Sarah HUGHES

 

 

USA

Single

 

Date of birth / Születési idõ

 2 May 1985

Place of birth / Születés helye

 Manhasset, New York

Height / Magasság

 160 cm

Home town  /Lakóhely

 Great Neck, New York, USA

Profession / Foglalkozás

 Pupil

Hobbies / Hobbi

 reading mysteries, tennis, playing the violin

Start skating / Korcsolyázás kezdete

 1988

Club

 Skating Club of New York

 

Coach / Edzõ

 Robin Wagner

Choreographer / Koreográfus

 Robin Wagner

 

Music Short Program as of 2000/2001 season

 Vocalise by Sergei Rachmaninov

Music Free Skating as of 2000/2001 season

 Don Quixote by Leon Minkus


Results / Eredmények

 

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

Olympic Games / Olimpia

 

 

 

 

1

 

World Champ./ Világbajnokság

 

7

5

3

 

6

World Juniors / Junior Világbajnokság

 

2

 

 

 

 

National Champ./ Nemzeti Bajnokság

1 J

4

3

2

 

 

 

International Competition:

 1999

 Skate America, Colorado Springs

4

 1999

 Trophee Lalique, Paris

3

 1999

 Keri Lotion FS Classics, Orlando, Fla.

6

 1999

 Karl Schäfer Memorial, Vienna

1

 2000

 Sparkassen Cup on Ice, Gelsenkirchen

2

 2000

 Skate America, Colorado Springs

2

 2000

 Cup of Russia, St. Petersburg

3

 2001

 ISU Grand Prix Final, Tokyo

3


Hughes began skating at age 3 because her two older brothers and sister skated. She is the fourth of six children. She plays the violin in her school orchestra. Her teenage brothers play ice hockey and her sister competes in figure skating. Her father played college hockey at Cornell, captaining the 1969-70 team. Hughes hopes to study medicine and to become a doctor.

International Skating Union, Chemin de Primerose 2, CH - 1007 Lausanne 16.03.2001


Salt Lake update

With a near perfect long program, Sarah Hughes moved from fourth to first and captured the ladies' gold medal at the 2002 Salt Lake Games. She was the fifth-to-last skater of the night and had to watch favorites like Michelle Kwan and Irina Slutskaya skate for the gold after her. Hughes cleanly landed seven triple jumps, including two triple-triple combinations, to claim the first ordinal. It marked the first time that a skater had jumped from fourth place in the short program to win the Olympic title since compulsories were eliminated from Olympic competition after the 1988 Games. Slutskaya won the silver and Kwan finished with the bronze.

Steady improvement

Hughes emerged as a future star when she won the 1998 U.S. Junior Figure Skating Championships at the age of 12. The following year, she made the step up to the senior level, placing fourth at her first U.S. Figure Skating Championships. That performance qualified her for the World Championships for the first time, where she finished seventh competing against the world's elite. Hughes continued to improve in 2000, finishing third at the 2000 U.S. nationals behind 1998 Olympic silver medalist Michelle Kwan and Sasha Cohen, and then taking fifth in impressive fashion at the World Championships. She continued her steady improvement the following season, placing second behind Kwan at 2001 nationals and Skate America, and second behind 1999 world champion Maria Butyrskaya of Russia at the Nations Cup. At the 2001 World Championships, she took the bronze behind Kwan and Russian Irina Slutskaya.

All in the family

Hughes' father, John, also had a great deal of athletic success on the ice -- as a hockey player. John Hughes, a native of Canada, was the captain of the 1969-1970 Cornell University hockey team. Following graduation, John got a tryout with the Toronto Maple Leafs of the NHL. When things did not work out with the Maple Leafs, John returned to Cornell to attend law school and is now an attorney.

High school girl

Despite her demanding skating schedule, Hughes maintains a regular school schedule at Great Neck North High School on Long Island. She takes honors classes and plans to study medicine in the future. Hughes is the fourth of six children.

Coach and friend

 Hughes is coached by Robin Wagner, with whom she shares a close relationship that extends off the ice. When they were in Vienna for the 1999 Vienna Cup, Wagner scheduled an extra day so she could see the city with Hughes. Among the things they saw was the opera, "Nessun Dorma," to which Hughes skated in one of her programs.

Official Olympic Site 2002


Pictures / Képek