Tatiana Totmianina
Template:Short description Template:Infobox figure skater Tatiana Ivanovna Totmianina (Template:Langx; born 2 November 1981) is a Russian former competitive pair skater. With partner Maxim Marinin, she is the 2006 Olympic champion, two-time World champion, and five-time European champion. The pair began skating together in 1996 and retired from competition in 2006.
Career

Early career
Tatiana Totmianina, sickly as a child,<ref name=NV121215/> was introduced to skating at the age of four by her mother, a recreational skater.<ref name=ST050312/><ref name=chas/> She skated at the Perm sports palace and began to take lessons.<ref name=NV121215/>
By the age of 14, Totmianina was invited to train in Saint Petersburg.<ref name=karavan/> In 1995 at the Russian Nationals, she met Maxim Marinin. He had switched to pair skating in 1993 but was without a partner at the time.<ref name=GS021117/> They began skating together in 1996. Early in their career together, they were coached by Natalia Pavlova in Saint Petersburg, with choreography by Svetlana Korol.<ref name=JBM1999/>
Senior career
Totmianina/Marinin made consistent progress on the world scene through the late 1990s. In 1998, the pair asked Tamara Moskvina to coach them but she was unable to take on more students and suggested Oleg Vasiliev, 1984 Olympic pairs champion.<ref name=GS040222/> He declined due to lack of ice and connections but he accepted in 2001 when Moskvina again directed them to him.<ref name=GS040222/> Totmianina/Marinin left Pavlova just prior to the 2001 European Championships; they moved to Chicago, Illinois in the United States to train under Vasiliev.<ref name=ISU-0506/><ref name=GS021117/><ref name=karavan/> They trained at the Oakton Ice Arena in Park Ridge, Illinois.<ref name=CT020213/>
Totmianina/Marinin won their first major title at the 2002 European Championships. They finished 4th at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. Twice in a row, they finished second at the World Championships to their Chinese rivals Shen Xue / Zhao Hongbo, before finally winning gold in 2004. The day after winning their first World title, Totmianina suffered a dislocated shoulder in practice.<ref name=04sagannon/> They were unable to perform in the exhibition.
Accident
On 23 October 2004, during the free skate at the 2004 Skate America in Pittsburgh, Marinin lost his balance while attempting an axel lasso lift and Totmianina slammed into the ice head first.<ref name=USFS041023a/><ref name=USFS041023b/><ref name=AP041024/> She sustained a concussion and spent the night in a local hospital.<ref name=USFS041024/> On 25 October, Totmianina said that, although she felt pain, she had no memory of the accident and was not afraid to return to the ice.<ref name=AP041025/> She recovered from her injuries rapidly and was able to return to the ice within days. Although Totmianina did not blame him, the accident weighed heavily on Marinin and when the pair returned to training, he was unable to lift her due to panic.<ref name=karavan/> He began seeing a sport psychologist who helped him overcome it.<ref name=work/>
Continued career

