2021 World Figure Skating Championships

The 2021 World Figure Skating Championships were held in Stockholm, Sweden from March 22–28, 2021.[1] Figure skaters competed for the title of world champion in men's singles, ladies' singles, pairs, and ice dance. The competition was used to determine the entry quotas for each federation at the 2022 World Championships and was the first qualification event for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

2021 World Figure Skating Championships
Type:ISU Championship
Date:March 22 – 28
Season:2020–21
Location:Stockholm, Sweden
Host:Skate Sweden
Venue:Ericsson Globe
Champions
Men's singles:
United States Nathan Chen
Ladies' singles:
FSR Anna Shcherbakova
Pairs:
FSR Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov
Ice dance:
FSR Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov
Navigation
Previous:
2019 World Championships
2020 World Championships
Next:
2022 World Championships

Stockholm was announced as the host in June 2018.[2] It was the first time that Stockholm had hosted the World Championships since 1947 and the first time that Sweden had hosted since 2008.[3]

The World Championships were the only ISU Championship event held during the 2020–21 season, as the European, Four Continents, and World Junior Championships were all cancelled. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, event organizers hosted the event in a bubble.[1]

No public spectators were allowed at the event. Like the 2020–21 Grand Prix series, the World Championships were livestreamed on the ISU's YouTube channel with geographical restrictions for markets that have TV rights in place.

The 2015 Eurovision contest winner Måns Zelmerlöw and runner-up Polina Gagarina recorded the official song for the event, "Circles and Squares", which they performed live at the exhibition gala.

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

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Scheduling

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In early December, even as the 2021 European Championships and the 2020–21 Grand Prix Final were cancelled, ISU Vice President Alexander Lakernik stated that the ISU would make "every effort" to hold the World Championships.[4] Initial concerns about Swedish COVID restrictions led Lakernik to comment that the ISU would have considered moving the competition to Russia, if not for the Court of Arbitration for Sport ban on the country holding World Championship events.[5] A Swedish government ban which limited entrants in international competitions hosted by Sweden to only those from the European Union had been lifted on November 20, 2020.[6] However, on December 22, 2020, Skate Sweden, the host federation, cancelled all domestic championships for the remainder of the 2020–21 season in compliance with Public Health Agency of Sweden guidelines.[7]

During its January 28 meeting, the ISU Council affirmed that the World Championships would proceed as scheduled.[8] The council also announced that the World Championships' status as an Olympic qualification event would be reevaluated and any potential changes determined based on the entries received by the ISU as of the March 1, 2021 deadline.[9] On March 4, the ISU affirmed that the Olympic qualification process would proceed as previously announced, as nearly all ISU member nations with qualified skaters had confirmed entry to the 2021 World Championships.[10]

In an effort to limit the number of skaters gathering in one place, the ISU announced that instead of a drawing process, the starting order for the free skate/free dance would be the reverse of the short program/rhythm dance placements.[11]

ISU member nations' response

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As early as November 2020, Skate Canada stated that there was a possibility, if the event continued as planned, that they would not send skaters due to insufficient COVID-19 protocols.[12] Despite the cancellation of its national championships and lack of competitive opportunities for its skaters, Skate Canada announced its selection criteria for naming a Worlds team in January 2021.[13]

The Japan Skating Federation withdrew their delegation from the 2021 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, scheduled for early March in Dordrecht, Netherlands, calling into question their figure skaters' participation at Worlds.[14][15] The Japan Skating Federation eventually decided to send skaters to Worlds, due to it being an Olympic qualification event, unlike the World Short Track Speed Skating Championships. The Japanese delegation arrived at the competition throughout the weekend of March 20–22, with all athletes testing negative upon arrival.[16]

All members of the Chinese Skating Association's team were vaccinated prior to flying to Stockholm.[17]

Skaters' response

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Skaters came into the event with varying levels of preparation due to their respective governments' and federations' responses to the pandemic in their home country.[18][19] Multiple skaters were also unable to train with their main coaches due to travel and/or visa restrictions and spent the season in temporary training situations, either on their own or with a different set of coaches.[20][21]

In January 2021, four-time and defending ice dance world champions Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France announced that they would not compete at the World Championships, citing uncertainties regarding COVID; they planned to focus on the 2022 Winter Olympics next season instead.[22] Several other skaters scheduled to compete at Worlds, including two-time defending men's world champion Nathan Chen of the United States, expressed during the weeks leading up to the competition that while they were grateful for the opportunity to compete, they had similar concerns about COVID safety protocols at Worlds;[23][24] however, some skaters felt that proper precautions were being taken and that they would likely be safe at the event.[25][26]

