Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/russia

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Anna Pogorilaya

Russian retired figure skater

Anna Pogorilaya

Summary

Russian retired figure skater

FieldValue
nameAnna Pogorilaya
imageAnna Pogorilaya at the 2016 World Championships - Awarding ceremony.jpg
imagesize230px
captionPogorilaya at the 2016 World Figure Skating Championships
native_nameАнна Алексеевна Погорилая
native_name_langru
fullnameAnna Alexeyevna Pogorilaya
altnameAnna Pogorilaya-Nevskaia
countryRussia
birth_date
birth_placeMoscow, Russia
height
coachViktoria Butsayeva
skating clubSambo 70
beganskating2002
retiredOctober 2017
show-medalsyes
medaltemplates

|show-medals= yes

Anna Alexeyevna Pogorilaya (; born 10 April 1998) is a former Russian figure skater. She is the 2016 World bronze medalist, a three-time European medalist (silver in 2017; bronze in 2015 and 2016), and the 2016 Russian national bronze medalist. She won gold at three Grand Prix events – the 2013 Cup of China, 2016 Rostelecom Cup, and 2016 NHK Trophy. Earlier in her career, she won bronze at the 2013 World Junior Championships and at the 2012–13 Junior Grand Prix Final.

Personal life

Anna Alexeyevna Pogorilaya was born 10 April 1998 in Moscow, Russia. Her parents are from Kharkiv, Ukraine. She has a brother who is three years older. In 2016, she enrolled at the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture and Sports. In May 2018, she became engaged to Russian ice dancer Andrey Nevskiy, whom she met in 2015. They were married in July 2018.

Their daughter, Eva Andreyevna Nevskaya, was born on 22 December 2020.

Anna enjoys baking for her family in her free time.

Career

Early years

Pogorilaya began skating at age four. Anna Tsareva became her coach around 2004.

Pogorilaya missed the 2009–2010 season due to Osgood–Schlatter affecting both of her legs, as well as a concussion. She placed 15th at the Russian Junior Championships in 2011 and 13th in 2012.

2012–2013 season: World Junior bronze medal

In the 2012–2013 season, Pogorilaya made her ISU Junior Grand Prix debut. After taking bronze in Croatia, her first event, she then won gold at the JGP event in Germany. She qualified for the JGP Final in Sochi, where she won the bronze medal. At the Russian Championships, Pogorilaya placed fifth in her senior debut and sixth on the junior level. She took the bronze medal at the 2013 World Junior Championships in Milan, with teammates Elena Radionova and Yulia Lipnitskaya taking the gold and silver medals respectively.

2013–2014 season: Senior international debut

Making her senior Grand Prix debut, Pogorilaya placed third in the short program and first in the free skate at the 2013 Cup of China. She edged out teammate Adelina Sotnikova and Italian Carolina Kostner for the gold medal. After winning bronze at the 2013 Trophee Eric Bompard, behind Sotnikova, she qualified for her first senior Grand Prix Final. In early December 2013, Pogorilaya said she was receiving more ice time and training twice as much as before. In Fukuoka, Japan, she placed sixth in the short program, fifth in the free skate, and sixth overall.

Following an eighth-place result at the 2014 Russian Championships, she was not assigned to the 2014 European Championships but was later named in the Russian team to the 2014 World Championships. At Worlds in Saitama, Japan, Pogorilaya placed sixth in the short program and third in the free skate, scoring personal bests in both segments. She won a small bronze medal for the free skate and finished fourth overall, behind Carolina Kostner.

2014–2015 season: First European medal

2015 European Championships]] podium

Pogorilaya started her season at the 2014 Japan Open. She placed third with a score of 122.52 points in her free skate, helping Team Europe win the gold medal. Competing at her first Grand Prix event of the season, the 2014 Skate Canada, she placed first in both programs and won the gold medal with a total of 191.81 points. She took the silver medal behind Rika Hongo at the 2014 Rostelecom Cup and qualified for her second GP Final. She finished fourth at the 2014–15 Grand Prix Final in Barcelona after placing fourth in both segments. She then finished fourth at the 2015 Russian Championships, having ranked fourth in both segments.

