2016 World Junior Figure Skating Championships

The 2016 World Junior Figure Skating Championships were held from 14–20 March 2016 in Debrecen, Hungary.[1] Commonly called "World Juniors" and "Junior Worlds", the event determined the World Junior champions in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.

2016 World Junior Figure Skating Championships
Type:ISU Championship
Date:14 – 20 March
Season:2015–16
Location:Debrecen, Hungary
Host:Hungarian Skating Union
Champions
Men's singles:
Israel Daniel Samohin
Ladies' singles:
Japan Marin Honda
Pairs:
Czech Republic Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař
Ice dance:
United States Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter
Navigation
Previous:
2015 World Junior Championships
Next:
2017 World Junior Championships

Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař and Daniel Samohin became the first World Junior champions in figure skating from the Czech Republic and Israel, respectively. Japan's Marin Honda won the ladies' title and Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter took the ice dancing event.

Records edit

The following new junior records were set during this competition:

Event Component Skater(s) Score Date Ref
Pairs Short program   Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař 64.71 16 March 2016 [2]
Total score 181.82 17 March 2016
Ice dance Short dance   Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons 67.88 [3]
Free dance   Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter 97.40 19 March 2016
Total score   Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons 162.74
  Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter 163.65
Men Free skating   Daniel Samohin 165.38 20 March 2016 [4]

Qualification edit

The competition was open to skaters from ISU member nations who were at least 13 but not 19—or 21 for male pair skaters and ice dancers—before July 1, 2015 in their place of birth. National associations selected their entries according to their own criteria but the ISU mandated that their selections achieve a minimum technical elements score (TES) at an international event prior to the Junior Worlds.

The term "Junior" in ISU competition refers to age, not skill level. Skaters may remain age-eligible for Junior Worlds even after competing nationally and internationally at the senior level. At junior events, the ISU requires that all programs conform to junior-specific rules regarding program length, jumping passes, types of elements, etc.

Minimum TES edit

Minimum technical scores (TES)[5]
Discipline Short Free
Men 20 42
Ladies 20 35
Pairs 20 30
Ice dancing 18 28
Scores had to be achieved at an ISU-recognized
international event in the ongoing or preceding season.
SP and FS scores could be attained at different events.

Number of entries per discipline edit

Based on the results of the 2015 World Junior Championships, the ISU allowed each country one to three entries per discipline.[6]

Spots Men Ladies Pairs Dance
3   Japan
  Russia
  Russia
  Japan
  China
  Canada
  Russia
  United States
  Russia
  United States
  Canada
2   China
  United States
  Latvia
  Israel
  South Korea
  Kazakhstan
  United States
  South Korea
  Latvia
  Japan
  Czech Republic
  Ukraine
  France
  Poland
  Hungary
If not listed above, one entry is allowed.

Entries edit

Some national associations began announcing their selections in December 2015. The ISU published a complete list on 25 February 2016.