Criticism and concerns

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COVID management

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During the months preceding skaters' and officials' arrival in Stockholm, a petition calling for the ISU to implement a tighter bubble and stricter quarantine rules garnered thousands of signatures.[27] The ISU did not address the campaign's concerns about how COVID safety protocols would be enforced at the event.[23]

The attendance of the Figure Skating Federation of Russia (FSR) drew particular scrutiny, as the federation was accused of holding several domestic and international events – including a Grand Prix event, the 2020 Rostelecom Cup – in violation of the ISU's COVID safety guidelines.[18] In addition, a significant number of Russian skaters contracted COVID; at least 11 members of Russia's 17-person Worlds team tested positive at some point during the season.[28] Nevertheless, all members of the FSR delegation tested negative during the initial round of testing administered upon arrival in Stockholm.[29]

Judging

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Judges who could travel with fewer COVID restrictions were more available than those who could not, resulting in a geographically uneven distribution of judges on the panel.

After the event, there were some suggestions that, depending on the skaters’ nationality, judges were applying criteria inconsistently when awarding both TES and PCS marks.[30] In addition, FSR's Alexandra Trusova's five-quad free skate performance, during which she fell multiple times and completed only one quad cleanly, was cited as an example of judges inflating TES and PCS marks in favor of "technical bravery over artistic brilliance".[31] Trusova rose from 12th after the short program to the bronze medal position.[32]

COVID at Worlds

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Crown Princess Victoria had been scheduled to open the competition and participate in the opening ceremony, before she and her husband, Prince Daniel, contracted COVID-19 in the weeks prior to the event.[33] She instead appeared in a video message from Haga Palace to welcome the athletes.[34]

Delegations began arriving on March 20 and 21, and members underwent the required multiple PCR tests and quarantine period in their hotel rooms until a negative result was returned. Attendees were not eligible for accreditation until passing a second PCR test. After receiving accreditation, limited testing was conducted and attendees were only required to fill out daily symptom questionnaires and undergo temperature checks.[35]

On March 22, the ISU announced that one positive case had been found during one of the initial rounds of testing and that contact tracing procedures were being undertaken.[36] The person with the positive case, later revealed to be Viktoriia Safonova of Belarus, was quarantined and not allowed to participate. Safonova's coach subsequently tested negative in a second round of testing, and Safonova, who traveled from a different city, had had no contact with the other members of the Belarusian team or their coaches.[37] The ISU did not enforce an isolation period for close contacts.[35]

On March 24, the ISU announced that a second positive case had been found, also during the initial round of testing upon arrival and prior to accreditation. Without accreditation, neither positive had been let into the competition bubble.[38]

On March 26, the ISU announced that a third positive case had been found, with this case being discovered within the bubble.[39] After the event, ice dancer Simon Proulx-Sénécal of Armenia revealed that he had tested positive on March 25, the day before the ice dance competition was scheduled to start, and asked for a re-test prior to the rhythm dance on March 26. As the test result did not come back until after the rhythm dance had concluded, Proulx-Sénécal and his partner, Tina Garabedian, were not allowed to compete. The result came back as a second positive. Proulx-Sénécal expressed that he believed his first test was a false positive, as his federation later received a written test result stating that his second test taken the morning of the rhythm dance was negative, not positive as initially conveyed to their team doctor.[40] He subsequently tested negative twice more, once the day after the rhythm dance in Stockholm (March 27) and once upon returning to his training base in Montreal on March 29.[41] As of June 2021, the ISU had launched an investigation into the handling of the situation.[42]

Qualification

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Age and minimum TES requirements

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Skaters were eligible for the 2021 World Championships if they turned 15 years of age before July 1, 2020, and if they met the minimum technical elements score requirements. For the 2021 World Championships, the ISU accepted scores if they were obtained at senior or junior-level ISU-recognized international competitions during the current or preceding two seasons and recorded at least 21 days before the first official practice day of the championships.[1]

Minimum technical scores (TES)
Discipline SP / RD FS / FD
Men 34 64
Ladies 30 51
Pairs 27 44
Ice dance 33 47
Must be achieved at an ISU-recognized international event
in the ongoing or preceding two seasons.
SP/RD and FS/FD scores may be attained at different events.