Pogorilaya was selected to compete at the 2015 European Championships and won the bronze medal after placing third in both segments. She was also named in Russia's team for the 2015 World Championships in Shanghai, China. Before the event, she had been off the ice for a month after spraining her ankle and partially tearing her ligament during practice. Despite not having fully recovered from her injury, she chose to compete anyway. In the short program she had a hard fall on her triple loop and hit her face, placing 9th. In the free program, she singled a triple Lutz and fell twice, on another triple Lutz and on a double Axel-triple toe loop combination. She placed 13th in the free skate and 13th overall.

2015–2016 season: World bronze medal

2016 World Championships]] podium

Starting her season on the ISU Challenger Series (CS), Pogorilaya took silver at the 2015 Ondrej Nepela Trophy after placing 9th in the short program and first in the free skate. She won the 2015 CS Mordovian Ornament with personal bests in all segments. Competing on the Grand Prix series, Pogorilaya finished 4th at the 2015 Cup of China and 9th at the 2015 NHK Trophy, she had a series of multiple falls in her short and free programs in both of her Grand Prix events. At the end of December, she won the bronze medal at the 2016 Russian Championships in Yekaterinburg as well as Russia's third spot at Europeans, having placed fourth in the short and third in the free.

In late January 2016, Pogorilaya repeated as the bronze medalist at the European Championships, which were held in Bratislava, Slovakia. At the 2016 World Championships in Boston, she placed second in the short program and fourth in the free skate, winning the bronze medal behind Russia's Evgenia Medvedeva and USA's Ashley Wagner.

2016–2017 season: First Grand Prix Final medal

Pogorilaya won both of her Grand Prix events, the 2016 Rostelecom Cup and 2016 NHK Trophy. In December, she obtained the bronze medal in Marseille, France, at her third Grand Prix Final. Later that month, she finished 4th behind Maria Sotskova at the 2017 Russian Championships. She injured her knee in practice at the event before the free skate.

At the 2017 World Championships, Pogorilaya placed fourth in the short program but her 15th-place free skate, in which she fell three times, dropped her to 13th overall. She did not participate in the 2017 World Team Trophy.

2017–2018 season: Olympic season

Due to an injury, Pogorilaya did not participate in the Russian test skates in Sochi during 9–10 September 2017. On 15 October 2017, she performed a new Spanish-themed short program during the second stage of the Russian Cup series held in Yoshkar-Ola; she finished behind Stanislava Konstantinova and Polina Tsurskaya. She withdrew from the next segment due to back discomfort.

In October, Pogorilaya competed at the 2017 Skate Canada International, placing second in the short program, 10th in the free skate, and 9th overall. She withdrew from her next Grand Prix event, the 2017 Skate America. Due to her back problems, she withdrew from the Russian Championships, saying that she was unable to train and that her season was over. After half a year off the ice and undergoing rehab to strengthen her muscles, she resumed skating, coached by Tsareva at a new rink.

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition2018–2019
2017–2018
2016–2017
2015–2016
2014–2015
2013–2014
2012–2013
2011–20122010–2011

Competitive highlights

2016–17 Grand Prix Final]] podium
Pogorilaya at the [[2013 Cup of China]] podium

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

InternationalEvent10–1111–1212–1313–1414–1515–1616–1717–1818–19International: JuniorNationalTeam events
Worlds4th13th3rd13th
Europeans3rd3rd2nd
GP Final6th4th3rd
GP Bompard3rd
GP Cup of China1st4th
GP NHK Trophy9th1st
GP Rostelecom Cup2nd1st
GP Skate AmericaWD
GP Skate Canada1st9th
CS Finlandia3rd
CS Golden SpinWD
CS Mordovian1st
CS Ondrej Nepela2nd
Junior Worlds3rd
JGP Final3rd
JGP Croatia3rd
JGP Germany1st
Russian Champ.5th8th4th3rd4thWD
Russian Junior
Champ.15th13th6th
Japan Open1st T
3rd P2nd T
4th P
TBD = Assigned; WD = Withdrew
T = Team result; P = Personal result. Medals awarded for team result only.

