2025 CS Cranberry Cup International
2025 Cranberry Cup International | |
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Type: | ISU Challenger Series |
Date: | August 7 – 10 |
Season: | 2025–26 |
Location: | Norwood, Massachusetts, United States |
Host: | U.S. Figure Skating |
Venue: | Skating Club of Boston |
Champions | |
Men's singles: ![]() | |
Women's singles: ![]() | |
Previous: 2024 CS Cranberry Cup International | |
Next CS: 2025 CS John Nicks International Pairs Competition |
The 2025 Cranberry Cup International was a figure skating competition sanctioned by the International Skating Union (ISU), organized and hosted by U.S. Figure Skating, and the first event of the 2025–26 ISU Challenger Series.[1] It was held at the Skating Club of Boston in Norwood, Massachusetts, in the United States, on August 7–10, 2025.[2] Medals were awarded in men's and women's singles, and skaters earned ISU World Standing points based on their results. Roman Sadovsky of Canada won the men's event and Isabeau Levito of the United States won the women's event.
Background
The ISU Challenger Series was introduced in 2014. It is a series of international figure skating competitions sanctioned by the International Skating Union (ISU) and organized by ISU member nations. The objective was to ensure consistent organization and structure within a series of international competitions linked together, providing opportunities for senior-level skaters to compete at the international level and also earn ISU World Standing points.[3] The 2025–26 Challenger Series consists of eleven events, of which the Cranberry Cup International was the first.
The ISU published the preliminary list of entries on July 22, 2025.[4][5]
Changes to preliminary assignments
Date | Discipline | Withdrew | Added | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
July 26 | Men | ![]() |
— | [6] |
![]() | ||||
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Women | — | ![]() | ||
August 4 | ![]() |
— | [7] | |
August 6 | ![]() |
[8] | ||
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Required performance elements
Men and women competing in single skating first performed a short program on Saturday, August 9.[2] Lasting no more than 2 minutes 40 seconds,[9] the short program had to include the following elements:
For men: one double or triple Axel; one triple or quadruple jump; one jump combination consisting of a double jump and a triple jump, two triple jumps, or a quadruple jump and a double jump or triple jump; one flying spin; one camel spin or sit spin with a change of foot; one spin combination with a change of foot; and a step sequence using the full ice surface.[10]
For women: one double or triple Axel; one triple jump; one jump combination consisting of a double jump and a triple jump, or two triple jumps; one flying spin; one layback spin, sideways leaning spin, camel spin, or sit spin without a change of foot; one spin combination with a change of foot; and one step sequence using the full ice surface.[10]
Skaters performed their free skates on Sunday, August 10.[2] The free skate performance for both men and women could last no more than 4 minutes,[9] and had to include the following: seven jump elements, of which one had to be an Axel-type jump; three spins, of which one had to be a spin combination, one had to be a flying spin, and one had to be a spin with only one position; a step sequence; and a choreographic sequence.[11]
Judging
For the 2025–2026 season, all of the technical elements in any figure skating performance – such as jumps and spins – were assigned a predetermined base point value and were then scored by a panel of nine judges on a scale from -5 to 5 based on their quality of execution.[12] The judging panel's Grade of Execution (GOE) was determined by calculating the trimmed mean (that is, an average after deleting the highest and lowest scores), and this GOE was added to the base value to come up with the final score for each element. The panel's scores for all elements were added together to generate a total element score.[13] At the same time, judges evaluated each performance based on five program components – skating skills, transitions, performance, composition, and interpretation of the music – and assigned a score from .25 to 10 in .25 point increments. The judging panel's final score for each program component was also determined by calculating the trimmed mean. Those scores were then multiplied by the factor shown on the following chart; the results were added together to generate a total program component score.[14]
Discipline | Short progam | Free skate |
---|---|---|
Men | 1.67 | 3.33 |
Women | 1.33 | 2.67 |
Deductions were applied for certain violations like time infractions, stops and restarts, or falls.[16] The total element score and total program component score were added together, minus any deductions, to generate a final performance score for each skater or team.[17]
Medal summary
Discipline | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men | ![]() |
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Women | ![]() |
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Results
Men's singles
Rank | Skater | Nation | Total | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Roman Sadovsky | ![]() |
