Elena Valova Explained

Elena Valova
Country:
Fullname:Elena Aleksandrovna Valova
Birth Date:4 January 1963
Birth Place:Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Height:1.55 m
Formerpartner:Oleg Vasiliev
Formercoach:Tamara Moskvina
Retired:1988
Show-Medals:yes

Elena Aleksandrovna Valova (Russian: Елена Александровна Валова; born 4 January 1963) is a Russian former pair skater who competed internationally for the Soviet Union. With her then-husband Oleg Vasiliev, she is the 1984 Olympic champion, 1988 Olympic silver medalist, and three-time World Champion (1983, 1985, 1988). Their coach throughout their career was Tamara Moskvina.

Personal life

Valova was born in Leningrad, Russian SFSR, to parents Alla Borisovna Valova and Aleksander Dmitrievich Valov. She graduated from the P.F. Lesgaft University of Sports. She and Vasiliev were married from 1984 to 1992. Valova is now remarried to German Galusha and has a son, Roman, born in 1996. She moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1997 and currently lives in Moon Township.

Career

Valova began training at age seven under Tatiana Mishina, Alexei Mishin, and Nina Monahova. As a pair skater, she was coached by Tamara Moskvina, who partnered her with Oleg Vasiliev. The pair trained in Leningrad (Saint Petersburg).

Valova/Vasiliev's breakthrough came in the 1982–83 season. They won bronze at the Prize of Moscow News, gold at the 1982 Skate America, and then silver at the 1983 European Championships. The pair concluded their season by winning their first World title. They missed the 1983 national championships due to Vasiliev's broken jaw.

In 1984, Valova/Vasiliev won their first European title and then took gold at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. The deaths of several Soviet government officials, including one during the Olympics, cast a pall over the Soviet team and the athletes were told not to show too much joy. The pair took silver at their final event of the season, the 1984 World Championships.

In 1985, the pair won gold at both the European and World Championships but 1986 saw the emergence of the young Moscow pair Ekaterina Gordeeva / Sergei Grinkov. Although Valova/Vasiliev were awarded gold at the 1986 Europeans, they finished second to the Muscovites at both the 1986 and 1987 Worlds.

In their final amateur season, Valova/Vasiliev took silver at the 1988 Winter Olympics behind Gordeeva/Grinkov but then prevailed over the reigning Olympic champions at the 1988 World Championships. After winning their third World title, Valova/Vasiliev retired from ISU competition. After performing for a year in Igor Bobrin's ice theatre, they signed a U.S. contract – the first Soviets to do so without losing their citizenship. The pair performed together in various shows and events until the end of 1997.

Valova was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples (1984). She represented VSS Trud.

She currently teaches skating at the Robert Morris University Island Sports Center. She coached Kylie Gleason / Taylor Toth, who were the 2002 U.S. champions in juvenile pairs and the 2003 U.S. champions in intermediate pairs.

Programs

(with Vasiliev)

1979–1988

SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition
1987–1988
  • Stampede soundtrack

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  • Romance
    (from The Blizzard)
    by Georgy Sviridov
1986–1987Georgian folk:
  • Anthem of Leningrad
    Russian: Гимн Ленинграду

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  • Romance
    (from The Blizzard)
    by Georgy Sviridov
1985–1986
  • Romance
    (from The Blizzard)
    by Georgy Sviridov
1984–1985
  • Shurale
    by Färit Yarullin

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1983–1984
  • Baba-Yaga
    (from Pictures at an Exhibition)
    by Modest Mussorgsky

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1982–1983

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  • Sibaney
  • Get Back
  • Für Elise
    by Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Stairway to Heaven
  • Solveig's Song
    by Edvard Grieg

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  • Circus
1981–1982
1980–1981
  • Scheherazade
    by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

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1979–1980
  • Demon
  • Little Eagle
    Russian: Орлёнок
  • On the Nameless Height
    Russian: На безымянной высоте
  • We are blacksmiths
    Russian: Мы кузнецы и дух наш молод

1989–1997

Results

Amateur career with Vasiliev

International
Event80–8181–8282–8383–8484–8585–8686–8787–88
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=silver 2nd
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=gold 1st
align=left bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=silver 2nd
align=left bgcolor=cc9966 3rd bgcolor=gold 1st
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st
align=left bgcolor=gold 1st
align=left 6th bgcolor=cc9966 3rd bgcolor=cc9966 3rd bgcolor=gold 1st bgcolor=silver 2nd
align=left bgcolor=silver 2nd
National
align=left bgcolor=cc9966 3rd bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=gold 1st

Professional career with Vasiliev

Event90–9191–9292–9393–9494–9597–98
align=left World Professional Champ. bgcolor=silver 2nd 4th 4th 4th bgcolor=cc9966 3rd
align=left World Challenge of Champions bgcolor=silver 2nd 5th 4th bgcolor=silver 2nd bgcolor=cc9966 3rd
align=left US Open 5th bgcolor=silver 2nd 5th
align=left Masters Miko bgcolor=cc9966 3rd
align=left Canadian Professional Champ. 4th
align=left Legends bgcolor=silver 2nd

External links