Rinka Watanabe
Rinka Watanabe (渡辺 倫果, Watanabe Rinka, born 19 July 2002) is a Japanese figure skater. She is the 2024 Four Continents bronze medalist, 2022 Skate Canada International champion, 2023 Cup of China silver medalist, 2024 Skate America silver medalist, 2022 CS Lombardia Trophy champion and 2023 CS Finlandia Trophy silver medalist. Personal lifeWatanabe was born on 19 July 2002 in Chiba, Japan.[1] She has three older brothers. In addition, her mother is a former competitive tennis player and long jumper.[2] While training in Vancouver from 2017 to 2020, Watanabe lived with a host family. She is also able to speak English fluently.[3][4] In 2022, she enrolled into the Department of Commerce in the Faculty of Economics at Hosei University.[5][6] Skating careerEarly yearsWatanabe began figure skating at the age of three after watching Shizuka Arakawa win gold at the 2006 Winter Olympics on TV.[4] After winning the 2013 Japanese national novice B gold medal, she was invited to skate in the gala at the 2013 NHK Trophy.[7] In 2017, Watanabe moved to Vancouver, Canada, after her longtime coach, Megumu Seki, moved from Chiba to coach there.[8][9] Given few international assignments in the early years of her junior career, she won the junior silver medal at the 2018 Bavarian Open and gold in the junior competition in the 2019 Coupe du Printemps.[1] Following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the rink that Watanabe trained at in Vancouver closed down, forcing her to move her training back to Japan. Watanabe was briefly coached by Mie Hamada until the MF Figure Skating Academy opened in her hometown of Chiba in the spring of 2021. There, Kensuke Nakaniwa, Makoto Nakata, Momoe Naguma, and Aya Tanoue became her coaches.[10][1] 2021–2022 seasonIn her final season of international junior eligibility, Watanabe was not able to participate in the Junior Grand Prix because the Japan Skating Federation opted not to send singles skaters abroad in the fall.[11] She finished sixth at the Japan Championships, earning international assignments for the second half of the season.[1] Watanabe competed in the junior division at the Bavarian Open, winning the silver medal and earning the technical minimums needed for the 2022 World Junior Championships. She then appeared at the Coupe du Printemps at the senior level, winning gold, before placing tenth at the World Junior Championships to conclude the season.[1] 2022–2023 seasonWatanabe began the season by making her Challenger series debut at the 2022 CS Lombardia Trophy, where she unexpectedly won the gold over reigning World and Japanese champion Kaori Sakamoto. She also cleared the 200-point threshold for the first time internationally.[12] Following her success at the Lombardia Trophy, she was selected to replace Wakaba Higuchi at both of her Grand Prix assignments when the latter withdrew due to an injury.[13] Making her Grand Prix debut at the 2022 Skate Canada International, she was considered a favourite going in but placed sixth in the short program due to rotation issues on some triple jumps.[14] She rebounded in the free skate, winning that segment and taking the gold medal.[15] Watanabe was pleased afterward, noting, "this is my first time at the Grand Prix, and I did pretty good. I was very nervous. I was told only one week ago that I would participate, and it was hard to adjust my training."[16] Following her win, she entered the 2022 NHK Trophy as a podium favourite but ran into trouble in the short program, where she fell on her triple Axel attempt and then singled an intended triple loop. As a result, she placed ninth in the segment, almost ten points behind third-place Rion Sumiyoshi.[17] She rallied in the free skate, landing a slightly underrotated triple Axel and placing third in that segment, and rose to fifth overall, 5.05 points behind bronze medalist Sumiyoshi.[18][19] Watanabe's results on the Grand Prix qualified her for the Grand Prix Final in Torino, one of three Japanese women attending, alongside Kaori Sakamoto and Mai Mihara. She finished fourth in the short program after her triple Axel attempt was called a quarter underrotated.[20] In a "turbulent" free skate segment that saw many skaters underperform markedly, Watanabe finished third in that segment and very narrowly fourth overall, only 0.34 points behind bronze medalist Loena Hendrickx of Belgium. Assessing the Final, she said she "liked the overall experience and hope to come back to another.[21][22] Watanabe struggled in the short program of the 2022–23 Japan Championships, coming eighteenth in that segment.[23] She rose to twelfth place after the free skate. Despite this poor showing at the national championship, her international results earned her assignments to the 2023 Four Continents and 2023 World Championships.[24] At the Four Continents Championship in Colorado Springs, errors saw Watanabe place eighth in the short program. In the free skate, she was one of only three skaters to attempt a triple Axel, and the only one to land it cleanly, though she made errors on both attempted triple Lutz jumps. Fourth in that segment, she moved up to fifth overall.[25][26] At the World Championships, held on home ice in Saitama, Watanabe placed fifteenth in the short program, but rose to tenth overall with a seventh-place free skate.[27] She expressed that her desire during her competitive career was to challenge herself "to the limit."[28] During the off-season, Watanabe was cast to play Tony Tony Chopper in the summer show One Piece on Ice.[29] 2023–2024 seasonWatanabe chose as the thematic subject of her free program "the dark times and struggles with injuries" of her junior career.[30] In her first international competition of the season, she won the silver medal at the 2023 CS Finlandia Trophy in her first appearance of the season.[1] On the flight to Vancouver for the 2023 Skate Canada International, her first Grand Prix assignment, she watched Avatar: The Way of Water, whose score was the source of her short program music. She subsequently said she felt that understanding the story made her step sequence "more powerful." Watanabe fell on her triple loop attempt in the short program, placing seventh in the segment. She made only one mistake in the free skate, singling a planned triple Lutz, rising to sixth overall.[30] She finished second in the short program at the 2023 Cup of China despite slight underrotation calls on both parts of her jump combination, setting a new season's best score of 65.09.[31] She was second in the free skate as well, winning the silver medal and finishing only 0.75 points behind gold medalist Hana Yoshida. Watanabe said she had been "very regretful" of her performance in Vancouver, adding "today I feel better because I worked so hard."[32] Watanabe revised her training regimen in advance of the 2023–24 Japan Championships, where she placed sixth.[33] Despite her national result, she was assigned to the Japanese team for the 2024 Four Continents Championships, where she finished narrowly fourth in the short program, 1.03 points behind American Ava Marie Ziegler in third place, after her jump combination received quarter underrotation calls on both parts.[34] In the free skate Watanabe successfully landed the triple Axel and five other triple jumps, but had two jumps called underrotated. She finished second in the segment and moved up to third place overall, surpassing Ziegler by 1.02 points for the bronze medal.[35] 2024–2025 seasonWatanabe began the season with an eighth-place finish at the 2024 CS Lombardia Trophy. Going on to compete on the 2024–25 Grand Prix series, Watanabe won the silver medal at 2024 Skate America behind teammate Wakaba Higuchi.[1][7] At her second event, the 2024 Cup of China, she was fourth in the short program. In the free skate, she landed a triple Axel, which was judged to be a quarter under-rotated, but fell on two jumps in the second half of the program. She finished in fifth place in the free skate and fell to fifth overall. Watanabe said that she was frustrated by her performance, as she had aimed to skate cleanly in both programs, and that she had run out of stamina during the free skate. She also said that looking forward to the Japan Figure Skating Championships in December, she hoped to plan a triple Axel in both her short and free programs.[36] Watanabe was ultimately named as the first alternate for the 2024–25 Grand Prix Final.[37] ProgramsCompetitive highlightsGP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series
Detailed results
Senior level
Junior level
References
External links
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