Hana Yoshida Explained

Hana Yoshida
Native Name:吉田 陽菜
Native Name Lang:ja
Also Known As:Hanna
Country: Japan
Birth Date:21 August 2005
Birth Place:Aichi, Japan
Hometown:Uji, Kyoto, Japan
Discipline:Women's singles
Coach:Mie Hamada, Hiroaki Sato, Satsuki Muramoto, Noriyuki Kanzaki
Skating Club:Kinoshita Academy
Beganskating:2012

is a Japanese figure skater. She is the 2023–24 ISU Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, 2023 Cup of China champion, 2024 Finlandia Trophy champion, 2024 Skate Canada International bronze medalist, 2023 CS Lombardia Trophy silver medalist, 2024 CS Nebelhorn Trophy bronze medalist, 2023 Triglav Trophy champion, and the 2022 Egna Spring Trophy champion.

At the junior level, she is a two-time ISU Junior Grand Prix gold medalist, the 2022 Bavarian Open Junior champion, and a two-time Japanese Junior medalist. Yoshida is the nineteenth woman to successfully land a triple Axel in international competition.

Personal life

Yoshida was born on August 21, 2005, in Aichi, Japan.

As a child, she attended an international school where she learned how to speak English fluently. In 2024, Yoshida graduated from Chukyo High School before enrolling into Doshisha University to study the Faculty of Global and Regional Studies. In addition, she also studies French at the university.[1]

Her figure skating idol is Mao Asada.

Career

Early years

Yoshida began skating in 2012 after following her older sister into the sport. She placed ninth at the 2015 Japan Novice B National Championships but won the category the next year.

2017–18 season

Yoshida won the 2017 Japan Novice National Championships and was invited to compete at the 2017 Japan National Championships. She placed eighth overall. She was also invited to skate in the gala at the 2017 NHK Trophy as the 2017 Japanese national novice champion.

Yoshida was sent to the 2018 Challenge Cup, winning the advanced novice ladies ahead of Alysa Liu of United States.

2018–19 season

In August 2018, Yoshida competed at the 2018 Asian Open Trophy. She attempted the triple Axel in the free program but fell, ranking third overall.

2019–20 season

Yoshida competed at the 2019 Japan Junior National Championships. She placed tenth in the short program. However, Yoshida landed a clean triple Axel in the free and won the bronze medal. Due to the results, she was invited to compete at the senior division. Yoshida finished in nineteenth place.

2020–21 season

The 2020–21 Junior Grand Prix circuit was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Yoshida was then invited to compete at the 2020 Japan Open as part of Team Blue. She attempted the triple Axel unsuccessfully. She won the silver medal at the 2020 Japan Junior Nationals behind Rino Matsuike, then placing sixteenth at the senior event.

2021–22 season

Yoshida placed fourth at the 2021 Japan Junior National Championships. She was invited to the senior event because the junior champion Mao Shimada was too young to compete. She placed ninth overall.

Yoshida attended the 2022 Bavarian Open to compete in the Junior Women II category. She placed first in the short even though she popped the planned triple flip. Yoshida landed a clean triple Axel in the free skate, becoming the nineteenth woman to land the jump in an international competition successfully. She won over Japan's Rinka Watanabe. Also eligible to compete at the senior level, she was sent to 2022 Egna Spring Trophy. Yoshida landed the triple Axel in the short and another one in the free, but the jump was landed on the quarter. She won by outscoring South Korea's Lee Hae-in by 28.45 points.

2022–23 season: Junior Grand Prix debut

In August 2022, Yoshida debuted on the Junior Grand Prix at the 2022 JGP France in Courchevel. In her short program, she underrotated both jumps in her combination but otherwise gave a clean skate which placed her second behind her teammate Ayumi Shibayama and earned her the highest program components score awarded in that segment of the competition. During the free skate, Yoshida successfully landed a triple Axel but stepped out after the landing. Although her triple flip's edge was marked as unclear, and the first jump in her triple Lutz-triple toe combination was underrotated by a quarter, she had no falls, and the program was otherwise clean. She won the event with a lead of 15.13 points over Shibayama, who finished in second place. Yoshida became the first Japanese woman to win a Junior Grand Prix competition since Rika Kihira in 2016. Yoshida was initially scheduled to compete at the Armenian stop on the Junior Grand Prix circuit. However, when that was cancelled due to the September conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, she was reassigned elsewhere. Yoshida won a second gold medal at the 2022 JGP Italy, in the process qualifying for the 2022–23 Junior Grand Prix Final.

