Tanith Belbin
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Olympic medal record | |||
Figure skating | |||
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Silver | 2006 Turin | Ice dancing |
Personal Info | ||
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Country: | United States | |
Residence: | Northville, Michigan | |
Height: | 5 ft. 6 in | |
Partner: | Benjamin Agosto | |
Coach: | Igor Shpilband Marina Zoueva |
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Skating Club: | Arctic FSC | |
ISU Personal Best Scores | ||
Ice Dance Total: | 221.26 | 2005 Worlds |
Comp. Dance: | 44.00 | 2005 Four CC |
Original Dance: | 67.54 | 2005 Worlds |
Free Dance: | 111.54 | 2005 Worlds |
Most Recent Results: | |||
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Event | Points | Finish | Year |
Four Continents Championships | 196.98 | 2nd | 2007 |
National Championships | 202.88 | 1st | 2007 |
Cup of Russia | 186.33 | 1st | 2006 |
Tanith Belbin (born July 11, 1984 in Kingston, Ontario) is a Canadian-American ice dancer. Though she holds dual citizenship, she competes for the United States and has competed for the U.S. since she began skating with Benjamin Agosto in 1999. With Agosto, Belbin is the 2006 Olympic silver medalist, three time Four Continents Champion (2004-2006), and four time US National Champion (2004-2007).
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Tanith Belbin competed as a pair skater and ice dancer in Canada before concentrating completely on ice dancing. She was introduced to ice dancing by Paul Wirtz and competed with Liam Dougherty as an ice dancer and Ben Barruco as a pair skater. Not able to find a good partner in Canada, Belbin moved to Detroit, where she was partnered with Benjamin Agosto. They had early success, winning the bronze at World Juniors in their first competitive season. Belbin and Agosto qualified for the 2002 Olympics by placing second at U.S. championships, but were not able to go because Belbin was not an American citizen. Because Belbin started the citizenship process before new rules went into effect, her citizenship would not have been completed before 2007. Belbin and Agosto, therefore, focused more on Nationals and Worlds, winning Nationals three times, and earning the silver at Worlds going into the Olympics.
Fans of Belbin and Agosto wrote letters and signed petitions asking for a special act of Congress to let Belbin become a citizen in time for her to compete at the 2006 Winter Olympics, where many believed they could medal. This was a controversial move. The mother of fellow American ice dancer David Mitchell believed that it was unfair to bend the rules for Belbin.[1] Supporters pointed out that the U.S. had three dance team spots at the Olympics only because Belbin and Agosto had earned the third spot by medalling at the 2005 World Championships. Had they not, the U.S. would have had only two spots. By this logic, Belbin and Agosto had earned their own spots. But the point was moot after Mitchell and his partner Loren Galler-Rabinowitz placed ninth at U.S. championships, nowhere near earning a spot on the World team.
However, by a special act of Congress on December 28, 2005, which President George W. Bush signed on December 31, 2005, Belbin became a naturalized citizen, making her able to compete for the United States at the 2006 Winter Olympics. In January 2006, the pair won their third consecutive national title and qualified for the Olympics. Maxim Zavozin, who is half of the 2005 Junior World Champion team of Matthews and Zavozin, also became a U.S. citizen through this special act.
At the Turin Olympics, Belbin and Agosto won silver in ice dancing, the highest Olympic result of any American pair in the discipline, and the first American ice dancers to win an Olympic medal in 30 years. They went on to win the bronze at Worlds. In January 2007, Belbin and Agosto continued their streak, winning their fourth consecutive U.S. championship in Spokane.
Belbin and Agosto both train in Canton, Michigan.
