Bobrin, Igor Anatolyevich
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Igor Bobrin Personal data Represents the USSR USSR→Russia Russia
Date of birth: November 14, 1953(1953-11-14) (63 years old)
Place of birth Leningrad, USSR
Former coaches Tatiana Loveyko,
Igor Moskvin,
Yuri Ovchinnikov
Awards ,
Sports achievements The best results according to the ISU system
(at international amateur competitions) Amount: Completed an amateur
career before introduction
A new judging system.
Figure Skating World Championships Bronze Hartford 1981 Single skating European Championships Gold Innsbruck 1981 single skating Bronze Lyon 1982 single skating
Igor Anatolyevich Bobrin (born November 14, 1953 (19531114), Leningrad) is a Soviet and Russian figure skater (single skating).
European Champion (1981).
Honored Master of Sports of the USSR (1981).
Honored Coach of Russia (2002).
Content
1 Biography 1.1 Achievements 1.2 Activities 1.3 Personal life
2 Books 3 Notes 4 References
Biography[edit / edit wiki text]
Parents: Maria Ilyinichna and Anatoly Pavlovich, there is an older brother Vladimir.
At the age of 7, Bobrin was brought to figure skating (to the Izmailovsky skating rink in Leningrad) by his parents to improve his health.
The first coach was Tatyana Loveyko[1] (since 1960), since 1965 he trained with Igor Moskvin (in a group with Yuri Ovchinnikov, Vladimir Kurenbin, etc.), from 1980/1981 — with Yuri Ovchinnikov.
He spoke for Leningrad (DSO of Trade Unions).
Achievements[edit / edit wiki text]
At the USSR Championship in 1972, 1974-1976, he took 3rd place, then became a 4 time champion of the USSR (1978, 1980-1982).
The winner of the USSR Cup in 1977 and 1979 (possibly in other years).
In 1976, he made his debut at the World Championship.
At the 1980 Winter Olympics, he took 6th place, the American public was dissatisfied with the judges ' ratings.
In 1980-1982, he performed for three seasons with one free program to the music of Rick Wakeman, in 1982, due to the reduction of the free program from 5 to 4.5 minutes, he was forced to cut part of it.
The most successful year in Bobrin's sports career was 1981.
At the European Championship, he was taken out by Sergey Volkov, due to the ban on traveling abroad from Ovchinnikov.
He took second place in the mandatory figures, in the short program (called "Shot Bird") he unsuccessfully performed a cascade and was fourth.
However, then he beat everyone in the free program, purely performing five different triple jumps, including a triple lutz and a rare triple flip in those years, a number of others.
original elements, causing the delight of the audience and a long ovation at the end of the program.
The judges gave very high marks, including four 5.9 marks for artistry, which allowed him to become a champion.
At the world championship 1981 was the fifth in the figures and fourth in the short program, but once again dramatically improved the outcome in any program, becoming the second (performed four clean triple jumps, including a triple Lutz).
American audiences are enthusiastic standing ovation, the judges for artistry put grades 5,8—5,9, with the exception of one 5,6, and eventually skater received a bronze medal.
There was an incident at the 1982 European Championship in Lyon.
At the end of the warm up of the strongest group, the first of which, by lot, was supposed to be Bobrin, a group of Poles supporting Solidarity came out on the ice (sources indicate that the protest was sanctioned by the French authorities[2], contrary to the rules of the ISU).
The French audience greeted them with a disapproving whistle.
After about 1-2 minutes, the police, accompanied by the applause of the audience, managed to escort them off the ice, but Bobrin's start was noticeably delayed, which affected his performance.
Igor broke the first difficult jump — a triple lutz, having performed only a double one, having hesitantly performed several other jumps.
The judges lowered the scores for the technique up to 5.5-5.6.
As a result, Bobrin took only the third place.
In January 1983, he took 2nd place at the USSR championship, but the Federation's leadership, under the pretext of "rejuvenation of the team", did not include him in the national team, and the third vacancy from the USSR at the European Championship remained unoccupied.
In April 1983, during the demonstration performances of the USSR national team, Bobrin was sent off from the big sport.[3]
Activity[edit / edit wiki text]
Bobrin is one of the most original and artistic figure skaters.
He paid great attention to the production and music, creating small performances even in free programs (I. B. Moskvin invited Yuri Potemkin, a dancer of the Leningrad Kirov Opera and Ballet Theater, who was specially engaged in theatrical art with Bobrin).
In addition, improved the elements themselves, coming up with a whole series of steps on one foot in different directions, the combination of 4-5 jumps in different directions (in 1980-1982 played a unique combination of the four jumping in sex trafficking, and double Axel in different directions), the original spiral rotation; one of the world captured in five different triple jumps, the world's only played the so called "Bobrinsky jump" (jump bobrin) with the first rotation in the horizontal plane (invented by Tamara Moskvina), successfully entering them into the program.
Bobrin performed the following triple jumps: lutz, flip, rittberger, salchow and toe loop.
Having a fine sense of balance, he was able to make a jump "on his teeth", that is, in the most unfortunate position.
His demonstration performances with the programs "Garson" (the original name "Waiter" was banned by the leadership of the Sports Committee), "Musketeer", "Sleeping Cowboy", "Man of a Thousand Masks", "Pair Skating", etc. have also gone down in history.
He graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Physical Culture named after P. F. Lesgaft, the director's department of GITIS.
For 10 years he headed the department of figure skating choreographers at GITIS.
After the death of Lyudmila Pakhomova in 1986, he was invited to teach at the Department of figure Skating choreographers of the GITIS Choreography Department, where he worked for 10 years.