Traditionally, scores must be attained from an ISU-recognized senior-level international competition during the current or preceding season. However, due to the ongoing pandemic, the ISU extended the validity to scores attained at an ISU-recognized international competition at either the senior or junior level during the current or preceding two seasons. Skaters who did not have any technical minimums (e.g. new pairs or ice dance teams) or still did not meet technical minimums under the expanded timeline could submit video via their federations to the ISU for virtual judging.[43]

Number of entries per discipline

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Normally, the number of entries would be based on the results of the preceding Worlds. Because the 2020 World Championships were cancelled, results from the 2019 World Championships were used instead.[44]

Spots Men Ladies Pairs Dance
3   United States
  Japan
FSR[a]
  Kazakhstan
  Japan
  China
FSR[a]
FSR[a]
  United States
  Canada
2   China
FSR[a]
  Italy
  Czech Republic
  United States
  South Korea
  Canada
  France
  Canada
  Italy
  United States
  Austria
  Germany
  France
  Italy
If not listed above, one entry is allowed.

Schedule

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Date Discipline Time Segment
Wednesday, March 24 Ladies 10:10 Short program
All 17:30 Opening ceremony
Pairs 18:30 Short program
Thursday, March 25 Men 11:40 Short program
Pairs 18:10 Free skating
Friday, March 26 Ice dance 10:52 Rhythm dance
Ladies 18:00 Free skating
Saturday, March 27 Men 11:00 Free skating
Ice dance 17:00 Free dance
Sunday, March 28 All 14:30 Exhibition
All times are listed in local time (UTC+01:00) from March 24 to 27 and (UTC+02:00) on March 28.[1]

Entries

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Member nations began announcing their entries in December 2020. The International Skating Union published a complete list of entries on March 2, 2021.

Country Men[45] Ladies[46] Pairs[47] Ice dance[48]
  Armenia Tina Garabedian / Simon Proulx-Sénécal
  Australia[49] Kailani Craine Holly Harris / Jason Chan
  Austria[50] Maurizio Zandron Olga Mikutina Miriam Ziegler / Severin Kiefer
  Azerbaijan Vladimir Litvintsev Ekaterina Ryabova Ekaterina Kuznetsova / Oleksandr Kolosovskyi
  Belarus[51] Konstantin Milyukov Bogdana Lukashevich / Alexander Stepanov Viktoria Semenjuk / Ilya Yukhimuk
  Belgium[52] Loena Hendrickx
  Bulgaria[53] Larry Loupolover Alexandra Feigin Mina Zdravkova / Christopher M. Davis
  Canada[54] Keegan Messing Emily Bausback
Madeline Schizas
Kirsten Moore-Towers / Michael Marinaro
Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud
Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Nikolaj Sørensen
Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier
Marjorie Lajoie / Zachary Lagha
  China[55] Jin Boyang
Yan Han
Chen Hongyi Peng Cheng / Jin Yang
Sui Wenjing / Han Cong
Wang Shiyue / Liu Xinyu
  Chinese Taipei Emmy Ma
  Croatia Lana Petranović / Antonio Souza-Kordeiru
  Cyprus Emilea Zingas
  Czech Republic[56] Michal Březina Eliška Březinová Elizaveta Zhuk / Martin Bidař Natálie Taschlerová / Filip Taschler
  Estonia[57] Aleksandr Selevko Eva-Lotta Kiibus
  Finland[58] Valtter Virtanen Jenni Saarinen Juulia Turkkila / Matthias Versluis
  France[59] Kévin Aymoz Maé-Bérénice Méité Cléo Hamon / Denys Strekalin
Coline Keriven / Noël-Antoine Pierre
Adelina Galyavieva / Louis Thauron
Evgeniia Lopareva / Geoffrey Brissaud
FSR[a][63] Mikhail Kolyada
Evgeni Semenenko
Anna Shcherbakova
Alexandra Trusova
Elizaveta Tuktamysheva
Aleksandra Boikova / Dmitrii Kozlovskii
Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov
Evgenia Tarasova / Vladimir Morozov
Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov
Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin
Tiffany Zahorski / Jonathan Guerreiro
  Georgia[64] Morisi Kvitelashvili Alina Urushadze Anastasiia Metelkina / Daniil Parkman
  Germany[65] Paul Fentz Nicole Schott Annika Hocke / Robert Kunkel Katharina Müller / Tim Dieck
  Great Britain[66] Peter James Hallam Natasha McKay Zoe Jones / Christopher Boyadji Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson
  Hong Kong Yi Christy Leung
  Hungary Júlia Láng Ioulia Chtchetinina / Márk Magyar Anna Yanovskaya / Ádám Lukács
  Israel Alexei Bychenko Nelli Ioffe Anna Vernikov / Evgeni Krasnopolski Shira Ichilov / Laurent Abecassis
  Italy[67] Daniel Grassl
Matteo Rizzo
Lara Naki Gutmann Nicole Della Monica / Matteo Guarise
Rebecca Ghilardi / Filippo Ambrosini
Charlène Guignard / Marco Fabbri
Carolina Moscheni / Francesco Fioretti
  Japan[68] Yuzuru Hanyu
Yuma Kagiyama
Shoma Uno
Rika Kihira
Satoko Miyahara
Kaori Sakamoto
Riku Miura / Ryuichi Kihara Misato Komatsubara / Tim Koleto
  Kazakhstan[69] Mikhail Shaidorov
  Latvia Deniss Vasiļjevs Angelīna Kučvaļska
  Lithuania Elžbieta Kropa Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevičius
  Mexico[70] Donovan Carrillo
  Netherlands[71] Lindsay van Zundert Daria Danilova / Michel Tsiba Chelsea Verhaegh / Sherim van Geffen
  Poland Ekaterina Kurakova Natalia Kaliszek / Maksym Spodyriev
  Slovenia Daša Grm
  South Korea[72] Cha Jun-hwan Kim Ye-lim
Lee Hae-in
  Spain Sara Hurtado / Kirill Khaliavin
  Sweden[73] Nikolaj Majorov Josefin Taljegård
  Switzerland Lukas Britschgi Alexia Paganini
  Turkey Başar Oktar Yuliia Zhata / Berk Akalın
  Ukraine[74] Ivan Shmuratko Anastasiia Arkhipova Oleksandra Nazarova / Maxim Nikitin
  United States[75] Jason Brown
Nathan Chen
Vincent Zhou
Karen Chen
Bradie Tennell
Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc
Alexa Knierim / Brandon Frazier
Madison Chock / Evan Bates
Kaitlin Hawayek / Jean-Luc Baker
Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue

