2022 World Swimming Championships Results

2022 World Swimming Championships
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Finals results from the 2022 World Swimming Championships in Budapest at the Duna Arena …

Men’s 50m Freestyle
Gold: Ben Proud (GBR) — 21.32
Silver: Michael Andrew (USA) — 21.41
Bronze: Maxime Grousset (FRA) — 21.57
4. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN) — 21.60
5. Josh Liendo (CAN) — 21.61
6. Lorenzo Zazzeri (ITA) — 21.81
7. Lewis Burras (GBR) — 21.83
8. Kristian Gkolomeev (GRE) — 21.89

Men’s 100m Freestyle
Gold: David Popovici (ROU) — 47.58
Silver: Maxime Grousset (FRA) — 47.64
Bronze: Josh Liendo (CAN) — 47.71
4. Pan Zhanie (CHN) — 47.79
5. Brooks Curry (USA) — 48.00
6. Nandor Nemeth (HUN) — 48.13
7. Lewis Burras (GBR) — 48.23
8. Alessandro Miressi (ITA) — 48.31

Men’s 200m Freeestyle
Gold: David Popovici (ROU) — 1:43.21
Silver: Hwang Sunwoo (KOR) — 1:44.47
Bronze: Tom Dean (GBR) — 1:44.98
4. Drew Kibler (USA) — 1:45.01
5. Felix Auboeck (AUT) — 1:45.11
6. Kieran Smith (USA) — 1:45.16
7. Lukas Martens (GER) — 1:45.73
8. Elijah Winnington (AUS) — 1:45.92

SWIMMING WORLDS: TV Schedule | U.S. Roster

Men’s 400m Freestyle
Gold: Elijah Winnington (AUS) — 3:41.22
Silver: Lukas Martens (GER) — 3:42.85
Bronze: Guilherme Costa (BRA) — 3:43.31
4. Felix Auboeck (AUT) — 3:43.58
5. Marco De Tullio (ITA) — 3:44.14
6. Kim Woomin (KOR) — 3:45.64
7. Kieran Smith (USA) — 3:46.43
8. Trey Freeman (USA) — 3:46.53

Men’s 800m Freestyle
Gold: Bobby Finke (USA) — 7:39.36
Silver: Florian Wellbrock (GER) — 7:39.63
Bronze: Mykhailo Romanchuk (UKR) — 7:40.05
4. Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA) — 7:41.19
5. Guilherme Costa (BRA) — 7:45.48
6. Gabriele Detti (ITA) — 7:47.75
7. Damien Joly (FRA) — 7:48.10
8. Daniel Wiffen (IRL) — 7:50.63

Men’s 1500m Freestyle
Gold: Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA) — 14:32.80
Silver: Bobby Finke (USA) — 14:36.70
Bronze: Florian Wellbrock (GER) — 14:36.94
4. Lukas Martens (GER) — 14:40.89
5. Mykhailo Romanchuk (UKR) — 14:40.98
6. Guilherme Costa (BRA) — 14:48.53
7. Daniel Jervis (GBR) — 14:48.86
8. Damien Joly (FRA) — 15:09.15

Men’s 50m Backstroke
Gold: Justin Ress (USA) — 24.12
Silver: Hunter Armstrong (USA) — 24.14

Bronze: Ksawery Masiuk (POL) — 24.49
4. Thomas Ceccon (ITA) — 24.51
5. Apostolos Christou (GRE) — 24.57
5. Robert Glina (ROU) — 24.57
7. Ole Braunschweig (GER) — 24.66
8. Isaac Cooper (AUS) — 24.76

Men’s 100m Backstroke
Gold: Thomas Ceccon (ITA) — 51.60 WR
Silver: Ryan Murphy (USA) — 51.97
Bronze: Hunter Armstrong (USA) — 51.98
4. Yohann Ndoye-Brouard (FRA) — 52.50
5. Apostolos Christou (GRE) — 52.57
6. Ksawery Masiuk (POL) — 52.75
7. Ryosuke Irie (JPN) — 52.83
8. Robert Glinta (ROU) — 53.63

Men’s 200m Backstroke
Gold: Ryan Murphy (USA) — 1:54.52
Silver: Luke Greenbank (GBR) — 1:55.16
Bronze: Shaine Casas (USA) — 1:55.35
4. Brodie Williams (GBR) — 1:56.16
5. Mewen Tomac (FRA) — 1:56.35
6. Adam Telegdy (HUN) — 1:56.91
7. Roman Mityukov (SUI) — 1:57.45
8. Benedek Kovacs (HUN) — 1:58.52

