Anna Tarusina Explained

Anna Tarusina
Fullname:Anna Sergeyevna Tarusina
Birth Date:24 January 2003
Birth Place:Moscow, Russia
Residence:Moscow, Russia
Coach:Sergei Davydov
Formercoach:Sergey Chemodanov
Choreographer:Viktoria Bondarenko
Sergey Verbillo
Skating Club:CSKA Moscow
Former Skating Club:Sambo-70
MDCCHP
Currenttraininglocations:Moscow
Formertraininglocations:Odintsovo
Beganskating:2008
Retired:25 September 2019
Combined Total:198.76
Combined Date:2018 CS Alpen Trophy
Sp Score:67.48
Sp Date:2018 CS Alpen Trophy
Fs Score:131.28
Fs Date:2018 CS Alpen Trophy

Anna Sergeyevna Tarusina (Russian: Анна Сергеевна Тарусина; born 24 January 2003) is a Russian former competitive figure skater. She is the 2018 CS Alpen Trophy champion. On the junior level, she is the 2018 JGP Slovakia and 2018 JGP Slovenia silver medalist.

Personal life

Tarusina was born on 24 January 2003 in Moscow. She was diagnosed with vision problems shortly after birth.[1] As a child, Tarusina studied at a music school.[1]

Career

Early career

Tarusina began learning to skate in 2008. Until 2013, she trained in Odintsovo under former coach Sergey Chemodanov.

Tarusina finished 12th at the 2015 Russian Junior Championships and 7th at the 2016 Russian Junior Championships.

Tarusina was supposed to make her ISU Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating debut in August 2016 at the 2016 JGP St. Gervais, alongside Russian teammate Alina Zagitova. However, she and her coach Sergei Davydov, along with other athletes, were in a car accident on the shuttle bus en route to the rink where the competition was taking place. Tarusina sustained a knee injury requiring surgery and was forced to withdraw from the competition. She missed most of the 2016–17 season because of the accident but placed 10th at the 2017 Russian Junior Championships.

Tarusina finished 12th at the 2018 Russian Championships, which was her first senior national championships.

2018–19 season

Tarusina made her Junior Grand Prix debut in August 2018 at the first JGP competition of the season in Bratislava, Slovakia. Tarusina placed second behind teammate Anna Shcherbakova and ahead of South Korean competitor You Young with a score of 186.68 points.

At her second assignment, JGP Slovenia, Tarusina placed second in both the short program and the free skate to claim the silver medal behind Russian teammate Anastasia Tarakanova and ahead of South Korean competitor Lee Hae-in. Tarusina set a new ISU personal best in her free skate, earning 122.50 points. Both Tarusina and her teammate Alena Kanysheva won two silver medals during JGP season, but since Kanysheva accumulated more combined total points from her two JGP events than Tarusina did, Kanysheva won the tiebreaker for the final qualification place at the 2018–19 Junior Grand Prix Final. Kanysheva accumulated only about 4 points more than Tarusina. Tarusina was the first alternate for the event.

In mid-November, Tarusina made her senior international debut at the 2018 CS Alpen Trophy, a Challenger Series competition held in Innsbruck, Austria. At the Alpen Trophy, she was ranked first in both the short program and the free skate and won the gold medal by a margin of about 24 points over the silver medalist, her teammate Serafima Sakhanovich. At this event, Tarusina also scored her personal best score of 198.76 points.

At the 2019 Russian Championships, Tarusina placed eighth.

2019–20 season

Tarusina had knee surgery related to the injury she sustained in the 2016 bus accident prior to the season. After being unable to compete on the Junior Grand Prix due to an extended recovery period, she retired from the sport on 25 September 2019.[2]

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skating
2019–2020
  • Unconditioned
  • Following a Bird
2018–2019
  • Winter in Buenos Aires
2017–2018
  • Winter in Buenos Aires
  • Overture to Raymonde
2015–2017
  • Street Passion
  • Overture to Raymonde

Competitive highlights

CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

International
Event14–1515–1616–1717–1818–1919–20
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st
International: Junior
align=left WD
align=left bgcolor=silver 2nd
align=left bgcolor=silver 2nd
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st
National
align=left 12th 8th
align=left 12th 7th 10th 5th
align=left 6th
Levels: J = Junior
WD = Withdrew, TBD = Assigned

Detailed results

Junior level

2018–19 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
1–4 February 20192019 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunioralign=center 5
71.51
align=center 5
134.62
align=center 5
206.13
19–23 December 20182019 Russian ChampionshipsSenioralign=center 9
70.01
align=center 7
135.15
align=center 8
205.16
11–18 November 20182018 CS Alpen TrophySenioralign=center 1
67.48
align=center 1
131.28
align=center bgcolor=gold 1
198.76
3–6 October 20182018 JGP SloveniaJunioralign=center 2
65.74
align=center 2
122.50
align=center bgcolor=silver 2
188.24
22–25 August 20182018 JGP SlovakiaJunioralign=center 2
67.14
align=center 3
119.54
align=center bgcolor=silver 2
186.68
2017–18 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
19–24 December 20172018 Russian ChampionshipsSenioralign=center 11
66.46
align=center 12
129.13
align=center 12
195.59
26–29 October 20172017 Ice StarJunioralign=center 1
64.00
align=center 1
123.84
align=center bgcolor=gold 1
187.84
2016–17 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
1–5 February 20172017 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunioralign=center 10
62.62
align=center 8
117.60
align=center 10
180.22
24–27 August 20162016 JGP FranceJunioralign=center WDalign=center WDalign=center WD
2015–16 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
21–23 January 20162016 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunioralign=center 8
61.13
align=center 7
110.84
align=center 7
171.97
2014–15 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
4–7 February 20152015 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunioralign=center 14
52.71
align=center 12
95.03
align=center 12
147.74

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "Больше не могу". Как карьеру талантливой российской фигуристки сломала автокатастрофа. "I cannot anymore." How the career of a talented Russian figure skater was broken by a car accident. Russian. Alexey. Adamov. Championat. 3 November 2020.
  2. Web site: Фигуристка Анна Тарусина завершила карьеру в 16 лет. Figure skater Anna Tarusina completed her career at age 16. Russian. Anatoly. Samokhvalov. RIA Novosti. 25 September 2019.