Changes to preliminary entries

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Date Discipline Withdrew Added Reason/Other notes Refs
February 15, 2021 Pairs   Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nolan Seegert N/A Leg injury (Hase) [76]
March 1, 2021   Jessica Calalang / Brian Johnson   Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc Personal reasons [77]
March 2, 2021 Men   Brendan Kerry N/A Injury[78] [45]
Ice dance   Maria Kazakova / Georgy Reviya Knee injury (Reviya)[79] [48]
  Maxine Weatherby / Temirlan Yerzhanov
March 8, 2021   Olivia Smart / Adrián Díaz   Sara Hurtado / Kirill Khaliavin Further consideration[80] [81]
March 10, 2021   Yura Min / Daniel Eaton N/A Injury recovery (Eaton)[82] [48]
March 16, 2021 Ladies   Anastasiya Galustyan Stress fracture[83] [46]
March 20, 2021 Pairs   Sofiia Holichenko / Artem Darenskyi COVID-19 [84]
March 21, 2021 Ladies   Alisson Krystle Perticheto Shin splints [85]
March 22, 2021 Men   Slavik Hayrapetyan COVID-19 [86]
Ladies   Viktoriia Safonova [37]
Pairs   Wang Yuchen / Huang Yihang [47]

Medal summary

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Medalists

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Medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest overall placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Nathan Chen   Yuma Kagiyama   Yuzuru Hanyu
Ladies FSR Anna Shcherbakova FSR Elizaveta Tuktamysheva FSR Alexandra Trusova
Pairs FSR Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov   Sui Wenjing / Han Cong FSR Aleksandra Boikova / Dmitrii Kozlovskii
Ice dance FSR Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov   Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue   Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier

Small medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest short program or rhythm dance placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Yuzuru Hanyu   Yuma Kagiyama   Nathan Chen
Ladies FSR Anna Shcherbakova   Rika Kihira FSR Elizaveta Tuktamysheva
Pairs FSR Aleksandra Boikova / Dmitrii Kozlovskii   Sui Wenjing / Han Cong FSR Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov
Ice dance FSR Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov   Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue   Madison Chock / Evan Bates

