Alexei Urmanov

[1] Competing for the Soviet Union, Urmanov won the silver medal at the 1990 World Junior Championships.He became the 1997 European champion, but an injury forced him out of the 1997 World Championships after the short program and kept him from competing for a berth to the 1998 Olympics.Urmanov was coached by Alexei Mishin at the Yubileyny Sports Palace in Saint Petersburg.He was based in Saint Petersburg until 2014, when he moved to Sochi, to coach at the Iceberg Skating Palace.[8] His current and former students include: GP: Champions Series / Grand Prix Media related to Alexei Urmanov at Wikimedia Commons
Eastern Slavic naming customspatronymicfamily nameLeningradRussian SFSRSoviet UnionRussiaFigure skatingMen's singlesWinter Olympics1994 LillehammerWorld Championships1993 PragueEuropean Championships1997 Paris1995 Dortmund1994 Copenhagen1999 PragueGrand Prix Final1995–96 Paris1998–99 St. Petersburg1996–97 HamiltonUnified Team1992 LausanneWorld Junior Championships1990 Colorado SpringsRussian1994 Olympic1993 World1997 European1995–96 Champions Series FinalRussian nationalSoviet national1990 World Junior Championshipsquadruple jump1992 Winter Olympics1993 World Championships1994 Winter Olympics1997 European champion1997 World ChampionshipsAlexei MishinYubileyny Sports PalaceSaint PetersburgInternational Skating UnionIceberg Skating PalaceLuleåSwedenFranceSergei VoronovNodari MaisuradzeZhan BushGordei GorshkovNikol GosvianiPolina AgafonovaAnastasiia GubanovaDeniss VasiļjevsYulia LipnitskayaMikhail ShaidorovToccata and Fugue in D minorJohann Sebastian BachMariano MoresPrincess of the CircusEmmerich KálmánNight on Bald MountainModest MussorgskyRigolettoGiuseppe VerdiSwan LakePyotr TchaikovskyThe Barber of SevilleGioachino RossiniPiano Concerto No. 1Don QuixoteLudwig MinkusBoléroMaurice RavelChampions Series / Grand PrixOlympicsWorldsEuropeansNations CupCup of RussiaSkate AmericaSkate CanadaGoodwill GamesInter. de ParisMoscow NewsNHK TrophySt. GervaisJunior WorldsRussian Champ.Soviet Champ.Vaytsekhovskaya, ElenaSport ExpressWayback MachineOlympic figure skating champions (men's singles)Ulrich SalchowGillis GrafströmKarl SchäferDick ButtonHayes Alan JenkinsDavid JenkinsManfred SchnelldorferWolfgang SchwarzOndrej NepelaJohn CurryRobin CousinsScott HamiltonBrian BoitanoViktor PetrenkoIlia KulikAlexei YagudinEvgeni PlushenkoEvan LysacekYuzuru HanyuNathan ChenEuropean figure skating champions (men's singles)Oskar UhligEduard EngelmannTibor von FöldváryGustav HügelMax BohatschErnst HerzPer ThorénIvan MalininAndor SzendeFritz KachlerWilly BöcklFelix KasparGraham SharpHans GerschwilerEdi RadaEde KirályHelmut SeibtCarlo FassiAlain GilettiKarol DivínAlain CalmatEmmerich DanzerJan HoffmannVladimir KovalevIgor BobrinNorbert SchrammAlexandre FadeevJozef SabovčíkPetr BarnaDmitri DmitrenkoViacheslav ZagorodniukBrian JoubertTomáš VernerFlorent AmodioJavier FernándezDmitri AlievMark KondratiukAdam Siao Him FaGrand Prix of Figure Skating Final champions (men's singles)Elvis StojkoEmanuel SandhuStéphane LambielJeremy AbbottPatrick ChanDaisuke TakahashiShoma UnoIlia MalininSkate Canada International figure skating champions (men's singles)Toller CranstonRon ShaverFumio IgarashiBrian OrserVitali EgorovKurt BrowningTakeshi HondaTakahito MuraSōta YamamotoBofrost Cup on Ice champions (men's singles)Christopher BowmanMark MitchellTodd EldredgeVyacheslav ZahorodnyukStefan LindemannRostelecom Cup champions (men's singles)Johnny WeirTatsuki MachidaAlexander SamarinMikhail KolyadaMorisi KvitelashviliRussian figure skating champions (men's singles)Alexander PanshinNikolai PaninFyodor DatlinKarl OlloAlexander AbtAndrei GriazevKonstantin MenshovMaxim KovtunEvgeni SemenenkoVladislav DikidzhiSoviet champions in figure skating – Men's singlesPyotr ChernyshevPyotr OrlovValentin ZakharovIgor PersiantsevLev MikhaylovValery MeshkovSergei ChetverukhinVladimir KovalyovSergey VolkovYuri OvchinnikovKonstantin KokoraVladimir Kotin