Emmi Peltonen
Emmi Peltonen | ||||||||||||||||||
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Born | Nashville, Tennessee, United States | 19 November 1999|||||||||||||||||
Hometown | Helsinki, Finland | |||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.62 m (5 ft 4 in) | |||||||||||||||||
Figure skating career | ||||||||||||||||||
Country | Finland | |||||||||||||||||
Discipline | Women's singles | |||||||||||||||||
Coach | Sirkka Kaipio Hanna Peltonen | |||||||||||||||||
Skating club | Helsingin Taitoluisteluklubi | |||||||||||||||||
Began skating | 2002 | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record | ||||||||||||||||||
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Emmi Peltonen (born 29 November 1999) is a Finnish-American figure skater. She is the 2017 FBMA Trophy champion, the 2020 Nordic silver medalist, and a three-time Finnish national champion (2016, 2017, 2019). She has finished within the top ten at three European Championships, and represented Finland at the 2018 Winter Olympics, where she finished twentieth.
Personal life
[edit]Peltonen was born on 29 November 1999 in Nashville, Tennessee.[1] She has two brothers, twins Aleksi and Jesper (one year older), and a sister, Nelli (six years younger).[2] Their Finnish parents – Hanna, a former figure skater, and Ville Peltonen, a former ice hockey player – had moved to the United States due to his contract with the NHL's Nashville Predators franchise.[2] The family returned to Finland a few years later. Her paternal grandfather, Esa Peltonen, is also a former professional ice hockey player.[2]
Career
[edit]Early years
[edit]Peltonen received her first skates when she was two years old and began learning to skate in 2002.[1][2] She competed domestically for the United States as a child at the juvenile level until 2010.[3] She began competing on the advanced novice level at international events in the 2011–2012 season. She won the novice gold medal at the 2013 Nordic Championships.
2013–2014 season: Junior international debut
[edit]Peltonen debuted on the junior international level in the 2013–2014 season. She won the junior silver medal at the Finnish Championships and Nordic Championships, both times finishing second to Jenni Saarinen.
2014–2015 season
[edit]Virpi Horttana coached Peltonen at Espoo Skating Club in Espoo, Finland.[4] Her ISU Junior Grand Prix (JGP) debut came in August 2014; she finished ninth at her assignment in Courchevel, France.
Competing on the senior level at the Finnish Championships, she placed eighth in the short program, fourth in the free skate, and fourth overall.
2015–2016 season: Senior international debut
[edit]In 2015–2016, Peltonen was coached by Sirkka Kaipio in Helsinki and Järvenpää, and by Rafael Arutyunyan in California. She placed fifteenth at her sole JGP assignment in Linz, Austria.
Making her senior international debut, Peltonen placed tenth at the Finlandia Trophy, a Challenger Series (CS) event in October 2015. She did not compete at the Finnish Championships in December but took the junior bronze medal at the Nordic Championships a couple of months later.
2016–2017 season
[edit]During the summer, Peltonen trained with Arutyunyan in California.[2] In August, she placed fifth at her JGP assignment in Saint Gervais-les-Bains, France. She then competed at several senior internationals, finishing twelfth at the CS Finlandia Trophy, fourteenth at the Volvo Open Cup, and sixth at the CS Warsaw Cup.
In December 2016, Peltonen won the senior gold medal at the Finnish Championships in Tampere,[5] having outscored silver medalist Jenni Saarinen by eight points. She was named in Finland's team to the 2017 European Championships in Ostrava.[6] Ranked fourteenth in the short program and ninth in the free skate, she finished eleventh overall in the Czech Republic.
Peltonen competed at the 2017 World Championships in Helsinki, Finland, but did not advance to the free skate, having placed twenty-ninth in the short program.
2017–2018 season
[edit]In September 2017, Finland qualified a spot in the ladies event at the 2018 Winter Olympics due to Viveca Lindfors' result at the 2017 CS Nebelhorn Trophy. In December, Peltonen won her second consecutive national title, finishing ahead of silver medalist Lindfors by a margin of 4.22 points.
In January, Peltonen placed eleventh in the short program, eighth in the free skate, and ninth overall at the 2018 European Championships in Moscow, Russia; she was Finland's top lady at the event, finishing 11 points ahead of Lindfors. On 24 January 2018, the Finnish Olympic Committee selected Peltonen to compete at the Olympics. She finished twentieth in the ladies' event.[7]
2018–2019 season
[edit]Peltonen began the new season at the 2018 CS Finlandia Trophy on home soil, finishing in fifth place, two ordinals below Lindfors, who won the bronze medal. She then debuted on the Grand Prix series at the special 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki, where she placed ninth.