Country Men[7] Ladies[8] Pairs[9] Ice dancing[10]
  Armenia Anastasia Galustyan
  Australia James Min Katie Pasfield Mathilda Friend / William Badaoui
  Austria[11] Luc Maierhofer Natalie Klotz Elizaveta Orlova / Stephano-Valentino Schuster
  Belgium Charlotte Vandersarren
  Belarus Yakau Zenko Maria Oleynik / Yuri Hulitski
  Bulgaria Teodora Markova Yana Bozhilova / Kaloyan Georgiev
  Canada[12] Nicolas Nadeau Sarah Tamura Justine Brasseur / Mathieu Ostiguy
Bryn Hoffman / Bryce Chudak
Hope McLean / Trennt Michaud
Mackenzie Bent / Dmitre Razgulajevs
Marjorie Lajoie / Zachary Lagha
Melinda Meng / Andrew Meng
  China Zhang He
Li Tangxu
Li Xiangning Gao Yumeng / Li Bowen Li Xibei / Xiang Guangyao
  Croatia Nicholas Vrdoljak
  Czech Republic Jiří Bělohradský Elizaveta Ukolova Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař Nicole Kuzmich / Alexander Sinicyn
  Denmark Leonora Colmor Jepsen
  Spain Hector Alonso Serrano Maëva Gallarda Rossell
  Estonia Aleksandr Selevko Kristina Škuleta-Gromova Victoria Semenjuk / Artur Gruzdev
  Finland Roman Galay Viveca Lindfors
  France Kévin Aymoz Alizée Crozet Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac
Angélique Abachkina / Louis Thauron
  Georgia Irakli Maysuradze
  Germany[13] Catalin Dimitrescu Lea Johanna Dastich Ria Schwendinger / Valentin Wunderlich
  Great Britain
[14]
Josh Brown Danielle Harrison Chloe Curtin / Steven Adcock Ekaterina Fedyushchenko / Lucas Kitteridge
  Hong Kong Maisy Hiu Ching Ma
  Hungary[15] Máté Böröcz Ivett Tóth Kimberly Wei / Ilias Fourati
Villő Marton / Danyil Semko
  Israel Daniel Samohin
Mark Gorodnitsky
  Italy Matteo Rizzo Lucrezia Gennaro Bianca Manacorda / Niccolò Macii Sara Ghislandi / Giona Terzo Ortenzi
  Japan[16] Shu Nakamura
Daichi Miyata
Kazuki Tomono
Wakaba Higuchi
Yuna Shiraiwa
Marin Honda
Rikako Fukase / Aru Tateno
  Kazakhstan Daniyar Adylov Elizabet Tursynbayeva Ekaterina Khokhlova / Abish Baytkanov Hannah Grace Cook / Temirlan Yerzhanov
  Latvia Deniss Vasiļjevs
Glebs Basins
Angelīna Kučvaļska
Diāna Ņikitina
  Lithuania Elzbieta Kropa Guostė Damulevičiūtė / Deividas Kizala
  Malaysia Kai Xiang Chew
  Netherlands Kyarha van Tiel
  Norway[17] Sondre Oddvoll Bøe Juni Marie Benjaminsen
  Poland Aleksandra Rudolf Alexandra Borisova / Cezary Zawadzki
Jenna Hertenstein / Damian Binkowski
  Romania Julia Sauter
  Russia[18] Dmitri Aliev
Alexander Samarin
Roman Savosin
Alisa Fedichkina
Maria Sotskova
Polina Tsurskaya
Anastasia Gubanova / Alexei Sintsov
Ekaterina Borisova / Dmitry Sopot
Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev
Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd
Betina Popova / Yuri Vlasenko
Anastasia Shpilevaya / Grigory Smirnov
  South Africa Michaela Du Toit
  Singapore Shuran Yu
  Slovenia Monika Peterka
  South Korea Cha Jun-hwan
Byun Se-jong
Son Suh-hyun
Kim Ha-nul
Lee Ho-jung / Richard Kang-in Kam
  Switzerland Nicola Todeschini Shaline Ruegger
  Slovakia Jakub Kršňák Alexandra Hagarová
  Sweden[19] Matilda Algotsson
  Thailand Thita Lamsam
  Chinese Taipei Chih-I Tsao Amy Lin
  Turkey Başar Oktar Elif Erdem
  Ukraine[20] Yaroslav Paniot Anastasia Hozhva Renata Ohanesian / Mark Bardei Anzhelika Yurchenko / Volodymyr Byelikov
Maria Holubtsova / Kyrylo Byelobrov
  United States
[21][22]
Tomoki Hiwatashi
Vincent Zhou
Tyler Pierce
Bradie Tennell
Chelsea Liu / Brian Johnson
Joy Weinberg / Maximiliano Fernandez
Lindsay Weinstein / Jacob Simon
Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter
Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons
Elliana Pogrebinsky / Alex Benoit

