Ilia Malinin height-American professional figure skater, Ilia Malinin was born on December 2, 2004, in Fairfax, Virginia in the United States of America.

How tall is Ilia Malinin?

Ilia Malinin stands at a height of 5 ft 8+12 inches or 174 centimeters/1.74 meters tall and weighs about 60kg. His incredible body stature has been a major contributing factor to his success in his field of sports.

He is a six-time Grand Prix medalist (4 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze), a three-time ISU Challenger Series medalist (2 gold, 1 bronze), the 2023 and 2024 U.S. national champion, the 2023 U.S. national bronze medalist, the 2022 U.S. national bronze medalist, and the 2024 World champion.

Malinin is a two-time gold medallist in the Junior Grand Prix and the 2022 World Junior champion. He now owns the world senior record for the men’s free skate as well as the world junior record for the men’s short program, free skate, and combined score.

Ilia Malinin career

In 2010, Malinin started skating at the age of six, receiving instruction from his parents in Reston, Virginia. Although he frequently chose to play soccer over-exercising in a cold arena as a boy, his grandfather told his parents to remain patient until he improved his triple leaps.

Malinin failed to qualify for the 2018 U.S. Championships, but he went on to win the U.S. national juvenile championship in 2016, the U.S. national intermediate champion in 2017, and the U.S. national novice bronze medalist in 2019.

Malinin is the 2018 Golden Bear silver medallist and the victor of the Asian Open Trophy on the international advanced novice circuit.

He has won the World Championship in 2024, the Grand Prix Final in 2023–24, the World Bronze Medal in 2023, and the Bronze Medal in the Grand Prix Final in 2022–23.

Malinin also won six Grand Prix medals (4 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze), three ISU Challenger Series medals (2 gold, 1 bronze), the U.S. national champion in 2023 and 2024, and the silver medal in 2022 for the U.S. national team.

Malinin is a two-time Junior Grand Prix gold medallist and the 2022 World Junior champion. In addition to holding the world senior record for the men’s free skate, he now maintains the world junior records for the men’s short program, free skate, and combined score.

In international competition, Malinin is the only skater to successfully perform a fully-rotated quadruple Axel, which is commonly considered the hardest jump in figure skating.

At the 2022 CS U.S. International Classic, he performed this feat for his debut. A month later, at Skate America, he replicated the feat for his senior Grand Prix debut.

Malinin gained notoriety in late 2020 for assuming the Instagram moniker “quadg0d,” which served as motivation for the quadruple leaps he was attempting to master.

He was included on Time magazine’s Time100 Next List in September 2022, which recognizes up-and-coming global leaders who are influencing the course of history and defining the next wave of leadership.

At the 2023 CS Autumn Classic International, Malinin’s first international competition of the season, he took home the gold. He received an invitation to participate in the Japan Open with Team North America, where he won the men’s division and the team placed second overall.

Malinin defeated Kévin Aymoz by over seven points in the short program to open the Grand Prix at the 2023 Skate America.

“One of the best performances of my career so far,” he said of the performance. I was engrossed in the music and the performance to the point where I lost track of my surroundings.”

In the free skate, he also made all of his jumps and broke the 200- and 300-point thresholds internationally, setting new personal bests in that segment (206.41) and overall (310.47).

After trailing Frenchman Adam Siao Him Fa in his second Grand Prix race, Malinin went on to qualify for the Grand Prix Final in Beijing and earn the silver medal.

Malinin made history in the 2023–24 Grand Prix Final in Beijing by successfully executing a quadruple Axel during his short program, which was a first for any skater.

Malinin became the first skater to ever complete all six jumps as quadruples in a competitive setting when she executed a quadruple loop during the free skate. He defeated current World champion Shoma Uno with a score of 17.30 points to win the event.

Source: www.Ghgossip.com

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