1982 European Figure Skating Championships

1982 European Championships
Type: ISU Championship
Date: 2 – 7 February 1982
Season: 1981–82
Location: Lyon, France
Champions
Men's singles:
West Germany Norbert Schramm
Ladies' singles:
Austria Claudia Kristofics-Binder
Pair skating:
East Germany Sabine Baeß / Tassilo Thierbach
Ice dance:
United Kingdom Jayne Torvill / Christopher Dean
Previous:
1981 European Championships
Next:
1983 European Championships

The 1982 European Figure Skating Championships was a senior-level international competition held in Lyon, France from February 2 to 7, 1982. Elite skaters from European ISU member nations competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.[1][2][3][4]

Results

Men

Rank Name Nation TFP CF OP FS
1 Norbert Schramm West Germany4.2421
2 Jean-Christophe Simond France1
3 Igor Bobrin Soviet Union2
4 Rudi Cerne West Germany3
5 Alexander Fadeev Soviet Union4
6 Heiko Fischer West Germany3
7 Vladimir Kotin Soviet Union5
8 Jozef Sabovčík Czechoslovakia71
9 Grzegorz Filipowski Poland
10 Didier Monge France
11 Philippe Paulet France
12 Thomas Hlavik Austria
13 Oliver Höner  Switzerland
14 Bruno Delmaestro Italy
15 Miljan Begovic Yugoslavia
16 Mark Pepperday United Kingdom
17 Lars Åkesson Sweden
18 Ed van Campen Netherlands
19 Todd Sand Denmark18
20 Thierry Michels Luxembourg
21 András Száraz Hungary
22 Eric Kol Belgium
23 Boyko Aleksiev Bulgaria
24 Fernando Soria Spain
WD Alexander König East Germany

Ladies

Witt was 6th in the compulsory figures and first in the technical program and free program. Kristofics-Binder won the figures and was third in the technical and the free, with Leistner second in the free.

Rank Name Nation
1 Claudia Kristofics-Binder Austria
2 Katarina Witt East Germany
3 Elena Vodorezova Soviet Union
4 Deborah Cottrill United Kingdom
5 Claudia Leistner West Germany
6 Kristiina Wegelius Finland
7 Carola Paul East Germany
8 Karen Wood United Kingdom
9 Janina Wirth East Germany
10 Anna Antonova Soviet Union
11 Myriam Oberwiler  Switzerland
12 Hana Veselá Czechoslovakia
13 Sandra Cariboni  Switzerland
14 Manuela Ruben West Germany
15 Sonja Stanek Austria
16 Parthena Sarafidis Austria
17 Pairi Nieminen Finland
18 Karin Telser Italy
19 Béatrice Farinacci France
20 Liisa Seitsonen Finland
21 Katrien Pauwels Belgium
22 Catarina Lindgren Sweden
23 Anette Nygaard Denmark
24 Nevenka Lisak Yugoslavia
25 Rosario Esteban Spain
26 Nora Miklosi Hungary
27 Ingrid Aalders Netherlands
28 Tsvetanka Stefanova Bulgaria
WD Sanda Dubravčić Yugoslavia
WD Petra Malivuk Yugoslavia

Pairs

This was the first Europeans in 17 years that was not won by a pair from the Soviet Union.[5]. Vorobieva & Lisovsky won the short program over Baess & Thierbach.

Rank Name Nation
1 Sabine Baeß / Tassilo Thierbach East Germany
2 Marina Pestova / Stanislav Leonovich Soviet Union
3 Irina Vorobieva / Igor Lisovski Soviet Union
4 Veronika Pershina / Marat Akbarov Soviet Union
5 Birgit Lorenz / Knut Schubert East Germany
6 Susan Garland / Robert Daw United Kingdom
7 Bettina Hage / Stefan Zins West Germany
8 Nathalie Tortel / Xavier Videau France
9 Gaby Galambos / Jürg Galambos  Switzerland

Ice dancing

Rank Name Nation
1 Jayne Torvill / Christopher Dean United Kingdom
2 Natalia Bestemianova / Andrei Bukin Soviet Union
3 Irina Moiseeva / Andrei Minenkov Soviet Union
4 Olga Volozhinskaya / Alexander Svinin Soviet Union
5 Karen Barber / Nicholas Slater United Kingdom
6 Nathalie Hervé / Pierre Béchu France
7 Jana Beránková / Jan Barták Czechoslovakia
8 Judit Péterfy / Csaba Bálint Hungary
9 Wendy Sessions / Stephen Williams United Kingdom
10 Birgit Goller / Peter Klisch West Germany
11 Petra Born / Rainer Schönborn West Germany
12 Jindra Holá / Karol Foltán Czechoslovakia
13 Isabella Micheli / Roberto Pelizzola Italy
14 Maria Kniffer / Manfred Hubler Austria
15 Marianne van Bommel / Wayne Deweyert Netherlands
16 Martine Olivier / Philippe Boissier France
17 Esther Guiglia / Roland Mader  Switzerland
18 Salia Saarinen / Kim Jacobson Finland
19 Ulla Ornamerker / Thomas Svedberg Sweden

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.