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Nelli Zhiganshina
Ice dancer

Nelli Zhiganshina

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Ice dancer
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Moscow, Russia
Age
37 years
Nelli Zhiganshina
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Nelli Nailevna Zhiganshina (Russian: Нелли Наильевна Жиганшина; born 31 March 1987) is a Russian-born German ice dancer. With Alexander Gazsi, she is a six-time German national champion (2007, 2011–2015) and has won twelve international medals. They have placed as high as 6th at the European Championships and 10th at the World Championships.

Personal life

Nelli Zhiganshina was born on 31 March 1987 in Moscow. She is the elder sister of Ruslan Zhiganshin, who is a competitive ice dancer for Russia. Their mother is a children's skating coach.

Zhiganshina passed a German citizenship test in 2011 and filed documents to renounce her Russian citizenship, as required by Germany. In November 2013, it was announced that she had been released by Russia, allowing her to take German citizenship.

Career

Early years

Zhiganshina began skating in 1990 at the age of three. She took up ice dancing at 12. Zhiganshina competed with Denis Bazdirev for Russia until the end of 2004, appearing four times on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series.

Partnership with Alexander Gazsi

2005–2010

In June 2005, Zhiganshina had a tryout with Alexander Gazsi in Moscow and agreed to skate with him for Germany. At the start of their partnership, they trained mainly in Moscow with coaches Elena Kustarova and Svetlana Alexeeva and, during summers, in Berlin and Chemnitz due to Gazsi's army service. They later changed coaches to Alexander Zhulin and Oleg Volkov, also in Moscow.

Zhiganshina/Gazsi won bronze at their first German Championships in 2006, their only competition of the season. The next season they won their first national title, placed 16th at the 2007 Europeans and 18th at Worlds.

During the 2007–08 season, they made their debut on the Grand Prix circuit, placing 7th at Skate Canada and 8th at Cup of Russia. They won silver at German Nationals and again finished 18th at Worlds.

During the 2008–09 season, Zhiganshina/Gazsi did not compete on the Grand Prix circuit. Zhiganshina continued to visit Germany on a three-month tourist visa because the low income from the sport meant she did not qualify for residency and Germany did not have as high caliber ice dancers as Moscow to train alongside. Although favored to win 2009 German Nationals, they placed second and missed the European and World teams. They considered leaving competition to focus on show skating and worked with circus acrobats in Moscow but decided to continue their competitive career and moved to Oberstdorf, Germany in spring 2009 to work with coaches Rostislav Sinicyn and Martin Skotnicky. During the 2009–10 season, they placed third at German Nationals and were not sent to the European or World Championships. They were not eligible for the 2010 Winter Olympics due to Zhiganshina not having German citizenship.

2010–present

Zhiganshina/Gazsi at Bompard 2013.

During the 2010–11 season, Zhiganshina/Gazsi again received no Grand Prix invitations but won three medals at senior B events. They won their second national title and were selected to compete at the European Championships for the first time in three years. At Europeans, they were 8th in the short dance, then edged past Nóra Hoffmann / Maxim Zavozin by 0.39 points into 7th place overall after the free dance. This was the first top-ten result for German ice dancers since 2003 (Kati Winkler / Rene Lohse). The result gave Germany two berths to the 2012 European ice dancing event. Zhiganshina/Gazsi finished 11th at the 2011 World Championships, earning invitations to two Grand Prix events the following season.

In preparation for the 2011–12 season, Zhiganshina/Gazsi went to Sofia, Bulgaria, to work with choreographer Maxim Staviski, with whom they also worked in previous years. They began their season at the 2011 Nebelhorn Trophy where they won the silver medal. After placing fourth at both of their Grand Prix events, the 2011 Skate America and 2011 NHK Trophy, the duo finished eighth at the 2012 European Championships and eleventh at the 2012 World Championships.

In 2012–13, Zhiganshina/Gazsi placed a career-best sixth at the 2013 European Championships and tenth at the 2013 World Championships. As a result of their Worlds placement, Germany qualified two spots in ice dancing at the 2014 Olympics.

In 2013–14, Zhiganshina/Gazsi won their fifth national title and were selected to represent Germany at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Germany assigned them to the team event short dance, where they placed sixth; Germany, however, did not qualify for the free dance. Zhiganshina/Gazsi finished 11th in the separate ice dancing event.

Programs

(with Gazsi)

SeasonShort danceFree danceExhibition
2014–2015
  • La Maza
    by Silvio Rodríguez
  • Ameksa
    by Taalbi Brothers
    choreo. by Stéphane Lambiel
Fredrik Rydman's
Swan Lake Reloaded
  • Rothbart's Solo
  • Then There's Us
  • Don't Go
  • Rothbart's Solo
    choreo. by Stéphane Lambiel
2013–2014
  • Le Jazz Hot
    performed by Glee cast
  • Carrigan & Dibs
    by James Horner
  • Mrs. ES Dancecard
    by Elliot Goldenthal
  • I'm Happy
    by the Gorillaz
2012–2013
  • Polka
    by Alfred Schnittke
  • Waltz from Admiral
"Two from the Grave":
  • Tore My Heart
    performed by Oona
  • Et Maintenant
    by Jean-Marc Zelwer
  • Rama Lama
    by Roisin Murphy
  • Tango de Roxanne
    (from Moulin Rouge)
2011–2012
  • Desperados
    (from Once Upon a Time in Mexico)
  • Mambo
  • Romeo + Juliet
    by Craig Armstrong
2010–2011
  • Unknown from Cirque du Soleil
  • Liebesträume
    by Franz Liszt
  • The Four Seasons
    by Antonio Vivaldi
Original dance
2009–2010
2007–2008
Ukrainian dance:
  • Black Eyebrows and Hazel Eyes
  • Marusia
    performed by Joseph Kobzon
  • La Boheme
    performed by Charles Aznavour
2006–2007
  • New Tango Besta Rio
  • Sandunga
    by Arturo Sandoval
  • Summertime
    by George Gershwin
  • Jazz Police
    by Goodwin

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series (began in the 2014–15 season); JGP: Junior Grand Prix

With Gazsi for Germany

Zhiganshina/Gazsi perform their zombie-themed free dance at the 2012 Nebelhorn Trophy
Zhiganshina/Gazsi perform their short dance at the 2012 Rostelecom Cup
International
Event2005–062006–072007–082008–092009–102010–112011–122012–132013–142014–15
Olympics11th
Worlds18th18th11th11th10th11thWD
Europeans16th7th8th6th7th7th
GP Bompard4th
GP Cup of Russia8th5th
GP NHK Trophy4th4th
GP Skate America4th5th
GP Skate Canada7th6th5th
CS Finlandia2nd
CS Nebelhorn4th2nd3rd3rd
Golden Spin5th1st
NRW Trophy2nd
Nepela Trophy1st6th3rd1st5th
Pavel Roman1st3rd1st1st
Volvo Open2nd
National
German Champ.3rd1st2nd2nd3rd1st1st1st1st1st
Team events
Olympics8th
TBD = Assigned

With Bazdirev for Russia

International
Event2002–032003–042004–05
JGP France4th
JGP Italy10th
JGP Mexico7th
JGP Ukraine6th
National
Russian Junior7th5th9th
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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