Medals awarded to the skaters who achieve the highest free skating or free dance placements in each discipline:

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men   Nathan Chen   Yuma Kagiyama   Shoma Uno
Ladies FSR Alexandra Trusova FSR Anna Shcherbakova FSR Elizaveta Tuktamysheva
Pairs FSR Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov   Sui Wenjing / Han Cong FSR Evgenia Tarasova / Vladimir Morozov
Ice dance FSR Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov   Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier   Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue

Medals by country

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Table of medals for overall placement:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1FSR3126
2  United States1102
3  Japan0112
4  China0101
5  Canada0011
Totals (5 entries)44412

Results

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Nathan Chen of the United States became the second American and the fifth skater since 1980 to win three consecutive World titles, following Scott Hamilton, Kurt Browning, Alexei Yagudin, and Patrick Chan.[87]

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Nathan Chen   United States 320.88 3 98.85 1 222.03
2 Yuma Kagiyama   Japan 291.77 2 100.96 2 190.81
3 Yuzuru Hanyu   Japan 289.18 1 106.98 4 182.20
4 Shoma Uno   Japan 277.44 6 92.62 3 184.82
5 Mikhail Kolyada FSR 272.04 4 93.52 5 178.52
6 Keegan Messing   Canada 270.26 5 93.51 6 176.75
7 Jason Brown   United States 262.17 7 91.25 8 170.92
8 Evgeni Semenenko FSR 258.45 10 86.86 7 171.59
9 Kévin Aymoz   France 254.52 9 88.24 9 166.28
10 Cha Jun-hwan   South Korea 245.99 8 91.15 13 154.84
11 Matteo Rizzo   Italy 245.37 11 83.30 11 162.07
12 Daniel Grassl   Italy 242.81 15 79.43 10 163.38
13 Yan Han   China 235.31 12 81.52 14 153.79
14 Morisi Kvitelashvili   Georgia 231.81 21 74.66 12 157.15
15 Lukas Britschgi   Switzerland 225.55 17 78.27 16 147.28
16 Aleksandr Selevko   Estonia 222.06 24 70.74 15 151.32
17 Konstantin Milyukov   Belarus 221.33 16 78.86 17 142.47
18 Deniss Vasiļjevs   Latvia 213.05 14 81.22 18 131.83
19 Michal Březina   Czech Republic 210.73 13 81.43 21 129.30
20 Donovan Carrillo   Mexico 204.78 23 73.91 19 130.87
21 Ivan Shmuratko   Ukraine 204.17 22 73.98 20 130.19
22 Jin Boyang   China 199.15 19 77.95 22 121.20
23 Nikolaj Majorov   Sweden 192.79 20 75.59 23 117.20
24 Alexei Bychenko   Israel 190.45 18 78.05 24 112.40
Did not advance to free skating
25 Vincent Zhou   United States 70.51 25 70.51
26 Paul Fentz   Germany 68.43 26 68.43
27 Vladimir Litvintsev   Azerbaijan 68.43 27 68.43
28 Başar Oktar   Turkey 67.14 28 67.14
29 Maurizio Zandron   Austria 63.88 29 63.88
30 Peter James Hallam   Great Britain 61.56 30 61.56
31 Valtter Virtanen   Finland 60.27 31 60.27
32 Mikhail Shaidorov   Kazakhstan 59.14 32 59.14
33 Larry Loupolover   Bulgaria 58.93 33 58.93

Ladies

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The Russian team, competing as FSR due to CAS sanctions against the country, became the second team to ever sweep the ladies' podium at a World Championships after the United States did so in 1991.[88]