Detailed results

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships. At team events, medals awarded for team results only.

2014–15 Grand Prix Final
2012–13 JGP Final
DateEventSPFSTotalDateEventSPFSTotalDateEventSPFSTotalDateEventSPFSTotalDateEventSPFSTotal
27–29 October 20172017 Skate Canada2
69.0510
87.849
156.89
**2016–2017 season**
29 March – 2 April 20172017 World Championships4
71.5215
111.8513
183.37
25–29 January 20172017 European Championships2
74.393
137.002
211.39
20–26 December 20162017 Russian Championships4
73.454
142.174
215.62
8–11 December 20162016–17 Grand Prix Final4
73.293
143.183
216.47
25–27 November 20162016 NHK Trophy1
71.561
139.301
210.86
4–6 November 20162016 Rostelecom Cup1
73.931
141.281
215.21
6–10 October 20162016 CS Finlandia Trophy1
69.503
113.303
182.80
1 October 20162016 Japan Open-
-4
132.044P/2T
**2015–2016 season**
28 March – 3 April 20162016 World Championships2
73.984
139.713
213.69
26–31 January 20162016 European Championships3
63.813
123.243
187.05
24–27 December 20152016 Russian Championships4
71.223
143.083
214.30
27–29 November 20152015 NHK Trophy11
47.354
117.289
164.63
6–8 November 20152015 Cup of China4
61.474
122.694
184.16
15–18 October 20152015 Mordovian Ornament2
72.261
141.811
214.07
1–3 October 20152015 Ondrej Nepela Trophy9
53.011
125.372
178.38
**2014–2015 season**
23–29 March 20152015 World Championships9
60.5013
99.8113
160.31
28 January – 1 February 20152015 European Championships3
66.103
125.713
191.81
24–27 December 20142015 Russian Championships4
71.174
133.344
204.51
11–14 December 20142014-15 Grand Prix Final4
61.344
118.954
180.29
14–15 November 20142014 Rostelecom Cup3
59.322
114.112
173.43
31 October – 1 November 20142014 Skate Canada1
65.281
126.531
191.81
2–4 October 20142014 Japan Open-
-3
122.521
**2013–2014 season**
27–29 March 20142014 World Championships6
66.263
131.244
197.50
24–26 December 20132014 Russian Championships10
59.355
121.538
180.88
5–8 December 20132013–14 Grand Prix Final6
59.815
112.076
171.88
15–17 November 20132013 Trophee Eric Bompard2
60.033
124.663
184.69
1–2 November 20132013 Cup of China3
60.241
118.381
178.62
DateEventLevelSPFSTotalDateEventLevelSPFSTotalDateEventLevelSPFSTotal
1–2 March 20132013 World Junior ChampionshipsJunior2
53.983
106.343
160.32
2–3 February 20132013 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunior8
58.345
112.526
170.86
25–28 December 20122013 Russian ChampionshipsSenior5
60.455
116.135
176.58
6–8 December 20122012 Junior Grand Prix FinalJunior3
57.943
109.463
167.40
11–12 October 20122012 JGP GermanyJunior3
53.811
106.711
160.52
4–6 October 20122012 JGP CroatiaJunior2
51.675
93.873
145.54
**2011–2012 season**
5–7 February 20122012 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunior8
50.9613
91.4213
142.38
**2010–11 season**
3–4 February 20112011 Russian Junior ChampionshipsJunior15
41.2615
80.7015
121.96

