ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland
The ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland is an international figure skating competition. Sanctioned by the International Skating Union, it is periodically held in the autumn as part of the Junior Grand Prix (JGP) series. Medals may be awarded in men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance.
When held in Gdańsk, the qualifying event is usually known as the Baltic Cup. It may also be called the Toruń Cup or Copernicus Stars when held in Toruń. The 2023 edition held in Gdańsk went under the official name PGE Solidarity Cup, referring to the main sponsor PGE and the Solidarność movement that originated in Gdańsk.
The Croatian Skating Federation was scheduled to host the fifth competition of the 2022 JGP in Zagreb, but cancelled the event due to logistical reasons. The Fédération Française des Sports de Glace initially volunteered to host two separate JGP events. However, on July 29, 2022, the ISU announced that France would no longer host the event in Grenoble as planned. The event was reallocated to the Polish Figure Skating Association, which hosted two back-to-back JGP events in Gdańsk instead.
Medalists
Men's singles
Year | Location | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 Final | Gdańsk | Gao Song | Stefan Lindemann | Fedor Andreev | |
2000 | Ryan Bradley | Andrei Griazev | Stanislav Timchenko | ||
2001 | Stanislav Timchenko | Karel Zelenka | Alexander Uspenski | ||
2003 | Parker Pennington | Alexander Uspenski | Yasuharu Nanri | ||
2005 | Alexander Uspenski | Austin Kanallakan | Yang Chao | ||
2007 Final | Adam Rippon | Brandon Mroz | Armin Mahbanoozadeh | ||
2009 | Toruń | Yuzuru Hanyu | Austin Kanallakan | Gordei Gorshkov | |
2011 | Gdańsk | Joshua Farris | Artur Dmitriev, Jr. | Ryuichi Kihara | |
2013 | Adian Pitkeev | Alexander Petrov | Zhang He | ||
2015 | Toruń | Sota Yamamoto | Deniss Vasiļjevs | Roman Sadovsky | |
2017 | Gdańsk | Alexey Erokhov | Camden Pulkinen | Conrad Orzel | |
2019 | Daniil Samsonov | Yuma Kagiyama | Daniel Grassl | ||
2021 | Gleb Lutfullin | Mikhail Shaidorov | Egor Rukhin | ||
2022 Poland I |
Lucas Broussard | Chen Yudong | Raffaele Francesco Zich | ||
2022 Poland II |
Takeru Amine Kataise | Robert Yampolsky | Seo Min-kyu | ||
2023 | Lim Ju-heon | Beck Strommer | Daiya Ebihara |
Women's singles
Year | Location | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 Final | Gdańsk | Deanna Stellato | Jennifer Kirk | Svetlana Bukareva | |
2000 | Anna Jurkiewicz | Colette Irving | Carina Chen | ||
2001 | Irina Tkatchuk | Svitlana Pylypenko | Magdalena Leska | ||
2003 | Viktória Pavuk | Akiko Kitamura | Kiira Korpi | ||
2005 | Haruka Inoue | Akiko Kitamura | Xu Binshu | ||
2007 Final | Mirai Nagasu | Rachael Flatt | Yuki Nishino | ||
2009 | Toruń | Kanako Murakami | Anna Ovcharova | Christina Gao | |
2011 | Gdańsk | Yulia Lipnitskaya | Satoko Miyahara | Samantha Cesario | |
2013 | Evgenia Medvedeva | Angela Wang | Gabrielle Daleman | ||
2015 | Toruń | Polina Tsurskaya | Ekaterina Mitrofanova | Rin Nitaya | |
2017 | Gdańsk | Alena Kostornaia | Daria Panenkova | Rino Kasakake | |
2019 | Alysa Liu | Viktoria Vasilieva | Anastasia Tarakanova | ||
2021 | Sofia Akateva | Elizaveta Kulikova | Shin Ji-a | ||
2022 Poland I |
Mao Shimada | Mone Chiba | Kim Chae-yeon | ||
2022 Poland II |
Ami Nakai | Shin Ji-a | Kwon Min-sol | ||
2023 | Rena Uezono | Kwon Min-sol | Youn Seo-jin |
Pairs
- Bazarova and Larionov were disqualified due to a positive doping test from Larionov.