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Anna Shcherbakova FSR 233.17 1 81.00 2 152.17
2 Elizaveta Tuktamysheva FSR 220.46 3 78.86 3 141.60
3 Alexandra Trusova FSR 217.20 12 64.82 1 152.38
4 Karen Chen   United States 208.63 4 74.40 6 134.23
5 Loena Hendrickx   Belgium 208.44 10 67.28 4 141.16
6 Kaori Sakamoto   Japan 207.80 6 70.38 5 137.42
7 Rika Kihira   Japan 205.70 2 79.08 9 126.62
8 Olga Mikutina   Austria 198.77 11 67.18 7 131.59
9 Bradie Tennell   United States 197.81 7 69.87 8 127.94
10 Lee Hae-in   South Korea 193.44 8 68.94 11 124.50
11 Kim Ye-lim   South Korea 191.78 5 73.63 13 118.15
12 Ekaterina Ryabova   Azerbaijan 189.46 13 64.11 10 125.35
13 Madeline Schizas   Canada 185.78 9 68.77 14 117.01
14 Eva-Lotta Kiibus   Estonia 181.47 19 59.65 12 121.82
15 Josefin Taljegård   Sweden 178.10 15 61.58 16 116.52
16 Lindsay van Zundert   Netherlands 174.50 24 57.72 15 116.78
17 Alexandra Feigin   Bulgaria 173.52 17 59.97 18 113.55
18 Nicole Schott   Germany 172.80 20 59.09 17 113.71
19 Satoko Miyahara   Japan 172.30 16 59.99 19 112.31
20 Alina Urushadze   Georgia 169.01 18 59.89 20 109.12
21 Chen Hongyi   China 162.79 22 58.81 21 103.98
22 Eliška Březinová   Czech Republic 155.14 21 58.81 22 96.33
23 Natasha McKay   Great Britain 153.46 23 58.15 23 95.31
24 Jenni Saarinen   Finland 146.54 14 63.54 24 83.00
Did not advance to free skating
25 Alexia Paganini   Switzerland 57.23 25 57.23
26 Kailani Craine   Australia 56.86 26 56.86
27 Emily Bausback   Canada 55.74 27 55.74
28 Lara Naki Gutmann   Italy 55.64 28 55.64
29 Emmy Ma   Chinese Taipei 55.63 29 55.63
30 Júlia Láng   Hungary 54.20 30 54.20
31 Nelli Ioffe   Israel 52.43 31 52.43
32 Ekaterina Kurakova   Poland 52.28 32 52.28
33 Angelīna Kučvaļska   Latvia 47.94 33 47.94
34 Daša Grm   Slovenia 47.76 34 47.76
35 Anastasia Arkhipova   Ukraine 45.07 35 45.07
36 Emilea Zingas   Cyprus 43.20 36 43.20
37 Elžbieta Kropa   Lithuania 41.31 37 41.31
WD Yi Christy Leung   Hong Kong withdrew withdrew from competition
WD Maé-Bérénice Méité   France withdrew withdrew from competition

Pairs

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Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov of FSR became the first pairs team to win gold in their Worlds debut since Ekaterina Gordeeva / Sergei Grinkov of the Soviet Union did so in 1986.[91]

Rank Name Nation Total points SP FS
1 Anastasia Mishina / Aleksandr Galliamov FSR 227.59 3 75.79 1 151.80
2 Sui Wenjing / Han Cong   China 225.71 2 77.62 2 148.09
3 Aleksandra Boikova / Dmitrii Kozlovskii FSR 217.63 1 80.16 4 137.47
4 Evgenia Tarasova / Vladimir Morozov FSR 212.76 4 71.46 3 141.30
5 Peng Cheng / Jin Yang   China 201.18 5 71.32 6 129.86
6 Kirsten Moore-Towers / Michael Marinaro   Canada 195.29 10 63.45 5 131.84
7 Alexa Knierim / Brandon Frazier   United States 192.10 7 64.67 7 127.43
8 Nicole Della Monica / Matteo Guarise   Italy 186.50 11 59.95 8 126.55
9 Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc   United States 185.31 6 64.94 9 120.37
10 Riku Miura / Ryuichi Kihara   Japan 184.41 8 64.37 10 120.04
11 Miriam Ziegler / Severin Kiefer   Austria 182.30 9 64.01 11 118.29
12 Evelyn Walsh / Trennt Michaud   Canada 176.24 12 59.41 12 116.83
13 Annika Hocke / Robert Kunkel   Germany 162.81 13 57.48 14 105.33
14 Ioulia Chtchetinina / Márk Magyar   Hungary 157.87 18 51.21 13 106.66
15 Elizaveta Zhuk / Martin Bidař   Czech Republic 157.29 16 54.30 15 102.99
16 Anastasiia Metelkina / Daniil Parkman   Georgia 156.73 14 56.13 16 100.60
17 Rebecca Ghilardi / Filippo Ambrosini   Italy 154.04 15 54.70 18 99.34
18 Bogdana Lukashevich / Alexander Stepanov   Belarus 145.55 20 46.20 17 99.35
19 Anna Vernikov / Evgeni Krasnopolski   Israel 145.03 17 53.67 20 91.36
20 Cléo Hamon / Denys Strekalin   France 144.84 19 50.99 19 93.85
Did not advance to free skating
21 Lana Petranović / Antonio Souza-Kordeiru   Croatia 44.75 21 44.75
22 Daria Danilova / Michel Tsiba   Netherlands 43.12 22 43.12
23 Coline Keriven / Noël-Antoine Pierre   France 42.12 23 42.12
24 Zoe Jones / Christopher Boyadji   Great Britain 38.79 24 38.79