On February 2, 1986, he created the Theater of Ice Miniatures; he is its artistic director and director.
He helped to set programs for a number of figure skaters, including Kristina Chako (Hungary), which allowed her to become the second at the 1997 European Championships.
As a choreographer, he worked with the couple Elena Berezhnaya Anton Sikharulidze, who became Olympic champions in 2002; in 2005, he helped put on the program for Irina Slutskaya, when she became world champion.
In 2011-2012, he was a member of the judging panel of the TV show "Cup of Professionals"[4] of the all Russian television channel Channel One (Russia).
Personal life[edit / edit wiki text]
Since 1983, he has been married to Natalia Bestemyanova, an Olympic figure skating champion.
There is a son Maxim (born 1977) from his first marriage with Natalia Ovchinnikova.
Books[edit / edit wiki text]
Natalia Bestemyanova, Igor Bobrin, Andrey Bukin.
A couple in which there are three.
- Moscow: "Vagrius", 2001 — - ISBN 5-264-00650-4
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
Лов Loveyko Tatyana Ivanovna ↑ [1] (unavailable link from 15-05-2016 [248 days]) ↑ Sports biography of Igor Bobrin: The last season of 1983 ↑ "Professional Cup"
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
"The site of the Theater of Ice Miniatures" the site of the Ice Trio Interview with Bobrin (February 2002) Article by E. Wojciechowska Interview with Bobrin (April 2006) The Unloved revelations of a sleeping cowboy
European Figure Skating Champions men
1891: Oskar Ulig · 1892-1894: Eduard Engelmann · 1895: Tibor von Foldvari · 1898-1900: Ulrich Salchow · 1901: Gustav Hugel · 1904: Ulrich Salchow · 1905: Max Bohach · 1906-1907: Ulrich Salchow · 1908: Ernst Hertz · 1909-1910: Ulrich Salchow · 1911: Per Toren · 1912: Gost Sandal · 1913: Ulrich Salchow · 1914: Fritz Kahler · 1922-1923: Willy Beckle · 1924: Fritz Kahler · 1925-1928: Willy Beckle · 1929-1936: Karl Schaefer · 1937-1938: Felix Kaspar · 1939: Graham Sharp · 1947: Hans Gershwiler · 1948: Dick Button · 1949: Edi Rada · 1950: Ede Kiray · 1951-1952: Helmut Seibt · 1953-1954: Carlo Fassi · 1955-1957: Alain Giletti · 1958-1959: Karol Divin · 1960-1961: Alain Giletti · 1962-1964: Alain Kalma · 1965-1968: Emmerich Danzer · 1969-1973: Ondrej Nepela · 1974: Jan Hoffmann · 1975: Vladimir Kovalev · 1976: John Curry · 1977-1979: Jan Hoffmann · 1980: Robin Cousins · 1981:
Igor Bobrin · 1982-1983: Norbert Schramm · 1984: Alexander Fadeev · 1985-1986: Josef Sabovchik · 1987-1989: Alexander Fadeev · 1990-1991: Viktor Petrenko · 1992: Peter Barna · 1993: Dmitry Dmitrenko · 1994: Viktor Petrenko · 1995: Ilya Kulik · 1996: Vyacheslav Zagorodnyuk · 1997: Alexey Urmanov · 1998-1999: Alexey Yagudin · 2000-2001: Evgeny Plushenko · 2002: Alexey Yagudin · 2003: Evgeny Plushenko · 2004: Briand Joubert · 2005-2006: Evgeny Plushenko · 2007: Briand Joubert · 2008: Tomas Werner · 2009: Brian Joubert · 2010: Evgeny Plushenko · 2011: Florent Amodio · 2012: Evgeny Plushenko · 2013-2016: Javier Fernandez
Champions of the USSR in single skating
1920: Fyodor Datlin · 1923-1924, 1927-1929: Yuri Zeldovich · 1933: Ivan Bogoyavlensky · 1937-1939, 1940: Peter Chernyshev · 1945: Sergey Vasiliev · 1946, 1947: Peter Orlov · 1948-1950: Sergey Vasiliev · 1951: Peter Orlov · 1952: Ivan Mitrushchenkov · 1953, 1954: Valentin Zakharov 1955: Igor Persiantsev · 1956-1960: Lev Mikhailov · 1961-1962: Valery Meshkov · 1963: Alexander Vedenin · 1964: Valery Meshkov · 1965: Alexander Vedenin · 1966: Valery Meshkov · 1967-1971: Sergey Chetverukhin · 1972: Vladimir Kovalev · 1973: Sergey Chetverukhin · 1974: Sergey Volkov · 1975: Yuri Ovchinnikov · 1976: Sergey Volkov · 1977: Vladimir Kovalev · 1978: Igor Bobrin · 1979: Konstantin Kokora * 1980-1982: Igor Bobrin · 1983: Alexander Fadeev · 1984: Vitaly Egorov · 1985: Vladimir Kotin · 1986-1990: Alexander Fadeev · 1991: Viktor Petrenko · 1992: Alexey Urmanov
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bobrin, _igor Anatolyevich&oldid=79580323"
Categories: Born on November 14, Born in 1953, Personalities alphabetically Born in St. Petersburg Honored Masters of Sports of the USSR Honored Coaches of Russia Athletes alphabetically Figure skaters alphabetically European Champions in figure skating USSR Champions in figure skating Figure skaters at the 1980 Winter Olympics Figure Skaters of the USSR Choreographers in figure skating
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