Ilia Malinin

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Ilia Malinin
Other namesQuadg0d
Born (2004-12-02) December 2, 2004 (age 19)
Fairfax, Virginia
HometownVienna, Virginia
Height1.74 m (5 ft 8+12 in)
Figure skating career
Country United States
DisciplineMen's singles
CoachTatiana Malinina
Roman Skorniakov
Rafael Arutyunyan
Skating clubWashington Figure Skating Club
Began skating2011
Highest WS1st
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2024 Montreal Singles
Bronze medal – third place 2023 Saitama Singles
Grand Prix Final
Gold medal – first place 2023–24 Beijing Singles
Bronze medal – third place 2022–23 Turin Singles
U.S. Championships
Gold medal – first place 2023 San Jose Singles
Gold medal – first place 2024 Columbus Singles
Silver medal – second place 2022 Nashville Singles
World Team Trophy
Gold medal – first place 2023 Tokyo Team
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place 2022 Tallinn Singles

Ilia Malinin (born December 2, 2004) is an American competitive

figure skater. He is the 2024 World champion, 2023–24 Grand Prix Final champion, 2023 World bronze medalist, the 2022-23 Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, a six-time Grand Prix medalist (four gold, one silver, one bronze), a three-time ISU Challenger Series medalist (two gold, one bronze), the 2023 and 2024 U.S. national champion, and the 2022 U.S. national silver medalist. At the junior level, Malinin is the 2022 World Junior champion, and a two-time Junior Grand Prix
gold medalist. He holds the current world junior record for the men's short program, free skate, and combined score, along with the world senior record for the men's free skate.

Malinin is the first and only skater to land a fully rotated quadruple Axel, widely regarded as the hardest jump in figure skating, in international competition.[1] He accomplished this feat at his first attempt at the 2022 U.S. International Classic, and repeated the feat for his senior Grand Prix debut one month later at Skate America. Malinin is also known for his Instagram handle "quadg0d", which he adopted in late 2020 as inspiration for the quadruple jumps that he was striving to learn.[2]

In September 2022, he was named to Time magazine's Time100 Next List of emerging leaders from around the world who are shaping the future and defining the next generation of leadership.

Personal life and education

Ilia Malinin was born on December 2, 2004, in Fairfax, Virginia. He is the son of Russian-born Olympic Uzbekistani singles skaters Tatiana Malinina (1999 Grand Prix Final and inaugural Four Continents champion, ten-time national champion), and Roman Skorniakov (seven-time national champion).[3] His younger sister, competing as Elli Beatrice Malinina and nicknamed Liza, was born in 2014 and is also a skater.[4] When embarking on his skating career, he took the Russian masculine form of his mother's surname due to his parents' concerns that his father's surname would be too difficult to pronounce.[5] His grandfather, Valery Malinin, is a former competitor for the Soviet Union and currently coaches skaters in Novosibirsk, Siberia.[2]

Malinin attended George C. Marshall High School, where he graduated in 2023, and his favorite subject was physics.[3][6][2] He currently attends the George Mason University School of Dance, as well as takes online math and economics classes.[7][8] He is fluent in English and Russian.[9] Malinin admires his mother's skating, as well as Evgeni Plushenko, Nathan Chen, and Mikhail Kolyada.[9] He also looks up to Yuzuru Hanyu and Alexandra Trusova.[10]

Career

Early career

Malinin began skating at the age of six in 2010, under the tutelage of his parents in Reston, Virginia. When he was a child, he often preferred playing soccer to training in a cold arena but his grandfather advised his parents to be patient, "he’ll (gain) his triple jumps, (and then) you won’t be able to drag him away.”[2] He went on to become the 2016 U.S. national juvenile champion, the 2017 U.S. national intermediate champion, and the 2019 U.S. national novice bronze medalist; he did not qualify for the 2018 U.S. Championships. Internationally, on the advanced novice level, Malinin is the 2018 Asian Open Trophy champion and the 2018 Golden Bear silver medalist.[3]

Junior career

2019–2020 season: Junior international debut

Malinin made his junior international debut at the

Philadelphia Summer International, winning gold ahead of U.S. teammate Nicholas Hsieh and Darian Kaptich of Australia. On the 2019–20 ISU Junior Grand Prix, he placed fourth at JGP United States and seventh at JGP Italy. He was unable to compete at the 2020 U.S. Championships due to injury but was awarded a berth to the 2020 World Junior Championships based on his early season results.[9]
At the World Junior Championships, he was 13th in the short program and 18th in the free skating, to finish 16th overall.