[edit] Competitive highlights
(with Agosto)
Event | 1999-2000 | 2000-2001 | 2001-2002 | 2002-2003 | 2003-2004 | 2004-2005 | 2005-2006 | 2006-2007 |
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Winter Olympic Games | 2nd | |||||||
World Championships | 17th | 13th | 7th | 5th | 2nd | 3rd | 3rd | |
Four Continents | 2nd | 2nd | 1st | 1st | 1st | 2nd | ||
U.S. Championships | 1st J. | 2nd | 2nd | 2nd | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st |
Grand Prix Final | 3rd | 2nd | WD | |||||
Skate America | 5th | 3rd | 1st | 1st | 1st | |||
Cup of China | 1st | 2nd | ||||||
Trophee Lalique | 6th | 3rd | 4th | |||||
Cup of Russia | 2nd | 1st | ||||||
Nebelhorn Trophy | 1st | |||||||
Goodwill Games | 5th | |||||||
World Juniors | 3rd | 2nd | 1st | |||||
Junior Grand Prix Final | 4th | 1st | ||||||
JGP Mexico | 1st | |||||||
JGP Germany | 1st | |||||||
JGP Canada | 1st | |||||||
JGP Japan | 2nd |
- J = Junior level
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Official web site
- Tanith Belbin at the United States Figure Skating Association
- Tanith Belbin at the International Skating Union biography page
[edit] Navigation
1999: Shae-Lynn Bourne & Victor Kraatz | 2000: Naomi Lang & Peter Tchernyshev | 2001: Shae-Lynn Bourne & Victor Kraatz | 2002: Naomi Lang & Peter Tchernyshev | 2003: Shae-Lynn Bourne & Victor Kraatz | 2004-2006: Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto | 2007: Marie-France Dubreuil & Patrice Lauzon |
1936: Marjorie Parker / Joseph Savage | 1937-1938: Nettie Prantell / Harold Hartshorne | 1939-1941: Sandy MacDonald / Harold Hartshorne | 1942: Edith Whetstone / A.L. Richards | 1943-1944: Marcella May / James Lochead | 1945: Kathe Mehl Williams / Robert Swenning | 1946: Anne Davies / Carleton Hoffner | 1947-1949: Lois Waring / Walter Bainbridge | 1950: Lois Waring / Michael McGean | 1951: Carmel Bodel / Edward Bodel | 1952: Lois Waring / Michael McGean | 1953: Carol Ann Peters / Daniel Ryan | 1954-1955: Carmel Bodel / Edward Bodel | 1956: Joan Zamboni / Roland Junso | 1957: Sharon McKenzie / Bert Wright | 1958-1959: Andree Anderson / Donald Jacoby | 1960: Margie Ackles / Charles Phillips | 1961: Diane Sherbloom / Larry Pierce | 1962: Yvonne Littlefield / Peter Betts | 1963: Sally Schantz / Stanley Urban | 1964: Darleen Streich / Charles Fetter | 1965-1966: Kristin Fortune / Dennis Sveum | 1967: Lorna Dyer / John Carrell | 1968-1972: Judy Schwomeyer / James Sladky | 1973: Mary Campbell / Johnny Johns | 1974-1976: Colleen O'Connor / Jim Millns | 1977: Judi Genovese / Kent Weigle | 1978-1980: Stacey Smith / John Summers | 1981-1985: Judy Blumberg / Michael Seibert | 1986: Renee Roca / Donald Adair | 1987-1988: Suzanne Semanick / Scott Gregory | 1989-1990: Susan Wynne / Joseph Druar | 1991: Elizabeth Punsalan / Jerod Swallow | 1992: April Sargent Thomas / Russ Witherby | 1993: Renee Roca / Gorsha Sur | 1994: Elizabeth Punsalan / Jerod Swallow | 1995: Renee Roca / Gorsha Sur | 1996-1998: Elizabeth Punsalan / Jerod Swallow | 1999-2003: Naomi Lang / Peter Tchernyshev | 2004-2007: Tanith Belbin / Benjamin Agosto |
1997: Federica Faiella & Luciano Milo | 1998: Jamie Silverstein & Justin Pekarek | 1999: Natalia Romanyta & Daniel Barantsev | 2000: Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto | 2001: Elena Khaliavina & Maxim Shabalin | 2002: Oksana Domnina & Maxim Shabalin | 2003: Nora Hoffmann & Attila Elek | 2004: Morgan Matthews & Maxim Zavozin | 2005: Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir | 2006: Madison Hubbell & Keiffer Hubbell |
Categories: Ice dancers | American figure skaters | Canadian figure skaters | Olympic competitors for the United States | Olympic silver medalists for the United States | Winter Olympics medalists | Figure skaters at the 2006 Winter Olympics | Naturalized citizens of the United States | People from Kingston, Ontario | People from Northville, Michigan | Ontario sportspeople | Quebec sportspeople | Canadian expatriate sportspeople in the United States | Canadian immigrants to the United States | 1984 births | Living people