References

References

  1. "Ровно год назад 22.12.2020 ты появилась на свет в 21:20 Мы так благодарны тебе за то, что ты у нас есть. Ты самый долгожданный подарок на Новый год🎁 Я как мама желаю тебе: Оставаться такой же сильной и доброй Пусть все мечты исполняются А в мире всегда царит мир Пусть твоя жизнь будет яркой и полной радости И желаю самого главного в жизни- здоровья!!! С днём рождения, ангелочек🤍 И спасибо всем за тёплые пожелания. Очень приятно их читать 😘".
  2. "Competition Results: Anna POGORILAYA". International Skating Union.
  3. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2012/2013". International Skating Union.
  4. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2013/2014". International Skating Union.
  5. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2014/2015". International Skating Union.
  6. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2015/2016". International Skating Union.
  7. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2016/2017". International Skating Union.
  8. "Anna POGORILAYA: 2017/2018". International Skating Union.
  9. link. Russian Figure Skating Federation
  10. link
  11. link. Maria. Vorobieva. team-russia2014.ru. (3 November 2013)
  12. link. Elena. Vaytsekhovskaya. [[Sport Express]]. (10 November 2013)
  13. link. Olga. Berezemskaya. Moskovskiy Figurist. Figure Skating Federation of Moscow. (30 December 2013)
  14. Luchianov, Vladislav. (4 December 2013). "Pogorilaya claims spot among Russia's young elite". [[IceNetwork.com]].
  15. link. Elena. Vaytsekhovskaya. [[Sport Express]]. (29 March 2014)
  16. link. Elena. Vaytsekhovskaya. [[Sport Express]]. (29 March 2014)
  17. link. Olga. Ermolina. Russian Figure Skating Federation. (9 May 2014)
  18. She used the Lara Fabian version of Adagio for the 2014 Skate Canada and Rostelecom Cup, according to the short program videos.
  19. Flade, Tatjana. (10 January 2015). "Pogorilaya readies for European debut". Golden Skate.
  20. Golinsky, Reut. (25 January 2015). "Anna Pogorilaya heading into European debut". Absolute Skating.
  21. link. Team Russian 2014. (26 July 2015)
  22. Colpart, Sabine. (29 January 2016). "Medvedeva leads Russian sweep at European figure skating championships". Yahoo Sports.
  23. link. Olga. Ermolina. Russian Figure Skating Federation. (10 September 2016)
  24. Vasilyeva, Nadia. (9 December 2016). "Anna Pogorilaya: "I'll keep on working, I can't stop here"". Inside Skating.
  25. Kondakova, Anna. (24 December 2016). "Medvedeva defends national title with record-breaking score". Golden Skate.
  26. Berlot, Jean-Christophe. (28 January 2017). "Pogorilaya uses acting skills to ramp up drama". [[IceNetwork.com]].
  27. "Fantasy on Ice 2017 in Makuhari". [[BS Asahi]].
  28. "Fantasy on Ice 2017 in Kobe". [[TV Asahi.
  29. link. Елена. Дьячкова. Р-Спорт. (9 September 2017)
  30. "Кубок России Ростелеком 2017 2018, 2 й Жeнщины, MC КП 4 Анна ПОГОРИЛАЯ МОС". [[Figure Skating Federation of Russia]].
  31. link. [[Figure Skating Federation of Russia]]. (16 October 2017)
  32. link. Анатолий. Самохвалов. Р-Спорт. (16 October 2017)
  33. (22 March 2015). "Царёва: Погорилая не тренировалась месяц из-за травмы голеностопа".
  34. (7 April 2015). "Фигуристка Анна Погорилая: отлично понимаю, что существенно понизила планку".
  35. Flade, Tatjana. (10 September 2016). "Anna Pogorilaya: Underrated & Understated". International Figure Skating Magazine.
  36. (13 December 2017). "Russian skater Pogorilaya to miss Olympics with injury". Yahoo News.
  37. (14 July 2018). "Погорилая вышла замуж за Невского". [[Sport Express]].
  38. (July 2018). "Фигуристка Анна Погорилая вышла замуж за своего коллегу". [[Hello! (magazine).
  39. Flade, Tatjana. (17 September 2018). "Pogorilaya starts comeback this fall".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Anna Pogorilaya — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report