Totmianina/Marinin returned to competition two months later in January 2005, winning gold at the Russian Nationals and then the European Championships.<ref name=pairdef/> In March, they competed at the World Championships, held in Moscow, Russia. They won their second consecutive World title easily, with a total score 10 points higher than the second-place finishers.
Totmianina/Marinin dominated world competition from that point onward. In December 2005, Totmianina was hospitalized with a gall bladder problem.<ref name=gall/> They won their fifth consecutive European Championship the following month in January 2006. With Shen/Zhao recovering from an Achilles tendon injury, Totmianina/Marinin were the clear favorites for Olympic gold in Turin, Italy. They won the short program on 11 February and then the long program on 13 February, capturing the 2006 Olympic pair skating title.
Totmianina/Marinin did not compete at the World Championships in March 2006. They later announced their retirement from competition. The pair toured with the Champions on Ice show, with other notable skaters including Michelle Kwan, Evgeni Plushenko, and Viktor Petrenko, among others.
Totmianina has appeared in several seasons of the Russian show Ice Age, as a skater or judge. She also continues to skate with Marinin in Russian ice shows, alongside other famous skaters including her fiancé, Yagudin.<ref name=citylights/><ref name=wonderland/>
Personal life
Totmianina was born on 2 November 1981 in Perm.<ref name=ISU-0506/> Her father was emotionally distant and abandoned the family when she was seven. He lived nearby but offered no assistance to them; his daughter and her mother lived with his mother, who had schizophrenia and often became violent.<ref name=karavan/> Totmianina said that she and her mother became nearly inseparable, "like Siamese twins".<ref name=karavan/>
Once Totmianina was more comfortable financially, she bought her mother a car and her own apartment in Saint Petersburg.<ref name=karavan/> Shortly after Totmianina's engagement to Alexei Yagudin, her mother was seriously injured in a January 2009 car accident. She eventually died in hospital.<ref name=interviewnov2010/> Yagudin supported Totmianina as she overcame grief and depression associated with the loss of her mother.<ref name=karavan/>
On 20 November 2009, Totmianina gave birth to the couple's first child, a daughter named Elizaveta ("Liza").<ref name=interviewnov2010/><ref name=daughter/> On 20 May 2015, they announced that Totmianina was pregnant with the couple's second child.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On 2 October 2015, the couple's second daughter, Michèle, was born.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Cbignore</ref> The couple have a Yorkshire Terrier named Varia.<ref name =interviewnov2010/>
Programs

(with Marinin)
| Season | Short program | Free skating | Exhibition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005–06 <ref name=ISU-0506/><ref name=AOI121029/> |
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| 2004–05 <ref name=ISU-0405/> |
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| 2003–04 <ref name=ISU-0304b/><ref name=ISU-0304a/><ref name=gs03sc/> |
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| 2002–03 <ref name=ISU-0203/> |
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| 2001–02 <ref name=ISU-0102/> |
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| 2000–01 <ref name=ISU-0001/> |
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| 1999–2000 <ref name=JBM1999/> |
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| 1998–99 |
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Results
(with Marinin)
| International<ref name=ISU-TTMM/> | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Event | Template:Tooltip | 97–98 | 98–99 | Template:Tooltip | Template:Tooltip | 01–02 | 02–03 | 03–04 | 04–05 | 05–06 |
| Olympics | 4th | 1st | ||||||||
| Worlds | 7th | 6th | 5th | 2nd | 2nd | 1st | 1st | |||
| Europeans | 5th | 5th | 2nd | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | ||
| Template:Small Final | 1st | 2nd | 1st | |||||||
| Template:Small Cup of Russia | 5th | 6th | 3rd | 6th | 1st | 1st | ||||
| Template:Small Lalique/Bompard | 5th | 2nd | 4th | 1st | 2nd | 1st | ||||
| Template:Small Skate America | 7th | 3rd | 3rd | 1st | WD | |||||
| Template:Small Skate Canada | 2nd | 1st | 1st | |||||||
| Template:Small Sparkassen | 3rd | |||||||||
| Schäfer Memorial | 5th | |||||||||
| Skate Israel | 2nd | |||||||||
| National<ref name=ISU-TTMM/> | ||||||||||
| Russian Champ. | 6th | 5th | 3rd | 3rd | 3rd | 2nd | 1st | 1st | 1st | WD |
| GP = Champions Series / Grand Prix; WD = Withdrew | ||||||||||
References
External links
- 1981 births
- Living people
- Russian female pair skaters
- Olympic figure skaters for Russia
- Figure skaters at the 2002 Winter Olympics
- Figure skaters at the 2006 Winter Olympics
- Olympic gold medalists for Russia
- Figure skaters from Perm, Russia
- Olympic medalists in figure skating
- World Figure Skating Championships medalists
- European Figure Skating Championships medalists
- Medalists at the 2006 Winter Olympics
- 21st-century Russian sportswomen