Yoshida entered the Final in Turin as a medal favourite after winning both of her qualifying events, but she finished sixth of sixth skaters in the short program after falling on her jump combination, which she called "very disappointing." The free skate proved no better, opening with a fall on an underrotated triple Axel and going on to make several other jump errors, including a singled attempt at a triple Lutz. She was again last in the segment and last overall.

Competing at the senior 2022–23 Japan Championships, Yoshida erred on two jumps in the short program, placing fourteenth in that segment. In the free skate she successfully landed a triple Axel and seven other triple jumps, placing third in that segment and rising to sixth overall. She was assigned to compete at the 2023 Four Continents Championships. Yoshida went on to finish eighth at the Four Continents Championships.

2023–24 season: Grand Prix debut and Grand Prix Final bronze medal

Yoshida made her Challenger debut at the 2023 CS Lombardia Trophy, taking the silver medal. Invited to make her senior Grand Prix debut at the 2023 Skate America, she finished ninth in the short program after singling a planned triple Axel. She stepped out of her triple Axel in the free skate, but performed strongly otherwise and finished third in the segment, rising to fourth place overall. She finished less than four points behind bronze medalist Niina Petrõkina of Estonia. At the 2023 Cup of China, she placed third in the short program after falling on an underrotated triple Axel, but rallied to win the free skate and take the gold medal by 0.75 points over Rinka Watanabe. Yoshida said she was "surprised" to have won, and said she was focused on improving on various jump issues.With Yoshida's results qualifying her for the 2023–24 Grand Prix Final in Beijing, she placed fourth in the short program after falling on both her triple Axel attempt and her jump combination. She rebounded in the free skate, landing a triple Axel and seven other triple jumps, though the triple Axel was deemed a quarter short of rotation. Yoshida was second in that segment with a new personal best score of 142.51 points, rising to the bronze medal. She finished only 0.20 points behind Belgian silver medalist Loena Hendrickx. Yoshida described it as "a dream for me to compete on this stage."

Multiple jump errors in the short program at the 2023–24 Japan Championships saw Yoshida come ninth in that segment. She rose to seventh after the free skate, calling the result "very disappointing."

In February, Yoshida received the Best Newcomer award at the 2024 ISU Skating Awards. She concluded the season in March at the 2024 World Championships, held in Montreal. Yoshida came eighth in the short program after both parts of her jump combination was called a quarter underrotated. She also had several quarter calls in the free skate, including on her triple Axel, finishing sixth in the segment but remaining eighth overall.

2024–2025 season

Yoshida started the season by winning bronze at the 2024 CS Nebelhorn Trophy behind American skaters, Elyce Lin-Gracey and Isabeau Levito. Going on to compete on the 2024–25 Grand Prix circuit, Yoshida came fourth in the short program at the 2024 Skate Canada International after underrotating the second part of her jump combination. She was third in the free skate, despite a number of jump errors, and won the bronze medal behind Japanese peers Kaori Sakamoto and Rino Matsuike. Following the event, Christopher Tin, the musician that composed Yoshida's short program music, praised her performance on his social media accounts. Three weeks later, Yoshida would compete at the 2024 Finlandia Trophy. At the event, she won the short program and obtained a new personal best score. In the free skate, Yoshida would fall on her opening triple axel but delivered her remaining jumps relatively cleanly. While she would place second in that segment of the competition behind Rino Matsuike, she managed to hold onto the gold medal position overall due to her short program result.[2] With her Grand Prix results, Yoshida accumulated enough points to qualify for the 2024–25 Grand Prix Final.[3]

Honors and awards

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition
2024–2025
  • Temen Oblak (Dark Clouds)
  • S.O.S. d'un terrien en détresse
  • Temen Oblak (Dark Clouds)

