1997–98 ISU Junior Series explained

1997–98 ISU Junior Series
Comptype:ISU Junior Series
Skatingseason:1997–98
Nextcomp:1998–99 ISU Junior Grand Prix

The 1997–98 ISU Junior Series was the first season of what was later named the ISU Junior Grand Prix, a series of international junior level competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was designed to be a junior-level complement to the ISU Champions Series, which was for senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The top skaters from the series met at the Junior Series Final in Lausanne, Switzerland on March 5–8, 1998.

Competitions

The locations of the ISU Junior Grand Prix events change yearly. In the 1997–98 season, the series was composed of the following events:

DateEventLocation
August 19–23, 19971997 JS Grand Prix de Saint GervaisSaint-Gervais-les-Bains, France
September 17–21, 19971997 JS Sofia CupSofia, Bulgaria
September 25–28, 19971997 JS Ukrainian SouvenirDnipropetrovsk, Ukraine
October 8–11, 19971997 JS Pokal der Blauen SchwerterChemnitz, Germany
October 23–26, 19971997 JS Hungarian CupSzékesfehérvár, Hungary
Oct. 30 – Nov. 2, 19971997 JS Grand Prix SNPBanská Bystrica, Slovakia
March 6–8, 19981997–98 JS FinalLausanne, Switzerland

Series notes

At the Junior Series Final, Timothy Goebel, the winner of the men's event, made history by becoming the first skater to land a quadruple salchow jump in competition. It was videotaped by the father of another skater.

Junior Series Final qualifiers

The following skaters qualified for the 1997–98 Junior Series Final, in order of qualification.

There were eight qualifiers in singles and six in pairs and ice dance.

MenLadiesPairsIce dance
1 Timothy Goebel Viktoria Volchkova Alena Maltseva / Oleg Popov Flavia Ottaviani / Massimo Scali
2 Ivan Dinev Julia Soldatova Julia Obertas / Dmytro Palamarchuk Jessica Joseph / Charles Butler
3 Matt Savoie Amber Corwin Natalie Vlandis / Jered Guzman Federica Faiella / Luciano Milo
4 Vincent Restencourt Chisato Shina Victoria Maxiuta / Vladislav Zhovnirski Oksana Potdykova / Denis Petukhov
5 Christo Turlakov Andrea Diewald Svetlana Nikolaeva / Alexei Sokolov Zita Gebora / Andras Visontai
6 David Jäschke Shelby Lyons Tiffany Stiegler / Johnnie Stiegler Jamie Silverstein / Justin Pekarek
7 Yosuke Takeuchi Morgan Rowealign=center align=center
8 Vitaly Danilchenko Elena Pingachovaalign=center align=center

Christel Borghi was given the host wildcard spot to the Junior Series Final. She placed 8th out of 8 competitors. Viktoria Volchkova withdrew before the competition with injury.

Medalists

Men

Competitionalign=center bgcolor=gold Goldalign=center bgcolor=silver Silveralign=center bgcolor=cc9966 BronzeDetails
France David Jäschke
Bulgaria
Ukraine
Germany David Jäschke
Hungary
Slovakia
Final

Ladies

Competitionalign=center bgcolor=gold Goldalign=center bgcolor=silver Silveralign=center bgcolor=cc9966 BronzeDetails
France
Bulgaria
Ukraine
Germany
Hungary
Slovakia
Final

Pairs

Competitionalign=center bgcolor=gold Goldalign=center bgcolor=silver Silveralign=center bgcolor=cc9966 BronzeDetails
France
Bulgaria
Ukraine
Germany
Hungary
Slovakia
Final

Ice dance

Competitionalign=center bgcolor=gold Goldalign=center bgcolor=silver Silveralign=center bgcolor=cc9966 BronzeDetails
France
Bulgaria
Ukraine
Germany
Hungary
Slovakia
Final

External links