Changes to initial assignments edit

Announced Discipline Initial Replacement Reason
28 January 2016 Men   Nathan Chen[21]   Tomoki Hiwatashi[22] Chen's hip surgery
25 February 2016 Ice dance   Gwen Sletten / Elliot Verburg[14]   Ekaterina Fedyushchenko / Lucas Kitteridge[10] Sletten retired.
25 February 2016 Ladies   Pernille Sørensen[23]   Leonora Colmor Jepsen[8] Sørensen retired.
1 March 2016 Ladies   Sara Casella   Lucrezia Gennaro[8]
1 March 2016 Men   Alexander Maszljanko   Máté Böröcz[7]
1 March 2016 Pairs   Zhao Ying / Xie Zhong [9]
7 March 2016 Ice dance   Valentina Schär / Carlo Röthlisberger [10]
9 March 2016 Men   Illya Solomin [7]
10 March 2016 Pairs   Amina Atakhanova / Ilia Spiridonov   Anastasia Gubanova / Alexei Sintsov Atakhanova's injury[24]
12 March 2016 Men   Sota Yamamoto   Kazuki Tomono[7] Broken ankle[25]

Results edit

Men edit

Israel's Daniel Samohin climbed from 9th after the short program to win his country's first World Junior title in figure skating. Nicolas Nadeau, who missed the cut for the free skate in 2015, obtained the silver medal and three spots for Canada in the 2017 men's event. Called up to replace the injured Nathan Chen, Tomoki Hiwatashi was awarded the bronze medal in his first appearance at Junior Worlds.

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Daniel Samohin   Israel 236.65 9 71.27 1 165.38
2 Nicolas Nadeau   Canada 224.76 8 73.90 2 150.86
3 Tomoki Hiwatashi   United States 222.52 6 74.97 3 147.55
4 Alexander Samarin   Russia 222.11 2 80.31 5 141.80
5 Vincent Zhou   United States 221.19 4 77.31 4 143.88
6 Dmitri Aliev   Russia 211.18 1 80.74 7 130.44
7 Cha Jun-hwan   South Korea 207.11 7 74.38 6 132.73
8 Deniss Vasiļjevs   Latvia 204.75 3 78.78 9 125.97
9 Kévin Aymoz   France 197.76 5 75.53 11 122.23
10 Zhang He   China 195.70 10 70.85 10 124.85
11 Yaroslav Paniot   Ukraine 189.50 15 62.56 8 126.94
12 Shu Nakamura   Japan 186.22 12 66.05 13 120.17
13 Matteo Rizzo   Italy 182.96 11 66.79 17 116.17
14 Roman Savosin   Russia 181.65 13 64.00 14 117.65
15 Kazuki Tomono   Japan 179.61 20 58.33 12 121.28
16 Jiří Bělohradský   Czech Republic 178.51 16 61.96 16 116.55
17 Yakau Zenko   Belarus 174.39 22 57.67 15 116.72
18 Daichi Miyata   Japan 169.19 19 59.10 18 110.09
19 Aleksandr Selevko   Estonia 166.61 17 60.91 20 105.70
20 Chih-I Tsao   Chinese Taipei 164.25 14 63.42 22 100.83
21 Sondre Oddvoll Bøe   Norway 163.64 21 57.72 19 105.92
22 Nicola Todeschini   Switzerland 161.15 18 59.59 21 101.56
23 Josh Brown   Great Britain 157.16 23 57.65 23 99.51
24 Irakli Maysuradze   Georgia 154.41 24 56.87 24 97.54
Did not advance to free skating
25 Li Tangxu   China 53.20 25 53.20
26 Nicholas Vrdoljak   Croatia 52.12 26 52.12
27 James Min   Australia 51.96 27 51.96
28 Héctor Alonso   Spain 51.41 28 51.41
29 Byun Se-jong   South Korea 50.67 29 50.67
30 Luc Maierhofer   Austria 50.27 30 50.27
31 Başar Oktar   Turkey 48.65 31 48.65
32 Daniyar Adylov   Kazakhstan 47.99 32 47.99
33 Roman Galay   Finland 45.47 33 45.47
34 Mark Gorodnitsky   Israel 45.28 34 45.28
35 Jakub Kršňák   Slovakia 43.19 35 43.19
36 Glebs Basins   Latvia 41.93 36 41.93
37 Kai Xiang Chew   Malaysia 39.77 37 39.77
38 Máté Böröcz   Hungary 37.16 38 37.16
WD Catalin Dimitrescu   Germany withdrew withdrew from competition

