy 4th 1st
Goodwill Games 3rd
Nations Cup 7th 6th 8th
NHK Trophy 5th
Nebelhorn Trophy 3rd 3rd
Piruetten 2nd 8th
Schäfer Memorial 3rd
Skate Canada 1st
Trophée de France 5th
National[14]
Russian Champ. 1st 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 3rd 2nd
Soviet Champ. 6th 3rd
WD = Withdrew

References edit

  1. ^ a b . International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 10 August 2002.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. ^ Mikhailina, Elena (April 2012). Мария Бутырская: «Женщины уходили от Башарова сами» [Maria Butyrskaya]. Zhurnal "Karavan Istorii" / 7days.ru (in Russian).
  3. ^ a b . FigureSkating-Online. 4 May 2009. Archived from the original on 16 March 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 November 2006.
  5. ^ Мария Бутырская родила дочку [Maria Butyrskaya gave birth to daughter] (in Russian). dni.ru. 4 June 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e Mittan, J. Barry (1998). . Archived from the original on 14 May 2012. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  7. ^ . CBS Sportsline. Reuters. 24 December 1999. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008.
  8. ^ Nidetz, Stephen (25 December 1999). "Car Explosion Fails To Rattle Russian Champ Butyrskaya". Chicago Tribune.
  9. ^ a b "'Pure human jealousy'; Car bomb derailed Russian skater's preparations". Sports Illustrated. Reuters. 29 December 1999.
  10. ^ Titov, Boris (3 July 2007). Бутырская снова вышла на лед [Butyrskaya back on the ice]. Izvestia (in Russian).
  11. ^ . International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 18 December 2001.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  12. ^ . International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 19 April 2001.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ . International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 26 April 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  14. ^ "Бутырская Мария Викторовна". fskate.ru (in Russian).