Ice dance

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Rank Name Nation Total points RD FD
1 Victoria Sinitsina / Nikita Katsalapov FSR 221.17 1 88.15 1 133.02
2 Madison Hubbell / Zachary Donohue   United States 214.71 2 86.05 3 128.66
3 Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier   Canada 214.35 4 83.37 2 130.98
4 Madison Chock / Evan Bates   United States 212.69 3 85.15 4 127.54
5 Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin FSR 208.77 5 83.02 5 125.75
6 Charlène Guignard / Marco Fabbri   Italy 205.20 6 81.04 6 124.16
7 Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson   Great Britain 196.92 8 77.42 7 119.50
8 Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Nikolaj Sørensen   Canada 196.88 7 77.87 8 119.01
9 Kaitlin Hawayek / Jean-Luc Baker   United States 188.51 11 75.08 9 113.43
10 Tiffany Zahorski / Jonathan Guerreiro FSR 188.45 10 75.58 10 112.87
11 Sara Hurtado / Kirill Khaliavin   Spain 186.13 12 74.26 11 111.87
12 Natalia Kaliszek / Maksym Spodyriev   Poland 183.33 9 76.12 14 107.21
13 Wang Shiyue / Liu Xinyu   China 182.90 13 73.97 12 108.93
14 Marjorie Lajoie / Zachary Lagha   Canada 180.71 14 72.00 13 108.71
15 Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevičius   Lithuania 178.18 15 71.29 15 106.89
16 Adelina Galyavieva / Louis Thauron   France 173.55 16 69.99 16 103.56
17 Evgeniia Lopareva / Geoffrey Brissaud   France 169.70 19 66.80 17 102.90
18 Katharina Müller / Tim Dieck   Germany 168.33 17 68.37 19 99.96
19 Misato Komatsubara / Tim Koleto   Japan 167.81 18 68.02 20 99.79
20 Oleksandra Nazarova / Maxim Nikitin   Ukraine 167.34 20 66.54 18 100.80
Did not advance to free dance
21 Juulia Turkkila / Matthias Versluis   Finland 64.59 21 64.59
22 Natálie Taschlerová / Filip Taschler   Czech Republic 64.00 22 64.00
23 Anna Yanovskaya / Ádám Lukács   Hungary 62.78 23 62.78
24 Holly Harris / Jason Chan   Australia 60.73 24 60.73
25 Carolina Moscheni / Francesco Fioretti   Italy 60.60 25 60.60
26 Shira Ichilov / Laurent Abecassis   Israel 55.57 26 55.57
27 Yuliia Zhata / Berk Akalın   Turkey 52.21 27 52.21
28 Viktoria Semenjuk / Ilya Yukhimuk   Belarus 51.15 28 51.15
29 Chelsea Verhaegh / Sherim van Geffen   Netherlands 50.79 29 50.79
30 Ekaterina Kuznetsova / Oleksandr Kolosovskyi   Azerbaijan 46.19 30 46.19
31 Mina Zdravkova / Christopher M. Davis   Bulgaria 45.28 31 45.28
WD Tina Garabedian / Simon Proulx-Sénécal   Armenia withdrew withdrew from competition

Olympic qualification event

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The results of the 2021 World Championships determined 82 spots for the 2022 Winter Olympics: 23 entries in men's singles, 24 in ladies' singles, 16 in pairs, and 19 in ice dance. The available spots were awarded going down the results list, with multiple spots being awarded first. One allocated spot in men's singles was unused due to an insufficient number of member nations meeting the criteria, and the spot was re-allocated to the qualification event, 2021 CS Nebelhorn Trophy.[93]

At the World Championships, countries were able to qualify up to three entries in each discipline according to the system in place for earning multiple spots to the 2022 World Championships. However, for the Olympics, if a country earned two or three spots, but did not have two or three skaters/teams, respectively, qualified for the free segment, the country must qualify the second or third spot at Nebelhorn Trophy. Each discipline qualified independently.

