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Nina Pinzarrone
Belgian figure skater

Nina Pinzarrone

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Belgian figure skater
Places
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
City of Brussels, Arrondissement of Brussels-Capital, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium
Age
18 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Nina Pinzarrone (born 24 November 2006) is a Belgian figure skater. She is the 2024 European bronze medalist and a two-time ISU Grand Prix medalist, one of only two Belgian women to have medaled at those events. She placed eleventh at both the 2023 World Championships and the 2022 World Junior Championships.

At the domestic level, she is the 2024 Belgian national champion and a two-time (2020, 2022) national junior champion.

Personal life

Pinzarrone was born on 24 November 2006 in Brussels, Belgium. Her father Mario Pinzarrone is of Italian origin, while her mother, Laurence Novalet, is Belgian from Brussels. She has an older sister, Lily, who is also a figure skater. Nina's mother tongue is French but she skates in Flanders and goes to school in Dutch. Because her father is of Italian heritage, she studied the Italian language for a year as a fourth language but does not speak it.

Career

Early years

Pinzarrone began learning how to skate in 2010 at the age of three. She followed her sister Lily, who became interested after watching figure skating on television.

2021–22 season: International junior debut

Pinzarrone made her international junior and ISU Junior Grand Prix debuts in August at the 2022 JGP France II, the second of two JGP events hosted in Courchevel, France. She placed fifth in the short program and sixth in the free skate to place sixth overall. At her second JGP assignment, the 2022 JGP Slovenia, Pinzarrone replicated her short program and free skate placements from Courchevel but finished fifth in the overall standings.

Pinzarrone did not compete again until November when she handily won her second Belgian junior national title. Following her win, between December 2021 and February 2022, she claimed the junior women's titles at the Santa Claus Cup, the Icelab International Cup, and the Dragon Trophy. She finished seventh at the Challenge Cup in March.

In April, Pinzarrone competed at her first World Junior Championship. There, she was seventh in the short program but fell to sixteenth in the free skate after a series of mishaps, ultimately winding up in eleventh overall.

2022–23 season: International senior debut

Pinzarrone was assigned to her first Grand Prix event, the 2022 MK John Wilson Trophy, in July. In August, she received a second assignment, replacing South Korean skater Lim Eun-soo at the 2022 Skate Canada International. She later withdrew from both events due to hip injury, subsequently revealed to be a double stress fracture.

After recovery, Pinzarrone won the silver medal at the Latvia Trophy. Having acquired senior technical minimums, she was assigned to compete at the European Championships for the first time, alongside longtime Belgian national champion Loena Hendrickx. Her coach stated that her primary objectives for the event were to achieve the minimum scores to take Belgium's second berth at the World Championships later in the season. Pinzarrone underrotated the second part of her jump combination in the short program, but still finished sixth in the segment. She rose to fifth place after the free skate. She had the second-best technical score in the free skate.

Due to Hendrickx's placement at the previous year's World Championships, Belgium had three berths in the women's event in Saitama. Pinzarrone, Hendrickx and national silver medalist Jade Hovine all had the minimum scores necessary to attend, comprising the largest Belgian women's delegation in event history. Pinzarrone finished eleventh.

2023–24 season: European bronze and Grand Prix medals

Beginning the season at the 2023 CS Lombardia Trophy Pinzarrone finished ninth. Speaking of this event later, she would opine: "At Lombardia I really wasn't myself." She was also invited to attend the Shanghai Trophy, coming fourth of six skaters. She called the latter invitation "an amazing experience."

Making her Grand Prix debut following the previous year's withdrawals, Pinzarrone appeared first at the 2023 Grand Prix de France, where she finished fourth in the short program with a new personal best 65.74 points, only 0.99 points back of second-place Anastasiia Gubanova of Georgia. She set another new personal best in the free skate (133.06), and rose to second overall. Her silver medal made her only the second Belgian woman to medal on the Grand Prix, after Hendrickx. Of the feat, she said: "It doesn’t feel real." The week before her second Grand Prix assignment she appeared at her first senior Belgian championships. With Loena Hendrickx withdrawing due to illness, Pinzarrone won her first national title by more than forty points. At the 2023 NHK Trophy, Pinzarrone placed second in both segments, but third overall, winning the bronze medal and qualifying to the Grand Prix Final for the first time. She said she had not considered this result a possibility at the start of the season, and added that it was "so cool" that both she and Hendrickx had qualified, the first time two Belgian women had done so. Pinzarrone went on to finish fourth at the Final.

Pinzarrone entered the 2024 European Championships as a podium favourite after her results in the first half of the season, and finished second in the short program with a personal best 69.70 points, less than a point ahead of third-place Anastasiia Gubanova of Georgia, the defending champion. In the free skate, four of her jumps were deemed a quarter underrotated, coming third in that segment and placing third overall behind Hendrickx and Gubanova. With her bronze medal alongside Hendrickx's gold, Belgium had two women on the European podium for the first time, with Pinzarrone also only the second woman (after Hendrickx) to make the European podium.