External links edit

  Media related to Maria Butyrskaya at Wikimedia Commons

maria, butyrskaya, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, viktorovna, family, name, butyrskaya, maria, viktorovna, butyrskaya, russian, Мария, Викторовна, Бутырская, born, june, 1972, russian, retired, figure, skater, 1999. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Viktorovna and the family name is Butyrskaya Maria Viktorovna Butyrskaya Russian Mariya Viktorovna Butyrskaya born 28 June 1972 is a Russian retired figure skater She is the 1999 World champion and a three time European champion becoming the oldest skater and the first Russian to win the World ladies title and the oldest skater to win the European ladies title 2002 at age 29 Butyrskaya placed fourth at the 1998 Winter Olympics and sixth at the 2002 Winter Olympics She won the Russian national title six times Maria ButyrskayaButyrskaya in 2010Full nameMaria Viktorovna ButyrskayaBorn 1972 06 28 28 June 1972 age 51 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionHeight1 60 m 5 ft 3 in Figure skating careerCountry RussiaBegan skating1977Retired2002Medal record Representing RussiaFigure skating Ladies singlesWorld Championships1999 Helsinki Ladies singles1998 Minneapolis Ladies singles2000 Nice Ladies singlesEuropean Championships1998 Milan Ladies singles1999 Prague Ladies singles2002 Lausanne Ladies singles2000 Vienna Ladies singles2001 Bratislava Ladies singles1996 Sofia Ladies singlesGrand Prix Final1998 99 St Peters Ladies singles1997 98 Munich Ladies singles1999 2000 Lyon Ladies singles Contents 1 Personal life 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Seasons 1994 95 to 1997 98 2 3 Seasons 1998 99 to 2001 02 2 4 Later career 3 Programs 4 Results 5 References 6 External linksPersonal life editMaria Butyrskaya was born on 28 June 1972 in Moscow 1 Her parents divorced after the birth of her younger brother 2 In summer 2006 Butyrskaya married an ice hockey player Vadim Khomitsky 3 As of 2010 he plays in Russia for Khimik s successor team Atlant Moscow Oblast 4 They have three children together 5 Career editEarly career edit As a child Butyrskaya was coached by Irina Nifontova for eight years 6 After she decided to retire Butyrskaya had a couple of coaches one of whom told her she had no talent and then contacted Vladimir Korolov 6 He improved her compulsory figures but they were then dropped from competitions 6 After Korolov moved to Greece Butyrskaya was coached by Viktor Kudriavtsev for several years until he told her that she was strong technically but he could not help her mentally 6 Her coach then became Elena Tchaikovskaia 6 Butyrskaya competed for the Soviet Union until its dissolution and then began representing Russia She first showed promise with a victory ahead of veterans Josee Chouinard and Tonya Harding at the 1992 Skate Canada International with her free skate including five triples and then placed 5th in her European Championship debut At the 1993 World Championships Butyrskaya did not advance past the qualifying round which resulted in Russia having no entry in ladies singles at the 1994 Olympics In the 1993 94 season she finished second behind Olga Markova at the Russian Nationals and 4th behind Markova at that year s Europeans Markova thus received Russia s lone berth to the 1994 World Championships Seasons 1994 95 to 1997 98 edit Butyrskaya regained her Russian national title in the 1994 95 season At the 1995 European Championships she was third after the short program but her long program dropped her to 7th behind teammates Olga Markova 2nd and Irina Slutskaya 5th She again missed a berth to the World Championships Butyrskaya re emerged as a contender in the 1995 96 season winning a silver behind Michelle Kwan at the 1995 Nations Cup She qualified for the first ever Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final where she finished seventh She was one of two women to beat Kwan that year at Centennial on Ice taking silver behind Slutskaya in front of her home fans Butyrskaya won her first European medal a bronze at the 1996 European Championships At the 1996 World Championships in Edmonton she missed a triple loop late in her free skate and finished 4th losing the bronze to Slutskaya The 1996 97 would see Butyrskaya maintain her status as one of the World s top skaters but struggle with consistency of her triple lutz which she failed to land cleanly in any of her long programs of the season After finishing 10th at the 1996 Skate America she rebounded with a silver medal at the 1996 Trophee Lalique finishing second to Kwan but ahead of rising star Tara Lipinski Second in the short program at the Grand Prix Final she dropped to fourth overall after missing her triple lutz in the free skate At the 1997 European Championships her 9th ranked short program kept her off the podium despite placing second in the long program At the 1997 World Championships in Lausanne she placed third in the short program but her performance in the free skate dropped her to 5th overall Butyrskaya won her first European title at the 1998 European Championships Ranked fifth in the short program she completed seven triples in the long program to dethrone two time defending champion Irina Slutskaya She also beat that year s Grand Prix Final silver medalist Tanja Szewczenko 3rd who had beaten her twice that season Butyrskaya was selected to represent Russia at the 1998 Winter Olympics and finished 4th in Nagano finishing behind bronze medalist Chen Lu by a narrow margin She went on to take her first World medal bronze at the 1998 World Championships She finished behind silver medalist Slutskaya on a 5 4 split after a late fall at the end of a strong performance Seasons 1998 99 to 2001 02 edit In the 1998 99 season Butyrskaya repeated as the European champion She took silver behind Uzbekistan s Tatiana Malinina at that year s Grand Prix Final after falling twice in the long program Butyrskaya then won gold at the 1999 World Championships finishing ahead of defending World champion Michelle Kwan She received all first place ordinals in both the short and the long programs at the event landing seven triples in her long program and receiving seven 5 9s for presentation Butyrskaya s car exploded outside her Moscow apartment on 23 December 1999 7 8 She said I don t see any other reason for it than jealousy pure human jealousy 9 Tchaikovskaya stated In my 40 years of coaching I have never seen anything like it I guess it s this crime wave that has taken over our cities and lives lately 9 Entering the Russian Championships as the five time defending champion Butyrskaya