The following ISU member nations earned Olympic quota spots for their National Olympic Committee at the World Championships:[93]

Spot(s) Men Women Pairs Dance
3   Japan   ROC[b]
  Japan
  ROC[b]   ROC[b]
  United States
  Canada
2   United States*
  ROC*[b]
  Italy
  United States*
  South Korea
  China*
  Canada
  United States
  Italy
1   Canada*
  France*
  South Korea*
  China
  Georgia
  Switzerland
  Estonia
  Belarus
  Latvia
  Czech Republic
  Mexico
  Ukraine
  Sweden
  Israel
  Belgium*
  Austria*
  Azerbaijan
  Canada
  Estonia
  Sweden
  Netherlands
  Bulgaria
  Germany
  Georgia
  China
  Czech Republic
  Great Britain
  Finland
  Japan*
  Austria
  Germany
  Hungary
  Czech Republic
  Italy*
  Great Britain*
  Spain
  Poland
  China
  Lithuania
  France
  Germany
  Japan
  Ukraine
Countries denoted with an asterisk (*) have the opportunity to earn a second/third berth at 2021 Nebelhorn Trophy.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e Under the Court of Arbitration for Sport ban, Russia may not use its name, flag, or anthem and must present themselves as "Neutral Athlete" or "Neutral Team" at any world championships until December 16, 2022.[60] Thus, Russian skaters competed under a modified flag of the Figure Skating Federation of Russia (FFKKR) and the name "FSR" at the 2021 World Championships.[61] The ISU approved the FFKKR's request for their skaters to use Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in lieu of the Russian national anthem during award ceremonies.[62]
  2. ^ a b c d Russia, which was not allowed to use its name or flag at the World Championships due to doping sanctions against the country, will compete as "ROC" under the Russian Olympic Committee flag at the 2022 Winter Olympics for the same reason.[94]

References

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  27. ^ Berkeley, Geoff (March 17, 2021). "Campaigners call for quarantine at ISU World Figure Skating Championships". Inside the Games.
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  29. ^ "Российские фигуристы получили разрешение начать тренировки на ЧМ по фигурному катанию" [Russian figure skaters received permission to start trainings at the World Figure Skating Championships]. Sport Express (in Russian). March 21, 2021.
  30. ^ "羽生結弦の「点数低すぎ」問題 フィギュア界の "生き字引" が指摘するジャッジの潮流" [Yuzuru Hanyu's "underscoring" problem: the judging trends pointed out by the "living encyclopedia" in the figure skating world]. Tokyo Sports (in Japanese). March 31, 2021.
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  33. ^ "HRH Crown Princess Victoria to open the ISU World Figure Skating Championships 2021". Stockholm 2021. March 11, 2021.
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  35. ^ a b Radnofsky, Louise (March 24, 2021). "World Skating Championships Open With Skaters on Edge". The Wall Street Journal.
  36. ^ "ISU Statement". International Skating Union. March 22, 2021.
  37. ^ a b "Белорусская фигуристка Виктория Сафонова не примет участия в чемпионате мира по фигурному катанию из-за положительного теста на коронавирус" [Belarusian figure skater Viktoria Safonova will not take part in the World Figure Skating Championships due to a positive test for COVID-19]. Ministry of Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Belarus (in Russian). March 23, 2021. Archived from the original on June 8, 2021. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
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  40. ^ a b Garabedian, Tina [@tinagarabedian] (March 30, 2021). "Armenian Ice Dancers explain how their Olympic Dream was stolen from them" – via Instagram.
  41. ^ Boutin, Richard (March 30, 2021). "COVID-19: deux patineurs victimes de négligence" [COVID-19: two skaters victims of negligence]. Le Journal de Québec (in French).
  42. ^ Sullivan, Tara (June 19, 2021). "Armenian figure skaters were robbed of competing in Worlds because of a false COVID test. What can be done about it?". The Boston Globe.
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  53. ^ Ivanova, Kristina (February 15, 2021). "Александра Фейгин и танцовата ни двойка с нови волни програми за СП" [Alexandra Feigin and our dance couple with new free programs for Worlds]. Bulgarian National Radio (in Bulgarian).
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