----

2023–2024
  • Koo Koo Fun
  • Shakuhachi
  • La terre vue du ciel

----

----

2022–2023
  • 6. Uranus, the Magician
  • 3. Mercury, the Winged Messenger
  • Princess Leia's Theme
2021–2022
  • Planet Ocean Suite
2020–2021
2019–2020
2018–2019
2017–2018
  • James Bond Theme
  • The Pink Panther Theme
  • It Had Better Be Tonight

----

  • James Bond Theme

Detailed results

Senior level

2023–24 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
March 18–24, 20242024 World Championshipsalign=center 8
64.56
align=center 6
130.37
align=center 8
194.93
February 15–18, 20242024 Tallink Hotels Cupalign=center 4
59.02
align=center 1
128.23
align=center bgcolor=silver 2
187.25
December 20–24, 20232023–24 Japan Championshipsalign=center 9
62.73
align=center 6
131.49
align=center 7
194.22
December 7–10, 20232023–24 Grand Prix Finalalign=center 4
60.65
align=center 2
142.51
3
203.16
November 10–12, 20232023 Cup of Chinaalign=center 3
64.65
align=center 1
139.32
align=center bgcolor=gold 1
203.97
October 20–22, 20232023 Skate Americaalign=center 9
59.40
align=center 3
131.58
align=center 4
190.98
September 8–10, 20232023 CS Lombardia Trophyalign=center 3
62.54
align=center 1
122.91
align=center bgcolor=Silver2
185.45
2022–23 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
April 12–16, 20232023 Triglav Trophyalign=center 1
69.79
align=center 1
141.67
align=center bgcolor=gold 1
211.46
February 7–12, 20232023 Four Continents Championshipsalign=center 10
59.82
align=center 7
129.78
align=center 8
189.60
December 21–25, 20222022–23 Japan Championshipsalign=center 14
59.49
align=center 3
137.72
align=center 6
197.21
2021–22 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
April 7–10, 20222022 Egna Springs Trophy1
73.04
1
137.73
align=center bgcolor=gold 1
210.77
December 22–26, 20212021–22 Japan Championshipsalign=center 13
61.35
align=center 8
126.09
align=center 9
187.44
2020–21 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
December 24–27, 20202020–21 Japan Championshipsalign=center 19
58.79
align=center 17
104.99
align=center 16
163.78
October 3, 20202020 Japan Openalign=center align=center 5
107.56
align=center bgcolor=gold 5P/1T
2019–20 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
December 18–22, 20192019–20 Japan Championshipsalign=center 21
50.96
align=center 18
98.76
align=center 19
149.72

Junior level

2022–23 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
December 8–11, 20222022–23 Junior Grand Prix Final6
55.51
6
102.79
6
158.30
October 12–15, 20222022 JGP Italy2
66.89
1
141.42
1
208.31
August 24–27, 20222022 JGP France2
66.56
1
136.96
1
203.52
2021–22 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
January 18–23, 20222022 Bavarian Open1
60.73
1
133.50
1
194.23
November 19–21, 20212021–22 Japan Junior Championships3
62.48
4
110.07
4
172.55
2020–21 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
November 21–23, 20202020–21 Japan Junior Championships2
62.05
2
127.44
2
189.49
2019–20 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
November 15–17, 20192019–20 Japan Junior Championships10
52.75
3
115.11
3
167.86
2017–18 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
November 24–26, 20172017–18 Japan Junior Championships12
54.89
10
103.15
8
158.04

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 吉田陽菜「全日本で今年こそ」五輪まではホップ・ステップ・ジャンプ!“ステップ”の今季は大学とリンクを行き来の超多忙な日々 . FNN . FNN . 17 November 2024.
  2. Web site: 2024 GP Finlandia Trophy - Women's Free Skate: Hana Yoshida . Skating Scores . Skating Scores . 17 November 2024.
  3. Web site: Update: Hana YOSHIDA has qualified for the Grand Prix Final with 26 points. . X . Skate Japan News . 17 November 2024.
  4. Web site: Hall of Fame 2024 . International Skating Union . International Skating Union . 4 November 2024.