2020–2021 season: New quads & injuries

Due to the

quadruple jumps – toe loop and Salchow – that he had learned during lockdown.[11] As a result of his placement, he was invited to participate in the Las Vegas Invitational, where he helped Team Tara defeat Team Johnny.[12] Malinin was unable to compete at the 2021 U.S. Championships after missing the qualifying competition due to an ankle injury.[13]

2021–2022 season: Junior world title & senior national debut

With the resumption of the

Returning to the senior level at the 2021 Cup of Austria in November, he placed 13th in the short program, but rallied with a second-place free skate to win the bronze medal.[17] Competing at the 2022 U.S. Championships with hopes of making the American Olympic team, he placed third in the short program. Second in the free skate with four quadruple jumps landed, Malinin won the silver medal, a result he said surprised him: "I definitely wasn’t expecting to skate this good and especially place second."[18] Malinin's placement meant that, per qualification criteria, the third berth on the Olympic team was to be decided between him and fourth-place Jason Brown. Ultimately, the committee chose Brown, a result that attracted some controversy.[19] Malinin was instead assigned to make his World Championship debut later in the year. Brown praised him, saying: "U.S. figure skating is so lucky to have such a bright future with Ilia."[20]

In advance of the 2022 World Championships, Malinin was sent to the International Challenge Cup to secure the required technical minimum scores. He was successful, winning the gold medal in the process.[17] Competing at the World Championships in Montpellier, France, Malinin finished fourth in the short program with a personal best of 100.16, exceeding his previous best international score by almost 20 points. In the free skate, he made major errors on two quadruple jump attempts and dropped to ninth overall.[21] He spoke afterwards of having put "more pressure on myself, just wanting to skate good so badly, and it kind of didn't work out."[22]

Malinin finished the season at the

Sofia, Bullgaria, to Tallinn in Estonia.[23] He entered the event as the favorite for the gold medal based on his strong season.[24] In the short program, he set a new junior world record of 88.99.[25] He won the free skate as well, setting junior world records for that segment and for total score, taking the gold medal by a margin of almost 42 points.[26]

Senior career

2022–2023 season: Senior international debut

Malinin opened his season at the 2022 CS U.S. Classic. He placed sixth place in his short program. His free skate, which was set to the Euphoria soundtrack and was choreographed by Shae-Lynn Bourne, consisted of five quad jumps, including a quad Axel, his first jump during the program, which made him the first skater to land the jump in an international competition.[27][28] American figure skater Adam Rippon called Malinin's accomplishment "the craziest thing I’ve ever seen anyone do on the ice.”[29] The judges awarded Malinin's quad Axel with a grade of execution of 1.0. His free skate also included a triple Lutz-triple Axel combination as the last jumping pass. He fell while attempting a quad Lutz but successfully completed all his other jumps. He came in first place in the free skate, earning a total of 257.28 points, coming in first place overall. Kévin Aymoz from France came in second place with 236.17 points, and fellow American Camden Pulkinen came in third place with 219.49 points.[27][28][29]

At the

Torino, Malinin stepped out of two jumps and slightly underrotated a third, as a result placing fifth in that segment with a score of 80.10, well back of the leaders. He indicated that he remained bothered by his injury and would not attempt the quad Lutz in competition.[37][38] He rebounded in the free skate, finishing in second place in that segment, with only a small error on one slightly underrotated jump. He rose to the bronze medal overall, 2.41 points behind silver medalist Sōta Yamamoto of Japan. Malinin said his "goal is to definitely make sure that I'm able to be comfortable with my short program because, as of right now, it's been a bit messy."[39][40]