Peltonen won the silver medal at the Finnish Championships, finishing behind Lindfors. She finished eighth at the 2019 European Championships, while Lindfors won the bronze medal.[8] Based on the season's results, the Finnish Federation assigned Lindfors to Finland's lone ladies' spot at the 2019 World Championships. However, Peltonen was subsequently given the spot following Lindors' withdrawal due to injury and placed twenty-eighth at the World Championships in Saitama.[9]
2019–2020 season
[edit]Assigned to only one Grand Prix event, the 2019 Rostelecom Cup, she placed twelfth among twelve skaters. Withdrawing from some other events, she won the Finnish national title again and was assigned to compete at the European Championships. She was fifth in the short program at the European Championships with a new personal best and described her "Caruso" program as her favourite to date.[10] Seventh in the free skate with one fall, she remained in fifth place overall.[11]
After winning the silver medal at the Nordic Championships, Peltonen was scheduled to compete at the World Championships in Montreal, but those were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.[12]
2020–2021 season
[edit]Peltonen was scheduled to compete on the Grand Prix at the 2020 Internationaux de France, but this event was cancelled as a result of the pandemic.[13]
2021–2022 season
[edit]Peltonen withdrew from her first two Challenger assignments, the Lombardia and Nebelhorn Trophies. At the 2021 CS Denis Ten Memorial Challenge, a third Challenger, she finished fourth and was later eighth at the 2021 CS Warsaw Cup before winning the Open d'Andorra.[14]
Despite winning the bronze medal at the Finnish championships, Peltonen was assigned to one of the two Finnish berths at the 2022 European Championships. However, she subsequently withdrew from the European Championships due to an ankle injury.[14][15]
2022–2023 season
[edit]In her season debut at the Volvo Open Cup, Peltonen won the bronze medal.[14] After contracting COVID-19, she was forced to withdraw from her other planned fall assignments, including the special home 2022 Grand Prix of Espoo.[16] Her only other event of the season was the 2022 CS Golden Spin of Zagreb, where she placed sixteenth.[14]
2023–2024 season
[edit]Peltonen finished seventh at the 2023 CS Autumn Classic International in her first appearance of the year, and went on to finish seventh as well at the 2023 CS Finlandia Trophy. She would subsequently compete at the 2023 Trophée Métropole Nice Côte d'Azur, where she won the gold medal before going on to finish eighth at the 2023 CS Warsaw Cup.[14]
Following a fourth-place finish at the 2023–24 Finnish Championships, Peltonen was selected to compete at the 2024 European Championships, where she placed twelfth.[14]
2024–2025 season
[edit]Beginning her season in late November, Peltonen competed at the 2024 NRW Trophy, where she finished in fifth place.[17]
Programs
[edit]Season | Short program | Free skating | Exhibition |
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2023–2024 [18][19] |
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2022–2023 [20] |
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2021–2022 [21] |
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2020–2021 [22] |
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2019–2020 [23] |
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2018–2019 [24] |
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2017–2018 [25] |
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2016–2017 [1] |
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2015–2016 [26] |
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2014–2015 [4] |
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2013–2014 |
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2012–2013 | |||
2011–2012 |
Competitive highlights
[edit]GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix
International[14] | ||||||||||||
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Event | 13–14 | 14–15 | 15–16 | 16–17 | 17–18 | 18–19 | 19–20 | 20–21 | 21–22 | 22–23 | 23–24 | 24–25 |
Olympics | 20th | |||||||||||
Worlds | 29th | 28th | C | |||||||||
Europeans | 11th | 9th | 8th | 5th | WD | 12th | ||||||
GP France | C | |||||||||||
GP Finland | 9th | WD | ||||||||||
GP Rostelecom Cup | 12th | |||||||||||
CS Autumn Classic | 7th | |||||||||||
CS Budapest Trophy | WD | |||||||||||
CS Denis Ten Memorial | 4th | |||||||||||
CS Alpen Trophy | WD | |||||||||||
CS Finlandia | 10th | 12th | 11th | 5th | WD | 7th | ||||||
CS Golden Spin | 16th | |||||||||||
CS Lombardia | 11th | WD | ||||||||||
CS Nebelhorn | WD | WD | ||||||||||
CS Tallinn | WD | |||||||||||
CS Warsaw Cup | 6th | WD | 8th | WD | 8th | TBD | ||||||
FBMA Trophy | 1st | 1st | ||||||||||
Nordics | WD | 2nd | ||||||||||
NRW Trophy | 5th | |||||||||||
Open d'Andorra | 1st | |||||||||||
Santa Claus Cup | 4th | |||||||||||
Tallink Hotels Cup | WD | |||||||||||
Trophée Nice | 1st | |||||||||||
Volvo Open Cup | 14th | 4th | 3rd | |||||||||
International: Junior[14][27] | ||||||||||||
Junior Worlds | WD | |||||||||||
JGP Austria | 16th | |||||||||||
JGP France | 9th | 5th | ||||||||||
Dragon Trophy | 3rd | |||||||||||
Hellmut Seibt | 3rd | |||||||||||
Ice Challenge | 5th | |||||||||||
Challenge Cup | 3rd | |||||||||||
Nordics | 2nd | WD | 3rd | |||||||||
NRW Trophy | 18th | |||||||||||
Volvo Open Cup | 9th | |||||||||||
National[14] | ||||||||||||
Finnish Champ. | 2nd J | 4th | 1st | 1st | 2nd | 1st | C | 3rd | 4th |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Emmi Peltonen: 2016/2017". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 30 May 2017.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ a b c d e Piilonen, Teijo (7 October 2016). "Ville Peltosen Emmi-tytär, 16, tähtää maailman huipulle – lopetti koulun yläasteen jälkeen" [Ville Peltonen's daughter Emmi, 16, is aiming for the top]. Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish).
