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Penta Cup

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The Penta Cup International (also known as the Novarat Trophy and Danubius Thermal Trophy) was an international figure skating competition in Hungary. It formed the Donaupokal (Danube Cup) along with Austria's Karl Schäfer Memorial. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior and junior levels. In 1987, the competition was held in November.

Senior medalists

Men

Senior men
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy United States Angelo D'Agostino Soviet Union Yuri Bureiko France Laurent Depouilly
1986–87 Novarat Trophy Canada Brian Orser United States Doug Mattis United States Mark Mitchell
1987–88 Novarat Trophy United States Brian Boitano Australia Cameron Medhurst Canada Neil Paterson
1988–89 Novarat Trophy United States Mark Mitchell Sweden Peter Johansson Canada Stephane Yvars
1989–90 Novarat Trophy Soviet Union Viacheslav Zagorodniuk United States Daniel Doran East Germany Ronny Winkler
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
France Thierry Cerez Romania Marius Negrea Hungary Szabolcs Vidrai
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
Hungary Zsolt Kerekes Canada Matthew Hall Hungary Szabolcs Vidrai

Ladies

Senior ladies
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy United States Yvonne Gomez Japan Izumi Aotani Japan Sachie Yuki
1986–87 Novarat Trophy United States Cindy Bortz Canada Charlene Wong United States Tonia Kwiatkowski
1987–88 Novarat Trophy United States Tracey Damigella West Germany Carola Wolff East Germany Evelyn Grossmann
1988–89 Novarat Trophy United States Nancy Kerrigan Hungary Tamara Teglassy Switzerland K. Schroeter
1989–90 Novarat Trophy Canada Josée Chouinard East Germany Tanja Krienke United States Holly Cook
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
Hungary Krisztina Czakó Germany Astrid Hochstetter Switzerland Nicole Skoda

Ice dancing

Senior ice dancing
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy Soviet Union Maia Usova / Alexander Zhulin Hungary Klara Engi / Attila Toth United States Lois-Marie Luciani / Russ Witherby
1986–87 Novarat Trophy Canada Tracy Wilson / Rob McCall Hungary Klara Engi / Attila Toth Soviet Union Larisa Fedorinova / Evgeni Platov
1987–88 Novarat Trophy Hungary Klara Engi / Attila Toth Soviet Union Ilona Melnichenko / Gennady Kaskov Italy Stefania Calegari / Pasquale Camerlengo
1988–89 Novarat Trophy Soviet Union Larisa Fedorinova / Evgeni Platov United States Jodie Balogh / Jerod Swallow Hungary Krisztina Kerekes / Csaba Szentpéteri
1989–90 Novarat Trophy Soviet Union Ludmila Berezova / Vladimir Fedorov United States Elizabeth McLean / Ari Lieb Czechoslovakia Monika Mandikova / Oliver Pekar
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
France Bérangère Nau / Luc Monéger Canada Janet Emerson / Steve Kavanagh Italy Laura Bonardi / Alessandro Reani

Junior medalists

Men

Junior men
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
France Alexandre Boudjadi Italy Edoardo De Bernadis Hungary Zoltán Kőszegi

Ladies

Junior ladies
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
Hungary Júlia Sebestyén Hungary Diána Póth

Ice dancing

Junior ice dancing
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
France Dominique Deniaud / Martial Jaffredo Italy Francesca Fermi / Andrea Baldi
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
Russia Ekaterina Davydova / Roman Kostomarov

References

  1. ^ "Results Book, Volume 2: 1974–current" (PDF). Skate Canada. pp. 119–120. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2009.
  2. ^ Heeren, Dave (February 28, 1988). "Damigella Eyes Chance At Gold In Next Olympics". Sun-Sentinel. Archived from the original on November 29, 2016.
  3. ^ "Penta Cup 1993, HUN, Budapest (1992–93 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016.
  4. ^ "Penta Cup 1993, HUN, Budapest (1993–94 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 28 May 2016.
  5. ^ "Penta Cup 1995, HUN, Székesfehérvár (1995–96 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 28 May 2016.
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