Ladies edit

Youth Olympic and JGP Final champion Polina Tsurskaya withdrew before the short program due to an ankle injury. Short program leader Alisa Fedichkina withdrew before the start of the free skate, also due to an ankle injury.

Japan's Marin Honda ended Russia's five-year streak of World Junior ladies' titles. Despite her teammates' withdrawals, Maria Sotskova was able to retain three spots for Russia by placing in the top two. Wakaba Higuchi of Japan won her second consecutive bronze medal at Junior Worlds.

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Marin Honda   Japan 192.98 2 66.11 1 126.87
2 Maria Sotskova   Russia 188.72 3 64.78 3 123.94
3 Wakaba Higuchi   Japan 183.73 5 58.08 2 125.65
4 Yuna Shiraiwa   Japan 171.59 8 56.23 5 115.36
5 Elizabet Tursynbayeva   Kazakhstan 170.83 14 50.11 4 120.72
6 Tyler Pierce   United States 167.19 7 56.56 6 110.63
7 Angelīna Kučvaļska   Latvia 161.29 6 57.92 8 103.37
8 Ivett Tóth   Hungary 153.70 15 49.98 7 103.72
9 Kim Ha-nul   South Korea 150.36 12 52.37 9 97.99
10 Diāna Ņikitina   Latvia 149.02 10 54.59 12 94.43
11 Bradie Tennell   United States 147.52 4 58.56 14 88.96
12 Lea Johanna Dastich   Germany 143.63 18 47.67 10 95.96
13 Sarah Tamura   Canada 141.32 16 48.11 13 93.21
14 Amy Lin   Chinese Taipei 139.14 22 44.52 11 94.62
15 Maisy Hiu Ching Ma   Hong Kong 138.11 11 52.69 15 85.42
16 Anastasia Galustyan   Armenia 137.35 9 55.80 16 81.55
17 Anastasia Gozhva   Ukraine 132.27 13 50.99 18 81.28
18 Kyarha van Tiel   Netherlands 127.18 17 47.94 20 79.24
19 Lucrezia Gennaro   Italy 125.25 23 43.74 17 81.51
20 Li Xiangning   China 123.94 24 43.38 19 80.56
21 Alizée Crozet   France 120.59 21 45.34 21 75.25
22 Juni Marie Benjaminsen   Norway 116.63 20 45.70 22 70.93
23 Son Suh-hyun   South Korea 115.41 19 46.18 23 69.23
WD Alisa Fedichkina   Russia withdrew 1 66.11 withdrew from competition
Did not advance to free skating
25 Viveca Lindfors   Finland 43.19 25 43.19
26 Shaline Ruegger   Switzerland 42.66 26 42.66
27 Natalie Klotz   Austria 42.25 27 42.25
28 Shuran Yu   Singapore 42.21 28 42.21
29 Kristina Škuleta-Gromova   Estonia 41.68 29 41.68
30 Matilda Algotsson   Sweden 41.00 30 41.00
31 Michaela Du Toit   South Africa 40.86 31 40.86
32 Julia Sauter   Romania 39.67 32 39.67
33 Alexandra Hagarová   Slovakia 39.07 33 39.07
34 Monika Peterka   Slovenia 39.00 34 39.00
35 Katie Pasfield   Australia 38.96 35 38.96
36 Danielle Harrison   Great Britain 37.59 36 37.59
37 Elizaveta Ukolova   Czech Republic 37.57 37 37.57
38 Elif Erdem   Turkey 37.39 38 37.39
39 Aleksandra Rudolf   Poland 35.32 39 35.32
40 Teodora Markova   Bulgaria 34.50 40 34.50
41 Elzbieta Kropa   Lithuania 34.34 41 34.34
42 Leonora Colmor Jepsen   Denmark 34.05 42 34.05
43 Thita Lamsam   Thailand 33.39 43 33.39
44 Charlotte Vandersarren   Belgium 32.30 44 32.30
45 Maëva Gallarda Rossell   Spain 29.65 45 29.65
WD Polina Tsurskaya   Russia withdrew withdrew from competition