- ^ "Emmi PELTONEN". RinkResults.com. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ a b "Emmi Peltonen: 2014/2015". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 21 May 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Smolander, Riikka (18 December 2016). "Ville Peltosen Emmi-tytär kruunattiin jääkuningattareksi SM-kisoissa" [Ville Peltonen's daughter Emmi crowned Finnish figure skating champion]. Yle (in Finnish). Archived from the original on 19 December 2016.
- ^ "Suomen EM-kisajoukkue Tsekin Ostravaan 25.-29.1.2017 on valittu" [Finnish team to the European Championships in Ostrava] (in Finnish). Finnish Figure Skating Association. 21 December 2016.
- ^ "Mika Kojonkoski vastasi taitoluistelun valintakohuun: "Täysin selvä tapaus"" [Mika Kojonkoski on figure skating: "A completely clear case"]. Iltalehti (in Finnish). 24 January 2018. Archived from the original on 24 January 2018.
- ^ Slater, Paula (January 25, 2019). "Samodurova shines; wins European ladies' title". Golden Skate.
- ^ Lindfors, Viveca (March 5, 2019). "Unfortunately I have to withdraw from World Championships due to a medical reason. Please look forward to seeing me again next season" (Instagram). Archived from the original on 2021-12-24.
- ^ Slater, Paula (January 24, 2020). "Kostornaia leads Russian sweep at Europeans". Golden Skate.
- ^ Slater, Paula (January 25, 2020). "Kostornaia takes gold in Russian sweep at Europeans". Golden Skate.
- ^ Ewing, Lori (March 11, 2020). "World figure skating championships cancelled in Montreal". CBC Sports.
- ^ "Grand Prix of France figure skating event canceled due to coronavirus". Olympic Channel. 20 October 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Competition Results: Emmi Peltonen". International Skating Union. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ "Taitoluistelun EM-kilpailut alkavat – Suomella edustus kaikissa sarjoissa, Ounasvuori Peltosen tilalle" [European Figure Skating Championships begin – Finland represented in all disciplines, Ounasvuori replaces Peltonen] (in Finnish). Suomen Taitoluisteluliitto. 9 January 2022.
- ^ "Janna Jyrkinen pikakomennuksella GP-edustajaksi" [Janna Jyrkinen on express assignment as a GP representative] (in Finnish). Finnish Figure Skating Association. 23 November 2022.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen". Skating Scores. Skating Scores. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
- ^ "Emmi PELTONEN: 2023/2024". International Skating Union. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ "2023-24 FP Announcement". TikTok. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2022/2023". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 17 November 2022.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2021/2022". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 1 October 2021.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2020/2021". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2019/2020". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 16 November 2019.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2018/2019". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 12 November 2018.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2017/2018". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 24 January 2018.
- ^ "Emmi Peltonen: 2015/2016". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 10 April 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Emmi Peltonen". tracings.net. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Emmi Peltonen at Wikimedia Commons
- Emmi Peltonen at the International Skating Union
- 1999 births
- Living people
- Figure skaters from Helsinki
- Sportspeople from Tennessee
- Finnish female single skaters
- American female single skaters
- American people of Finnish descent
- Figure skaters at the 2018 Winter Olympics
- Olympic figure skaters for Finland
- 21st-century American sportswomen
- 21st-century Finnish sportswomen