Yukari Nakano


Yukari Nakano is a Japanese former competitive figure skater. She is the 2006 Four Continents silver medalist, the 2003 Four Continents bronze medalist, the 2005–06 Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, the 2007 Asian Winter Games champion, and a three-time Japanese national bronze medalist. Nakano is one of nine female skaters to perform a triple Axel in international competition.

Personal life

Yukari Nakano was born on August 25, 1985 in Kōnan, Aichi Prefecture. She has two elder siblings, a brother and sister.
In 2004, Nakano enrolled at Waseda University in Tokyo. She earned her master's degree from Waseda, having studied at the Graduate School of Human Sciences. In 2010, she began working for Fuji Television's Sports Division, becoming a director and journalist.
In April 2015, Nakano married her longtime boyfriend.

Career

Nakano started skating in 1991 at the Grand Prix Tokai Figure Skating Club, where Machiko Yamada was coaching. Nakano met Midori Ito there, who inspired her to take her skating seriously.
On the junior level, Nakano won two ISU Junior Grand Prix events and earned the silver medal at the 2002 World Junior Championships.
At her first senior international event, the 2002 Skate America, Nakano became the third female skater in the history of the sport to land a triple axel in an ISU sanctioned competition, and the first to have done so in ten years. She went on to land a triple axel-double toe loop combinations at the 2002 Japanese Nationals, the West Japan Championships 2002, and the Kanto Gakusei Freeskating Championships 2004.

Nakano won her first Grand Prix medals in her fourth season on the circuit: bronze at the 2005 Skate Canada International and gold at the 2005 NHK Trophy. She qualified for the 2005–06 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final where she took the bronze. She landed triple axels in five consecutive competitions in 2005. At the 2005 Skate Canada, she became the first woman to land a triple axel under the ISU Judging System in ISU Senior level competition. She placed 5th at the 2005–06 Nationals, missing a berth on the Olympic team. At the World Championships she finished 5th in 2006, 5th in 2007 and 4th in 2008.
In the 2008–09 season, Nakano won the silver medal at the 2008 Skate America and the bronze at the 2008 NHK Trophy. She qualified for the 2008–09 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, where she placed fifth. At the 2008–09 Japan Figure Skating Championships, Nakano led after the short program but three of her jumps were downgraded in the free skate, resulting in her placing 6th in the long program and 5th overall. She did not qualify for the 2009 world team.
At her assigned events for the 2009–10 Grand Prix series, Nakano won the bronze medal at the 2009 Trophée Eric Bompard and finished fourth at the 2009 NHK Trophy. Although she won the bronze medal at the 2009–10 Japan Championships, she was not assigned to the 2010 Olympic team; fourth-place finisher Miki Ando was awarded the first Olympic spot due to her highest placement as a Japanese female skater in the 2009–10 Grand Prix Final, along with gold and silver Japanese medalists Mao Asada and Akiko Suzuki.
Nakano retired from competitive skating in March 2010 due to an injury to her left shoulder.

Triple axel and signature moves

In her regional competition at the beginning of the 2007–08 season, Nakano landed her first clean triple axel in two years. She consistently attempted the triple axel that season, receiving credit for it at the 2007 Skate Canada International, 2007 Cup of Russia, and the 2007–08 Grand Prix Final.
Nakano's signature move is the donut spin. She is also known for her leg wrap when she jumps.

Programs

SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition
2009–2010

by Julian Lloyd Webber, Sarah Chang
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Igor Stravinsky
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Sarah Brightman
choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
----
  • Sparkling Diamonds

by Nicole Kidman
choreo. by Kumiko Sato
2008–2009

  • Romance
from The Gadfly Op.97a
by Dmitri Shostakovich
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Adolphe Charles Adam
choreo. by Marina Zueva


by Barbra Streisand
choreo. by Marina Zueva
----
  • Bolero

by Steve Sharples
performed by Craig Armstrong
choreo. by Marina Zueva, Yukari Nakano
2007–2008

by Frédéric Chopin
performed by Yundi Li
choreo. by Kumiko Sato

by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
choreo. by Marina Zueva


by Camille Saint-Saëns
performed by Giorgia Fumanti
choreo. by Kumiko Sato
----

choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
2006–2007

by John Williams
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Sergei Prokofiev
choreo. by Marina Zueva

  • Claudine
by Tonči Huljić
performed by Maksim Mrvica
choreo. by Kumiko Sato
----
  • Memoirs of a Geisha
by John Williams
choreo. by Marina Zueva
2005–2006

  • Bolero

by Steve Sharples
performed by Craig Armstrong
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Ludwig Minkus
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Hayley Westenra
choreo. by Kumiko Sato
2004–2005


by Charles Gounod
choreo. by Marina Zueva

by Peter Nero
choreo. by Marina Zueva


by John Kander
choreo. by Marina Zueva
2003–2004

  • Prayer for Taylor from Freedom
by Michael W. Smith
choreo. by David Wilson

  • Etude No. 12 in C minor
"Revolutionary" Op. 10-12
by Frédéric Chopin
choreo. by Mihoko Higuchi

  • Nocturne

by Rolf Løvland
choreo. by Mihoko Higuchi
2002–2003

  • Prayer for Taylor from Freedom
by Michael W. Smith
choreo. by David Wilson

  • Oui, pour ce soir...
je suis Titania, Mignon
by Ambroise Thomas
choreo. by David Wilson

  • Nocturne

by Rolf Lovland
choreo. by Mihoko Higuchi
2001–2002

by John Denver
performed by James Galway
choreo. by David Wilson

by Antonín Dvořák
choreo. by Lea Ann Miller

  • Happy Valley
by Vanessa-Mae
choreo. by Mihoko Higuchi
2000–2001

  • Perhaps Love
by John Denver
performed by James Galway
choreo. by David Wilson

choreo. by David Wilson

  • Happy Valley
by Vanessa-Mae
choreo. by Mihoko Higuchi
1999–2000

  • Flute Battle
by Cusco
choreo. by David Wilson

  • Le Grand Tango
by Ástor Piazzolla
choreo. by David Wilson

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

Detailed results

Small medals for short program and free skating awarded only at ISU Championships.

Post–2002

Pre–2002