Malinin entered the 2023 U.S. Championships as the gold medal favourite, and, after a season of difficulties in the short program, delivered a clean performance to rank first in the segment by 10.11 points over Jason Brown. He acknowledged afterward that "this season all the short programs have been really tough, and I think that we took every single one of them and thought about where we need to work and what to improve" to get to that performance.[41] Malinin planned to attempt six quadruple jumps in his free skate, but fell on one and doubled two others. He placed second in that segment, behind Andrew Torgashev and only narrowly ahead of Brown, but won the gold medal on the strength of his short program showing.[42] At the 2023 World Championships in Saitama, Malinin placed second in the short program, with a score of 100.38 points behind Shoma Uno. He went on to attempt the most technically difficult free skate ever seen at a world championships with six quadruple jumps, landing three cleanly – including the quadruple axel, the first ever at an ISU championship event – earning 188.06 to place third in the free skate and third overall with a combined score of 288.44 behind Uno in first and Jun-Hwan Cha in second.[2]

2023–2024 season: World Champion and Grand Prix Final gold

Malinin won gold at the 2023 CS Autumn Classic International, his first international appearance of the season.[17] He was invited to compete as part of Team North America at the Japan Open, and won the men's segment, while the team finished second overall.[43]

Beginning the

Grand Prix at the 2023 Skate America, Malinin won the short program by almost seven points over Kévin Aymoz. He called the performance "one of the best all my career so far. I was so into the music and the performance that I was not aware of what was going around me."[44] He landed all of his jumps in the free skate as well, setting new personal bests in that segment (206.41) and overall (310.47), his first instances of breaking the 200- and 300-point barriers internationally.[45][46] Malinin went on to win the silver medal at his second Grand Prix event at the 2023 Grand Prix de France behind Adam Siao Him Fa of France and qualified for the Grand Prix Final in Beijing.[47] At the 2023–24 Grand Prix Final in Beijing, Malinin successfully performed a quadruple Axel during his short program; this was the first time that any skater had performed this jump during that segment.[48] During the free skate, Malinin successfully performed a quadruple loop, thus becoming the first skater to ever perform all six jumps as quadruples in competition. He won the event by a 17.30-point margin over reigning World champion Shoma Uno.[49][50]

At the 2024 World Championships in Montreal, Malinin’s score of 105.97 put him in third place following the short program, behind Shoma Uno (107.72) and Yuma Kagiyama (106.35) of Japan. In the free program, Malinin successfully performed six quadruple jumps, including two in combination, plus a triple Lutz-triple Axel sequence. He won the free program with a world record score of 227.79 (including a world record technical score of 137.18), earning the world title with a total score of 333.76.[51]

Honors and awards

World record scores

Combined total records
Disc. Segment Score Event Date Ref.
Men's singles
(Junior)
Short program 88.99 2022 World Junior Championships April 14, 2022
Free skate 187.12 April 16, 2022
Combined total 276.11
Men's singles
(Senior)
Free skate 227.79 2024 World Championships March 23, 2024

Programs

  • Program details mentioned at first occurrence
Competition and exhibition programs by season 
Season Short program Free skate program Exhibition program
2019–20
[56]
  • From
    Spectre
  • Performed by Sam Smith
  • Choreo. by Tatiana Malinina
2020–21
[57]
Medley:
  1. "Nobody Knows"
  2. "The Golden Age"
    • Performed by
      Woodkid
2021–22
[58]
"Billie Jean"
Medley:
  1. "Nobody Knows"
  2. "The Golden Age"
2022–23
[59]
"
I Put a Spell On You
"
  1. "The Lake"
  2. "I'm Tired"
  3. "Mount Everest"
  • Performed by Labrinth
  • Performed by NF
2023–24
[60]
  1. "Andante Agitato - End Credits - "The Raid""
  2. "Andante Con Moto - String Orchestra Version"
  3. Succession Main Title
  4. "Andante Moderato – End Credits – "Amen""
  5. "Strings Con Fuoco"
"All You Ever Wanted"
  • Performed by NF

Competitive highlights

Competition placements at senior level [17]
Season 2020–21 2021–22 2022–23
2023-24
World Championships 9th 3rd 1st
GP Final 3rd 1st
GP France 2nd
GP Finland 1st
GP Skate America 5th 1st 1st
CS Autumn Classic 1st
CS Cup of Austria 3rd
CS U.S. Classic 1st
Challenge Cup 1st
Japan Open 2nd
(2nd)
2nd
(1st)
World Team Trophy 1st
(2nd)
U.S. Championships 2nd 1st 1st
Competition placements at junior level [17][61]
Season 2019–20 2021–22
World Junior Championships 16th 1st
JGP Austria 1st
JGP France 1st
JGP Italy 7th
JGP United States 4th
Philadelphia Summer
7th