243.23 | 5 | 74.76 | 1 | 168.47 |
![]() |
Aleksandr Selevko | ![]() |
235.70 | 3 | 76.62 | 3 | 159.08 |
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Stephen Gogolev | ![]() |
231.81 | 11 | 67.22 | 2 | 164.59 |
4 | Tamir Kuperman | ![]() |
211.87 | 4 | 75.04 | 5 | 136.83 |
5 | Jacob Sanchez | ![]() |
211.31 | 2 | 78.60 | 7 | 132.71 |
6 | Donovan Carrillo | ![]() |
208.51 | 6 | 70.65 | 4 | 137.86 |
7 | Jimmy Ma | ![]() |
207.53 | 1 | 78.74 | 11 | 128.79 |
8 | Liam Kapeikis | ![]() |
201.94 | 8 | 69.65 | 8 | 132.29 |
9 | Tomoki Hiwatashi | ![]() |
201.66 | 9 | 69.45 | 9 | 132.21 |
10 | Lee Jae-keun | ![]() |
198.50 | 10 | 68.55 | 10 | 129.95 |
11 | Mark Gorodnitsky | ![]() |
193.08 | 15 | 58.49 | 6 | 134.59 |
12 | Kai Kovar | ![]() |
189.91 | 7 | 69.75 | 13 | 120.16 |
13 | Semen Daniliants | ![]() |
187.48 | 12 | 66.22 | 12 | 121.26 |
14 | Lev Vinokur | ![]() |
170.34 | 13 | 59.39 | 14 | 110.95 |
15 | Lim Ju-heon | ![]() |
161.89 | 16 | 56.83 | 15 | 105.06 |
16 | Daniel Martynov | ![]() |
153.00 | 14 | 58.83 | 16 | 94.17 |
17 | Jared Sedlis | ![]() |
139.71 | 17 | 51.98 | 17 | 87.73 |
Women's singles
Rank | Skater | Nation | Total | SP | FS | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Isabeau Levito | ![]() |
207.61 | 1 | 70.69 | 2 | 136.92 |
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Sofia Samodelkina | ![]() |
203.15 | 2 | 65.80 | 1 | 137.35 |
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Shin Ji-a | ![]() |
179.97 | 3 | 62.12 | 3 | 117.85 |
4 | Sonja Hilmer | ![]() |
165.83 | 4 | 59.34 | 4 | 106.49 |
5 | Josephine Lee | ![]() |
160.99 | 5 | 56.04 | 5 | 104.95 |
6 | Katie Shen | ![]() |
154.75 | 8 | 50.35 | 6 | 104.40 |
7 | Olivia Elin Phillips | ![]() |
147.05 | 11 | 47.01 | 7 | 100.04 |
8 | Andrea Montesinos Cantú | ![]() |
146.96 | 7 | 50.93 | 8 | 96.03 |
9 | Kim Min-chae | ![]() |
140.95 | 6 | 53.82 | 10 | 87.13 |
10 | Brooke Gewalt | ![]() |
136.83 | 9 | 48.92 | 9 | 87.91 |
11 | Sienna Kaczmarczyk | ![]() |
132.63 | 10 | 48.44 | 11 | 84.19 |
12 | Andrea Astrain Maynez | ![]() |
125.02 | 12 | 42.19 | 12 | 82.83 |
13 | Petra Lahti | ![]() |
115.90 | 13 | 38.88 | 13 | 77.02 |
14 | Simona Bhasin | ![]() |
94.93 | 14 | 31.81 | 14 | 63.12 |
15 | Alejandra Osuna Tirado | ![]() |
87.13 | 15 | 31.62 | 16 | 55.51 |
16 | Sophia Natalie Dayan | ![]() |
85.52 | 17 | 23.45 | 15 | 62.07 |
17 | Mya Li Poe | ![]() |
84.31 | 16 | 29.11 | 17 | 55.20 |
WD | Dimitra Korri | ![]() |
Withdrew | 18 | 22.60 | Withdrew from competition |
References
- ^ "ISU CS Cranberry Cup International 2025". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on June 7, 2025. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
- ^ a b c "2025 Cranberry Cup International Challenger Series" (PDF). International Skating Union. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 24, 2025. Retrieved August 15, 2025.
- ^ "Challenger Series". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on March 29, 2025. Retrieved May 14, 2025.
- ^ "ISU CS Cranberry Cup International 2025 – Men". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on July 22, 2025. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
- ^ "ISU CS Cranberry Cup International 2025 – Women". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on July 22, 2025. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
- ^ @AnythingGOE (July 26, 2025). "🇫🇷 Luc Economides, 🇰🇿 Nikita Krivosheyev, and 🇰🇿 Artur Smagulov have withdrawn from Cranberry Cup 🇰🇿 Sofia Samodelkina has been added" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ @diciccomichelle; (August 4, 2025). "Hola 👋🏼 Lamentablemente me tengo que bajar de la competencia Cranberry Cup por razones ajenas a mí" [Hello👋🏼 Unfortunately I have to withdraw from the Cranberry Cup competition for reasons beyond my control] – via Instagram.
- ^ @AnythingGOE (August 6, 2025). "🇦🇺 Victoria Alcantara and 🇳🇱 Jolanda Vos have withdrawn from Cranberry Cup" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ a b International Skating Union 2024, p. 82.
- ^ a b International Skating Union 2024, p. 106.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, pp. 110–111.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, pp. 83–84.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, pp. 15–16.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, pp. 16–17.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, p. 17.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, pp. 18–19.
- ^ International Skating Union 2024, p. 20.
- ^ "2025 Cranberry Cup Int'l". Skating Scores. Archived from the original on July 22, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "2025 Cranberry Cup Int'l – Mens Final Results". Skating Scores. Archived from the original on August 16, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
- ^ "2025 Cranberry Cup Int'l – Womens Final Results". Skating Scores. Archived from the original on August 16, 2025. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
Works cited
- "Special Regulations & Technical Rules – Single & Pair Skating and Ice Dance 2024" (PDF). International Skating Union. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 3, 2025. Retrieved August 15, 2025.
External links
- Official website
- 2025 Cranberry Cup International at Skating Scores