finished second to Irina Slutskaya and then placed 3rd at the Grand Prix final behind Slutskaya and Kwan At the 2000 European Championships Butyrskaya was fourth in the short program but came away with a silver medal after a long program containing six triples including a triple triple sequence At the 2000 World Championships she placed first in the short program scoring ten 5 9s In 2000 the New York Times described her short program Sarah Brightman s Scene d Amour as flowing lyrical skating a performance of rare elegance and beauty She dropped to third overall after missing two triple salchows in her long program and was awarded the bronze her third World medal Had she placed first or even second in the long program behind Kwan she would have successfully defended her title In the 2000 01 season Butyrskaya began attempting the triple flip jump in her short programs and won both the 2000 Sparkassen Cup on Ice and 2000 Trophee Lalique After a narrow loss to Slutskaya at the 2000 NHK Trophy she would initially not stand on the podium and finished fourth at the Grand Prix Final completing only five out of 14 planned triples over the three segments Butyrskaya took bronze at the Russian Nationals and silver at the 2001 European Championships finishing behind Slutskaya at both events At the 2001 World Championships her performance in the qualifying round kept her out of the final flight in the short program Although she placed third in the free skate with six triples and three 5 9s for presentation she finished fourth overall narrowly edged for the bronze by Sarah Hughes In the 2001 02 season Butyrskaya was the only woman to win both of her Grand Prix assignments and entered the Grand Prix Final as the top qualifier but finished fourth She won her third European title at the 2002 European Championships defeating Slutskaya in a major event for the first time in three years She finished sixth at her second Olympics and ended her amateur career at the 2002 World Championships withdrawing from the competition after skating poorly in the qualifying round Butyrskaya performed a combination spin that involved clasping her arms and hands behind her back while transitioning to back camel sit and scratch spins She often participated in choreographing her programs and in designing her costumes Later career edit After retiring from competition Butyrskaya began coaching working primarily with young skaters 3 She is based at the Olympic Reserve Skating School in Moscow 10 Programs editSeason Short program Free skating2001 2002 1 11 Melody of the White Nights by Isaac Schwartz Tale of Wandering by Alfred SchnittkeSeventeen Moments of Spring by Mikael Tariverdiev2000 2001 12 Scene d Amour by Francis Lai performed by Sarah Brightman Seventeen Moments of Spring by Mikael Tariverdiev1999 2000 Scene d Amour by Francis Lai performed by Sarah Brightman Swan Lake by Pyotr Tchaikovsky1998 1999 St James Infirmary Blues by Irving Mills Otonal Autumnal by Raul di Blasio1997 1998 Fever by Eddie Cooley and Otis Blackwell Otonal Autumnal by Raul di Blasio1996 1997 Songs from the Victorious City by Anne Dudley and Jaz Coleman Malaguena by Ernesto Lecuona1995 1996 Beyond Cool by Lucky Peterson Malaguena by Ernesto Lecuona1994 1995 Beyond Cool by Lucky Peterson Hajimari Matsuri by Kitarō1993 1994 The Phantom of the Opera by Andrew Lloyd Webber Hajimari Matsuri by Kitarō1992 1993 Orochi by Kitarō Moliendo Cafe by Hugo Blanco Calypso by Jean Michel Jarre1991 1992 Selecciones De De Caro by Mariano Mores Moliendo Cafe by Hugo Blanco Calypso by Jean Michel JarreResults editGP Champions Series Grand Prix International 13 Event 89 90 90 91 91 92 92 93 93 94 94 95 95 96 96 97 97 98 98 99 99 00 00 01 01 02Winter Olympics 4th 6thWorld Champ 29th 4th 5th 3rd 1st 3rd 4th WDEuropean Champ 5th 4th 7th 3rd 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1stGP Final 7th 4th 3rd 2nd 3rd 4th 4thGP Lalique 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1stGP Nations Spark 2nd 3rd 1st 1st 1stGP NHK Trophy 5th 1st 2nd 1st 2ndGP Skate America 10th 1stGP Skate Canada 2ndFinlandia Trophy 4th 1stGoodwill Games 3rdNations Cup 7th 6th 8thNHK Trophy 5thNebelhorn Trophy 3rd 3rdPiruetten 2nd 8thSchafer Memorial 3rdSkate Canada 1stTrophee de France 5thNational 14 Russian Champ 1st 2nd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 3rd 2ndSoviet Champ 6th 3rdWD WithdrewReferences edit a b Maria BUTYRSKAYA 2001 2002 International Skating Union Archived from the original on 10 August 2002 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Mikhailina Elena April 2012 Mariya Butyrskaya Zhenshiny uhodili ot Basharova sami Maria Butyrskaya Zhurnal Karavan Istorii 7days ru in Russian a b Interview with Maria Butyrskaia European Championships in Helsinki January 2009 FigureSkating Online 4 May 2009 Archived from the original on 16 March 2012 Retrieved 24 June 2011 Novosti Rossii i mira Novostnoj portal Moskovskij Komsomolec MK Archived from the original on 18 November 2006 Mariya Butyrskaya rodila dochku Maria Butyrskaya gave birth to daughter in Russian dni ru 4 June 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2010 a b c d e Mittan J Barry 1998 Maria Butyrskaya Archived from the original on 14 May 2012 Retrieved 13 May 2012 Champion figure skater s car blown up in Moscow CBS Sportsline Reuters 24 December 1999 Archived from the original on 4 December 2008 Nidetz Stephen 25 December 1999 Car Explosion Fails To Rattle Russian Champ Butyrskaya Chicago Tribune a b Pure human jealousy Car bomb derailed Russian skater s preparations Sports Illustrated Reuters 29 December 1999 Titov Boris 3 July 2007 Butyrskaya snova vyshla na led Butyrskaya back on the ice Izvestia in Russian Maria BUTYRSKAYA 2001 2002 International Skating Union Archived from the original on 18 December 2001 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Maria BUTYRSKAYA 2000 2001 International Skating Union Archived from the original on 19 April 2001 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Maria BUTYRSKAYA International Skating Union Archived from the original on 26 April 2017 Retrieved 26 April 2017 Butyrskaya Mariya Viktorovna fskate ru in Russian External links edit nbsp Media related to Maria Butyrskaya at Wikimedia Commons Maria Butyrskaya at the International Skating Union Maria Butyrskaya Official site at the Wayback Machine archived 22 March 2002 Maria Butyrskaya at Olympics at Sports Reference com archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Butyrskaya amp oldid 1156673183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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