Short program (figure skating)

The short program of figure skating is usually the first of two phases in figure skating competitions for single skating, pair skating and synchronized skating. As the name suggests, it is the shorter of the two programs, the other one being the free skating. The short program has also been known by other names. From 1989 to 1992, it was called the original program, and from 1993 to 1994, it was called the technical program.

History

The short program was first introduced in the 1964 season for pair skating competitions, which originally consisted of free skating only. The new short program for pairs was originally called the "connected program" and had only six required elements, drawn from designated groups in lifts, solo jumps, pair spins, solo spins, "spiral spins" (death spirals), and step sequences. The maximum time allowed was 2 minutes and 30 seconds.[1]

For single skating, figure skating competitions used to consist of compulsory figures and free skating only. The short program was introduced in the 1972–73 season as part of a reform to reduce the weight of the compulsory figures and provide an additional event suitable for television coverage of skating competitions. Originally, the short program for singles had only six required elements (three jumps, two spins, and one step sequence). It was performed for the first time at the Nebelhorn Trophy late in the summer of 1972. A seventh element, the spin combination, was added to the short program the following season.

Seen as something intermediate between the full free skating program of four or five minutes and the compulsories, the short program combined a sense of mandatory elements and a presentation that could be of interest to a television audience and paying live spectators.

Required deductions for failures on elements were introduced in the 1975–76 season. The eighth element (second step sequence for men or spiral sequence for ladies) was added in the 1988–89 season, when the time limit was set at 2 minutes 40 seconds. When the ISU Judging System was adopted, the short program was extended by an additional ten seconds in order to allow skaters more time to complete complex spins and step sequences.

In June 1988, the ISU raised the value of the short program from 20% to 30%, beginning in the 1988–89 season.[2]

Required elements in the short program were originally very constrained. For example, at the 1988 Winter Olympics, both men and ladies were required to do a double flip as the jump out of steps, and include a double loop in the jump combination. Beginning in the 1998–99 season, men were allowed to do a triple as the required axel jump and include a quadruple jump in the short program.

Required elements

The International Skating Union regulations set a maximum time of 2 minutes 50 seconds for the short program. There are seven required elements, with mandatory deductions for failures on each element.

Men's singles

Ladies' singles

Pair skating

Synchronized skating

References

  1. "New ISU Pair Program", Skating (magazine), December 1963
  2. "No More Figures In Figure Skating". Associated Press. The New York Times. 9 June 1988.
  3. "Communication No. 1619" (PDF). International Skating Union. U.S. Figure Skating. 24 June 2010.
  4. "SPECIAL REGULATIONS & TECHNICAL RULES SYNCHRONIZED SKATING 2012" (PDF). International Skating Union. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
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