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Vincent Restencourt
Figure skater

Vincent Restencourt

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Figure skater
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Star sign
LeoLeo
Birth
28 July 1981, Louviers, France
Age
42 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Vincent Restencourt (born 28 July 1981) is a French former competitive figure skater. He is a three-time World Junior medalist, the 1998-1999 Junior Grand Prix Final champion, the 1999 Trophée Lalique silver medalist, and the 2000 Ondrej Nepela Memorial champion.

Career

Restencourt started to skate at the age of 6, having been introduced to the activity by his sister, who also competed in figure skating. He represented the Champigny club and was coached by André Brunet. He was the first French skater to land a quadruple jump, a toe loop, in competition.

During the 1997–98 ISU Junior Series, Restencourt won silver in Ukraine and bronze in Hungary to qualify for the Junior Series Final, where he finished fourth.

Restencourt began the 1998–99 season on the Junior Grand Prix (JGP) series, winning gold in Saint-Gervais-les-Bains, France and then in Chemnitz, Germany. In November 1998, he competed at the 1999 World Junior Championships in Zagreb, Croatia. Ranked third in his qualifying group, first in the short program, and second in the free skate, he was awarded the silver medal behind Russia's Ilia Klimkin. In January 1999, he finished 8th at his first senior ISU Championship, the European Championships in Prague, Czech Republic. In March, he won gold at the JGP Final.

In February 2000, Restencourt finished tenth at the European Championships in Vienna, Austria. In March, he won the silver medal at the 2000 World Junior Championships in Oberstdorf, Germany, placing second to Germany's Stefan Lindemann after ranking third in his qualifying group, third in the short, and first in the free. Later that month, he placed ninth at the 2000 World Championships in Nice, France.

At the 2001 World Junior Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria, Restencourt placed second in his qualifying group, sixth in the short, and second in the free. He won the bronze medal behind Americans Johnny Weir and Evan Lysacek.

Restencourt coaches figure skating in Aston, PA. He coached American figure skater Gracie Gold.

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skating
2003–04
2002–03
  • The Matrix
    by various artists
  • Broken Arrow
    by Hans Zimmer
2001–02
  • Spanish medley
    arranged by Maxime Rodriguez
2000–01
  • Xotica
    by René Dupéré

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; JGP: Junior Series/Junior Grand Prix

International
Event97–9898–9999–0000–0101–0202–0303–0404–05
Worlds9th19th
Europeans8th10th
GP Final6th
GP Cup of China11th
GP Lalique2nd4th11th6th
GP NHK Trophy5th6th
GP Skate America6th
Nebelhorn Trophy7th
Nepela Memorial1st
International: Junior
Junior Worlds2nd2nd3rd
JGP Final4th1st
JGP France1st
JGP Germany1st
JGP Hungary3rd
JGP Ukraine2nd
National
French Champ.8th2nd3rd3rd6th4th5th11th

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The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 04 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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