- Joined
- Jan 19, 2005
It Alina ever leaves Eteri for another coach this message board will meltdown.![]()
Not just this place.
Probably the entire social-media structure.
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It Alina ever leaves Eteri for another coach this message board will meltdown.![]()
Not just this place.
Probably the entire social-media structure.
Nope. CSKA cant really poach anyone from Eteri now. There is nothing CSKA can offer now. I can't see anyone from Eteri's group (3A girls and Alina especially) wanting to join CSKA club.
Funding? Eteri group has whatever they desire now. Most of the Eteri skaters are coming from a rather well-off families, so they don't really need those military salaries, ranks and military pensions or cozy setups after professional sport career which CSKA usually likes to seduce with. A lot of things simply are not the same like they were back in Soviet times. This forum rather often doesn't really receive all the information in full. Just some random translated snippets of random interviews. There are tons of true stories and interviews of ex-CSKA athletes from then and now (including those famous hockey players), and there are number of interviews by many parents of Eteri's skaters too. Easily googleable and translatable. BTW, no reason of gossiping accusations. It is all public and open information.Facts.
Specialists? Eteri has her team in spades. Why in a world any Eteri's skater would need anything elsewhere? They are winning. If it ain't broken dont fix it. Again, their coaches are good, but nothing outstanding in CSKA in terms of specialists now. They actually kicked out a strong coach Inna Goncharenko recently and poached all her students, including Radionova. How did that work out for her after switching to Buyanova after 2015-2016 season? Facts.
Less competition in CSKA? How's that working out for them now? How did that work out for Tsurskaya, Sotnikova, Gubanova and Nurgumanova? These are all amazingly talented skaters. Why would any Eteri's skater want to follow their career path? Buyanova failed to produce any meaningful results in the recent 5 years while having all that funding you just told us. Facts.
Many athletes would dream to get into an elite group with other strong skaters. Many athletes are looking for a group with strong skaters (as a matter of facts - Shoma Uno for instance, according to his own words he is looking for a training group comparable to his level, he didn't went to CSKA 'for less competion'). You get better by training with a stronger skaters.
No, thank you. 3A, Alina, KamiVali, Usacheva, Akatyeva and the rest should stay right there where they are. Some people are mocking CSKA as a "graveyard for talents" lately.And for a good reason. Sadly.
This is exactly 12 so maybe it will happen
Valieva
Kanysheva
Tarakanova
Tarusina
Sinitsyna
Vasilieva
Usacheva
Khromykh
Frolova
Gubanova
Safonova
Kadyrova
Welcome Elegance. Figure skating is still elegant.Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...

Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...
Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...
I'm curious about Guliakova? She's 16, right? It seems unlikely she'll get any senior assignment, so why not just stay in Juniors, especially if her 3axel is getting more consistent? What other possible juniors could show up for JrTestSkates? I think those are all I know.
Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...

Did she retire?Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...
Sorry for dropping suddenly in this thread, but does anyone know what happened to Alisa Fedichkina? I throughly enjoyed her in juniors specially these (1) (2), even though I disliked some of her program choices. The cat program was a choice but she was also lovely in it.Did she retire?
Alisa is training with Mishin's group now. She was at his camp in Florida earlier this month with Liza, Sofia, and others. I'm not sure what kind of form she's in though. She competed once or twice domestically last year and didn't have good showings.Sorry for dropping suddenly in this thread, but does anyone know what happened to Alisa Fedichkina? I throughly enjoyed her in juniors specially these (1) (2), even though I disliked some of her program choices. The cat program was a choice but she was also lovely in it. [emoji23] Did she retire?
Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...
.No need to be sorry. I think Alisa is still out there.
She is adorable and her cat ears cute.
Thank you! Do you know if she has plans to compete this season? Last time she did was in 2017-2018.
It Alina ever leaves Eteri for another coach this message board will meltdown.![]()
Hello, everyone! As a yearlong FS fan and general cheerer-on of the Russian ladies' teams, I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time now, and that is this:
If other coaches in Russia and elsewhere followed Eteri Tutberidze's techniques, might their skaters enjoy a level of success that's comparable to hers?
From what I can tell, Eteri Georgievna's strategy is threefold:
1. Proposing a modest amount of food/drink intake that's designed to make her skaters go through puberty later than non-skaters and remain sufficiently thin thereafter to keep their jump techniques strong (e.g., Alina Zagitova, Evgenia Medvedeva).
2. Training her skaters in the same rink at the same time, with the reasoning that if you train with the best, you're more likely to become one of the best.
3. Requiring skaters to practice their full programs nonstop, thus entering them into muscle memory, rather than having the skaters concentrate primarily on difficult elements and potentially sacrifice consistency in the process.
Many opinions have been expressed as to whether Eteri Georgievna is too difficult a taskmaster, and that's not where I'm intending to go with this post. I greatly respect her accomplishments and those of her team. What I'm wondering is, if one strips away some of the cultural contrasts between West and East, how many other coaches might achieve similar success using her methods, and to what extent? For instance, if other coaches had their skaters follow more modest dietary standards but kept the centralization and program drills, would they see a rise in their number of podium placements?
I haven't seen these questions asked or answered in Golden Skate--not yet, anyway. I suppose you could call this post a thought experiment. I'll be interested in seeing your opinions...