Pairs edit

Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař became the first Czech figure skaters to ever win gold at a World Junior Championships and the first pair skaters from outside China, Russia, or the United States to win the competition since 2000. Russian pairs Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev and Ekaterina Borisova / Dmitry Sopot took silver and bronze, respectively, in their first trip to Junior Worlds.

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař   Czech Republic 181.82 1 64.71 1 117.11
2 Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev   Russia 172.60 2 59.50 2 113.10
3 Ekaterina Borisova / Dmitry Sopot   Russia 169.00 4 58.56 3 110.44
4 Renata Ohanesian / Mark Bardei   Ukraine 155.08 3 59.30 4 95.78
5 Chelsea Liu / Brian Johnson   United States 147.73 5 54.12 5 93.61
6 Bianca Manacorda / Niccolò Macii   Italy 141.76 7 49.80 6 91.96
7 Justine Brasseur / Mathieu Ostiguy   Canada 138.67 9 48.08 7 90.59
8 Bryn Hoffman / Bryce Chudak   Canada 138.12 6 52.20 10 85.92
9 Lindsay Weinstein / Jacob Simon   United States 137.58 8 48.75 8 88.83
10 Joy Weinberg / Maximiliano Fernandez   United States 135.71 10 47.54 9 88.17
11 Anastasia Gubanova / Alexei Sintsov   Russia 123.90 11 45.07 11 78.83
12 Chloe Curtin / Steven Adcock   Great Britain 112.68 12 44.74 13 67.94
13 Gao Yumeng / Li Bowen   China 112.56 14 42.24 12 70.32
14 Ekaterina Khokhlova / Abish Baytkanov   Kazakhstan 95.31 15 32.36 14 62.95
WD Hope McLean / Trennt Michaud   Canada withdrew 13 44.05 withdrew from competition

Ice dancing edit

The United States won both the gold and silver medals. Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter overtook short program leaders Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons for the title, finishing ahead by a margin of 0.91. It was the fourth appearance at Junior Worlds for both teams. Russia's Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd rose from sixth after the short dance to take bronze in their first trip to the event.