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition
2023–2024
  • Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia
  • The Via Appia and Dance of the
    Shepherd and Shepherdess
    (from Spartacus)
    by Aram Khachaturian
    performed by André Rieu
    choreo. by Benoît Richaud
2022–2023
  • Buon giorno principessa
    by Nicola Piovani
  • Beautiful That Way
    (from Life is Beautiful)
    by Noa and Nicola Piovani
  • La vie est belle
    by André Rieu
    choreo. by Benoît Richaud
2021–2022
  • Benediction and Dream
  • The Floating Bed
  • Solo Tú
    (from Frida)
    by Elliot Goldenthal
    choreo. by Benoît Richaud

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix.

International
Event17–1818–1919–2020–2121–2222–2323–24
Worlds11th
Europeans5th3rd
GP Final4th
GP France2nd
GP NHK Trophy3rd
GP Skate CanadaWD
GP John Wilson TrophyWD
CS Golden SpinWD
CS Lombardia TrophyWD9th
Challenge Cup4th
Latvia Trophy2nd
Shanghai Trophy4th
International: Junior
Junior Worlds11th
JGP France II6th
JGP Slovenia5th
Antwerp Diamond Trophy1st
Challenge Cup7th
Coupe du Printemps2nd
Dragon Trophy1st
Egna Spring Trophy1st
Icelab International Cup1st
Santa Claus Cup1st
Skate Helena1st
Sofia Trophy1st
International: Advanced novice
Antwerp Diamond Trophy1st1st
Bavarian Open8th3rd
Challenge Cup2nd7th
Coupe du Printemps2nd5th
Ice Talent Trophy1st1st
Kempen Trophy1st
Prague Ice Cup1st
Santa Claus Cup2nd2nd
Triglav Trophy2nd
Volvo Open2nd
National
Belgian Champ.1st N2nd N1st JC1st J1st

Detailed results

SegmentTypeScoreEvent
TotalTSS198.802023 Grand Prix de France
Short programTSS65.742023 Grand Prix de France
TES38.1122021 JGP Slovakia
PCS30.162023 NHK Trophy
Free skatingTSS133.062023 Grand Prix de France
TES72.692023 Grand Prix de France
PCS63.682023 NHK Trophy

ISU Personal best highlighted in bold.

Senior results

2023–24 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
January 10–14, 20242024 European Championships2
69.70
3
132.59
3
202.29
December 7–10, 20232023–24 Grand Prix Final3
66.72
5
128.19
4
194.91
November 24–26, 20232023 NHK Trophy2
63.44
2
131.22
3
194.66
November 17–18, 20232024 Belgian Championships1
66.65
1
129.98
1
196.63
November 3–5, 20232023 Grand Prix de France4
65.74
2
133.06
2
198.80
October 3–5, 20232023 Shanghai Trophy4
59.21
4
121.85
4
181.06
September 8–10, 20232023 CS Lombardia Trophy12
47.41
6
108.02
9
155.43
2022–23 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
March 22–26, 20232023 World Championships14
62.04
10
129.74
11
191.78
February 23–26, 20232023 International Challenge Cup3
62.99
4
128.21
4
191.20
January 25–29, 20232023 European Championships6
61.35
5
124.57
5
185.92
December 16–18, 20222022 Latvia Trophy3
58.28
2
111.00
2
169.28
December 7–10, 20222022 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb20
44.79
WDWD

Junior results

2021–22 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
April 13–17, 20222022 World Junior ChampionshipsJunior7
63.67
16
98.25
11
161.92
March 18–20, 20212022 Coupe du PrintempsJunior1
56.64
2
105.77
2
162.41
February 24–27, 20222022 International Challenge CupJunior4
51.91
7
89.75
7
141.66
February 11–13, 20222022 Dragon TrophyJunior1
62.85
1
100.43
1
163.28
January 13–14, 20222022 Icelab International CupJunior1
58.54
1
108.09
1
166.63
December 6–12, 20212021 Santa Claus CupJunior1
63.67
2
108.13
1
171.80
November 19–20, 20212022 Belgian ChampionshipsJunior1
59.77
1
116.11
1
175.88
September 22–25, 20212021 JGP SloveniaJunior5
64.58
6
121.52
5
186.10
August 25–28, 20212021 JGP France IIJunior5
58.40
6
104.68
6
163.08
2020–21 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
April 29–May 2, 20212021 Egna Spring TrophyJunior2
54.58
1
97.59
1
152.17
April 14–18, 20212021 Skate HelenaJunior1
61.89
1
106.40
1
168.29
February 26–March 3, 20212021 Sofia TrophyJunior1
63.82
1
123.08
1
186.90
2019–20 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
February 20–23, 20202020 International Challenge CupNovice1
43.69
15
54.80
7
98.49
February 3–9, 20202020 Bavarian OpenNovice3
37.85
3
74.59
3
112.44
December 2–8, 20192019 Santa Claus CupNovice2
42.08
2
69.14
2
111.22
November 22–23, 20192022 Belgian ChampionshipsJunior1
54.30
1
97.21
1
151.51
November 8–10, 20192021 Skate HelenaNovice2
36.65
1
68.25
1
104.90
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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