Detailed results

ISU personal best scores in the +5/-5 GOE System 
Segment Type Score Event
Total TSS 333.76 2024 World Championships
Short program TSS 106.90 2023–24 Grand Prix Final
TES 62.53 2023–24 Grand Prix Final
PCS 44.67 2024 World Championships
Free skating TSS 227.79 2024 World Championships
TES 137.18 2024 World Championships
PCS 90.61 2024 World Championships

Senior level

  • Small medals for the short program and free skating are only awarded at ISU Championships.
  • Medals at team events are awarded for the team results only. Individual placements at team events are listed in parentheses.
Results in the 2020–21 season[62]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Oct 23–24, 2020 United States 2020 Skate America 7 76.75 5 143.56 5 220.31
Results in the 2021–22 season[62]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Nov 11–14, 2021 Austria 2021 CS Cup of Austria 13 67.58 2 154.97 3 222.55
Jan 3–9, 2022 United States 2022 U.S. Championships 3 103.46 2 199.01 2 302.48
Feb 24–27, 2022 Netherlands 2022 International Challenge Cup 2 84.55 1 176.14 1 260.69
Mar 21–27, 2022 France 2022 World Championships 4 100.16 11 163.63 9 263.79
Results in the 2022–23 season[62]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Sep 13–16, 2022 United States 2022 CS U.S. International Classic 6 71.84 1 185.44 1 257.28
Oct 8, 2022 Japan 2022 Japan Open 2 193.42 2 (2)
Oct 21–23, 2022 United States 2022 Skate America 4 86.08 1 194.29 1 280.37
Nov 25–27, 2022 Finland 2022 Grand Prix of Espoo 2 85.57 1 192.82 1 278.39
Dec 8–11, 2022 Italy 2022–23 Grand Prix Final 5 80.10 2 191.84 3 271.94
Jan 23–29, 2023 United States 2023 U.S. Championships 1 110.36 2 177.37 1 287.74
Mar 22–26, 2023 Japan 2023 World Championships 2 100.38 3 188.06 3 288.44
Apr 13–16, 2023 Japan 2023 World Team Trophy 1 105.90 5 173.64 1 (2) 279.54
Results in the 2023–24 season
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Sep 14–16, 2023 Canada 2023 CS Autumn Classic International 1 100.87 1 180.81 1 281.68
Oct 8, 2023 Japan 2023 Japan Open 1 193.91 2 (1)
Oct 20–22, 2023 United States 2023 Skate America 1 104.06 1 206.41 1 310.47
Nov 3–5, 2023 France 2023 Grand Prix de France 1 101.58 2 203.10 2 304.68
Dec 7–10, 2023 China 2023–24 Grand Prix Final 1 106.90 1 207.76 1 314.66
Jan 22–28, 2024 United States 2024 U.S. Championships 1 108.57 1 185.78 1 294.35
Mar 18–24, 2024 Canada 2024 World Championships 3 105.97 1 227.79 1 333.76

Junior level

Results in the 2019–20 season[62]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Jul 29 – Aug 3, 2019
2019 Philadelphia Summer International
1 71.50 1 130.34 1 201.84
Aug 28–31, 2019 United States 2019 JGP United States 3 71.34 3 130.38 4 201.72
Oct 2–5, 2019 Italy 2019 JGP Italy 4 72.19 7 131.28 7 203.47
Mar 2–8, 2020 Estonia 2020 World Junior Championships 13 74.02 18 121.95 16 195.97
Results in the 2021–22 season[62]
Date Event SP FS Total
P Score P Score P Score
Aug 18–21, 2021 France 2021 JGP France I 1 80.07 1 134.57 1 214.64
Oct 6–9, 2021 Austria 2021 JGP Austria 1 81.31 1 164.04 1 245.35
Apr 13–17, 2022 Estonia 2022 World Junior Championships 1 88.99 1 187.12 1 276.11

References

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External links

World Record Holders
Preceded by Men's Free Skating
March 23, 2024 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
World Junior Record Holders
Preceded by Men's Junior Short Program
April 14, 2022 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by Men's Junior Free Skating
April 16, 2022 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by Men's Junior Total Score
April 16, 2022 – present
Succeeded by
Incumbent