Rank Name Nation Total points[26] SD FD
1 Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter   United States 163.65 2 66.25 1 97.40
2 Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons   United States 162.74 1 67.88 2 94.86
3 Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd   Russia 151.19 6 58.93 3 92.26
4 Elliana Pogrebinsky / Alex Benoit   United States 146.83 5 59.05 4 87.78
5 Anastasia Shpilevaya / Grigory Smirnov   Russia 146.55 4 59.15 6 87.40
6 Betina Popova / Yuri Vlasenko   Russia 146.21 7 58.56 5 87.65
7 Angélique Abachkina / Louis Thauron   France 145.25 8 58.34 7 86.91
8 Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac   France 144.26 3 59.65 8 84.61
9 Mackenzie Bent / Dmitre Razgulajevs   Canada 138.61 9 56.76 9 81.85
10 Sara Ghislandi / Giona Terzo Ortenzi   Italy 131.18 12 52.19 11 78.99
11 Nicole Kuzmich / Alexandr Sinicyn   Czech Republic 128.91 14 49.08 10 79.83
12 Melinda Meng / Andrew Meng   Canada 128.83 10 52.60 12 76.23
13 Marjorie Lajoie / Zachary Lagha   Canada 128.06 11 52.57 13 75.49
14 Lee Ho-jung / Richard Kang-in Kam   South Korea 119.13 13 50.10 14 69.03
15 Anzhelika Yurchenko / Volodymyr Byelikov   Ukraine 112.65 15 47.66 16 64.99
16 Ria Schwendinger / Valentin Wunderlich   Germany 109.00 17 43.87 15 65.13
17 Maria Oleynik / Yuri Hulitski   Belarus 106.31 16 45.02 18 61.29
18 Maria Golubtsova / Kirill Belobrov   Ukraine 105.90 20 42.49 17 63.41
19 Rikako Fukase / Aru Tateno   Japan 102.10 19 42.63 19 59.47
20 Alexandra Borisova / Cezary Zawadzki   Poland 100.31 18 42.80 20 57.51
Did not advance to free skating
21 Li Xibei / Xiang Guangyao   China 41.16 21 41.16
22 Guostė Damulevičiūtė / Deividas Kizala   Lithuania 39.98 22 39.98
23 Villö Marton / Danyil Semko   Hungary 38.63 23 38.63
24 Ekaterina Fedyushchenko / Lucas Kitteridge   Great Britain 38.12 24 38.12
25 Victoria Semenjuk / Artur Gruzdev   Estonia 37.68 25 37.68
26 Jenna Hertenstein / Damian Binkowski   Poland 37.68 26 37.68
27 Hannah Grace Cook / Temirlan Yerzhanov   Kazakhstan 37.60 27 37.60
28 Kimberly Wei / Illias Fourati   Hungary 34.48 28 34.48
29 Elizaveta Orlova / Stephano-Valentino Schuster   Austria 32.53 29 32.53
30 Matilda Friend / William Badaoui   Australia 31.98 30 31.98
31 Yana Bozhilova / Kaloyan Georgiev   Bulgaria 28.27 31 28.27

Medals summary edit

Medalists edit

Medals for overall placement:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Daniel Samohin   Nicolas Nadeau   Tomoki Hiwatashi
Ladies   Marin Honda   Maria Sotskova   Wakaba Higuchi
Pairs   Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař   Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev   Ekaterina Borisova / Dmitry Sopot
Ice dancing   Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter   Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons   Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd

Small medals for placement in the short segment:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Dmitri Aliev   Alexander Samarin   Deniss Vasiļjevs
Ladies   Alisa Fedichkina   Marin Honda   Maria Sotskova
Pairs   Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař   Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev   Renata Ohanesian / Mark Bardei
Ice dancing   Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons   Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter   Marie-Jade Lauriault / Romain Le Gac

Small medals for placement in the free segment:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Daniel Samohin   Nicolas Nadeau   Tomoki Hiwatashi
Ladies   Marin Honda   Wakaba Higuchi   Maria Sotskova
Pairs   Anna Dušková / Martin Bidař   Anastasia Mishina / Vladislav Mirzoev   Ekaterina Borisova / Dmitry Sopot
Ice dancing   Lorraine McNamara / Quinn Carpenter   Rachel Parsons / Michael Parsons   Alla Loboda / Pavel Drozd

By country edit

Table of medals for overall placement:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States (USA)1113
2  Japan (JPN)1012
3  Czech Republic (CZE)1001
  Israel (ISR)1001
5  Russia (RUS)0224
6  Canada (CAN)0101
Totals (6 entries)44412

Table of small medals for placement in the short segment:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Russia (RUS)2215
2  United States (USA)1102
3  Czech Republic (CZE)1001
4  Japan (JPN)0101
5  France (FRA)0011
  Latvia (LAT)0011
  Ukraine (UKR)0011
Totals (7 entries)44412

