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Catch up on what’s changed in Olympic figure skating since Beijing—returning medalists, rising stars, major rule changes, and country-by-country developments.
British figure skating duo set for Milan hoping to prove there is more to pairs - British team Anastasia Vaipan-Law and Luke ...
Katie Thompson of Oakhurst, California, dazzled the crowd and judges alike as she claimed victory in the Women's division at ...
Figure skating tributes dedicated to DC plane crash victims raise $1.3 million "Legacy on Ice" and other poignant performances remember the 67 lives lost.
Figure skating’s world championships are underway this week in Boston, a city that carries visceral memories of the sport’s improbable twin disasters.
Tragically, the same figure skating program had already experienced such loss. In 1961, the 18-member team was heading to the world championships in Prague when their plane crashed in Brussels.
Sarah Hughes explains how the plane crash near Washington DC has impacted the tight-knit figure skating community.
As the figure skating community grappled with the deaths of more than 15 skaters, coaches and parents, the grief was felt across the world.
Figure skaters and coaches returning from the U.S. national championships were aboard the American Airlines flight that collided with a Black Hawk helicopter Wednesday.
The Skating Club of Boston lost two coaches, two young skaters and their two mothers in the deadly crash of American Airlines Flight 5342 in Washington, D.C.
At least a dozen figure skaters, coaches and their family members were on the plane that crashed near Washington, D.C., including two teenage competitors and a Russian husband-and-wife coaching duo.
The figure skaters who died in Wednesday’s plane crash are mourned not just because they were young and talented but because, to anyone associated with the sport, they are part of the family.