Table of small medals for placement in the free segment:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States (USA)1113
2  Japan (JPN)1102
3  Czech Republic (CZE)1001
  Israel (ISR)1001
5  Russia (RUS)0134
6  Canada (CAN)0101
Totals (6 entries)44412

References edit

  1. ^ "World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2016".
  2. ^ "Highest Score: Pairs". International Skating Union. 31 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  3. ^ "Highest Score: Ice dancing". International Skating Union. 31 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  4. ^ "Highest Score: Men". International Skating Union. 31 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  5. ^ "Announcement: ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2016" (PDF). International Skating Union.
  6. ^ "Communication No. 1956: Entries ISU Championships 2016" (PDF). International Skating Union. 31 July 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2015. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d "Entries: Men". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  8. ^ a b c "Entries: Ladies". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  9. ^ a b "Entries: Pairs". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  10. ^ a b c "Entries: Ice Dance". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  11. ^ "Österreichische Meisterschaften 2016, Entsendung zu EM und JWM" [2016 Austrian Championships, Assignments to the European and World Junior Championships] (in German). Skate Austria. December 2015. Archived from the original on 27 January 2016.
  12. ^ "SKATE CANADA NAMES TEAMS FOR 2016 ISU CHAMPIONSHIPS". Skate Canada. January 24, 2016. Archived from the original on April 28, 2019. Retrieved January 24, 2016.
  13. ^ Gulyás, Ilona (1 February 2016). "German Federation's decision on GER Junior Worlds Team". jwc2016debrecen.hu. Archived from the original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  14. ^ a b "Skaters announced for the World Junior Championships 2016". NISA. January 2016. Archived from the original on 22 January 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  15. ^ "In March the icy world returns to Debrecen". jwc2016debrecen.hu. 8 February 2016. Archived from the original on 10 February 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  16. ^ "世界フィギュア/四大陸/世界ジュニア 代表選手" [World Figure Skating/Four Continents/Junior World Figure Skating Representatives.] (in Japanese). Japan Skating Federation. December 28, 2015. Archived from the original on December 29, 2015. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  17. ^ "Uttak Junior VM 2016 kunstløp" [Norwegian World Junior Championship team] (in Norwegian). 18 February 2016. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  18. ^ "Russian World Junior Championship team (In Russian)". January 23, 2016. Archived from the original on February 1, 2016. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  19. ^ "Sveriges JVM-trupp klar" [Swedish World Junior Championship team] (in Swedish). 9 February 2016. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  20. ^ "Президиум УФФК утвердил состав на юниорский чемпионат мира!" [UFFK has confirmed team to World Junior Championships] (in Russian). Ukrainian Figure Skating Federation. 22 January 2016. Archived from the original on 22 January 2016.
  21. ^ a b "U.S. Figure Skating Announces ISU Championship Event Selections". U.S. Figure Skating. January 24, 2016. Archived from the original on January 25, 2016. Retrieved January 24, 2016.
  22. ^ a b "Chen Undergoes Left Hip Surgery". U.S. Figure Skating. January 28, 2016.
  23. ^ "Udtagelser til internationale mesterskaber" [International assignments] (in Danish). Dansk Skøjte Union. 17 December 2015. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016.
  24. ^ "Атаханова -- Спиридонов не выступят на юниорском первенстве мира из-за травмы партнерши" [Atakhanova/Spiridonov won't compete at Junior Worlds due to her injury] (in Russian). Figure Skating Federation of Russia. 10 March 2016.
  25. ^ "山本が世界ジュニア欠場 練習中に右足首骨折/フィギュア" [Yamamoto injured] (in Japanese). Sanspo. 10 March 2016. Archived from the original on 12 March 2016.
  26. ^ "ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2015 - Junior Ice Dance". 2015-03-07.

External links edit