Men’s 50m Breaststroke
Gold: Nic Fink — 26.45
Silver: Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA) — 26.48
Bronze: Michael Andrew (USA) — 26.72
4. Bernhard Reitshammer (AUT) — 26.94
5. Simone Cerasuolo (ITA) — 26.98
6. Lucas Matzerath (GER) — 27.10
7. Yan Zibei (CHN) — 27.18
8. Felipe Franca Silva (BRA) — 27.42

Men’s 100m Breaststroke
Gold: Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA) — 58.26
Silver: Arno Kamminga (NED) — 58.62
Bronze: Nic Fink (USA) — 58.65
4. James Wilby (GBR) — 58.93
5. Yan Zibei (CHN) — 59.22
6. Lucas Matzerath (GER) — 59.50
7. Zac Stubblety-Cook (AUS) — 59.65
8. Andrius Sidlauskas (LTU) — 59.80

Men’s 200m Breaststroke
Gold: Zac Stubblety-Cook (AUS) — 2:07.07
Silver: Yu Hanaguruma (JPN) — 2:08.38
Silver: Erik Persson (SWE) — 2:08.38
4. Ryuya Mura (JPN) — 2:08.86
5. Nic Fink (USA) — 2:09.05
6. Anton McKee (ISL) — 2:09.37
7. Caspar Corbeau (NED) — 2:09.62
8. Matti Mattsson (FIN) — 2:09.65

Men’s 50m Butterfly
Gold: Caeleb Dressel (USA) — 22.57
Silver: Nicholas Santos (BRA) — 22.78
Bronze: Michael Andrew (USA) — 22.79
4. Dylan Carter (TTO) — 22.85
5. Thomas Ceccon (ITA) — 22.86
6. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN) — 23.01
7. Ben Proud (GBR) — 23.08
8. Tzen Wei Teong (SGP) — 23.29

Men’s 100m Butterfly
Gold: Kristof Milak (HUN) — 50.14
Silver: Naoki Mizunuma (JPN) — 50.94
Bronze: Josh Liendo (CAN) — 50.97
4. Michael Andrew (USA) — 51.11
5. Matthew Temple (AUS) — 51.15
6. Simon Bucher (AUT) — 51.28
7. Jakub Majerski (POL) — 51.35
8. Noe Ponti (SUI) — 51.51

Men’s 200m Butterfly
Gold: Kristof Milak (HUN) — 1:50.34
Silver: Leon Marchand (FRA) — 1:53.37
Bronze: Tomoru Honda (JPN) — 1:53.61
4. Noe Ponti (SUI) — 1:54.29
5. Luca Urlando (USA) — 1:54.92
6. Tamas Kenderesi (HUN) — 1:55.20
7. Alberto Razzetti (ITA) — 1:55.52
8. James Guy (GBR) — 1:55.54

Men’s 200m Individual Medley
Gold: Leon Marchand (FRA) — 1:55.22
Silver: Carson Foster (USA) — 1:55.71
Bronze: Daiya Seto (JPN) — 1:56.22
4. Chase Kalisz (USA) — 1:56.43
5. Tom Dean (GBR) — 1:56.77
6. Hubet Kos (HUN) — 1:57.26
7. Lewis Clareburt (NZL) — 1:58.11
. Matthew Sates (RSA) — 1:58.27

Men’s 400m Individual Medley
Gold: Leon Marchand (FRA) — 4:04.28
Silver: Carson Foster (USA) — 4:06.56
Bronze: Chase Kalisz (USA) — 4:07.47
4. Lewis Clareburt (NZL) — 4:10.98
5. Brendon Smith (AUS) — 4:11.36
6. Daiya Seto (JPN) — 4:11.93
7. Tomoru Honda (JPN) — 4:12.20
8. Balazs Hollo (HUN) — 4:15.17

Men’s 4x100m Freestyle Relay
Gold: USA — 3:09.34
Silver: Australia — 3:10.80
Bronze: Italy — 3:10.95
4. Great Britain — 3:11.14
5. Hungary — 3:11.24
6. Canada — 3:11.99
7. Brazil — 3:12.21
8. Serbia — 3:13.83

Men’s 4x200m Freestyle Relay
Gold: U.S. — 7:00.24
Silver: Australia — 7:03.50
Bronze: Great Britain — 7:04.00
4. Brazil — 7:04.69
5. Hungary — 7:06.27
6. South Korea — 7:06.93
7. France — 7:08.78
8. China — 7:10.93

Men’s 4x100m Medley Relay
Gold: Italy — 3:27.51
Silver: USA — 3:27.79
Bronze: Great Britain — 3:31.31
4. Australia — 3:31.81
5. France — 3:32.37
6. Germany — 3:32.63
7. Austria — 3:32.80
8. China — 3:34.62

Women’s 50m Freestyle
Gold: Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) — 23.98
Silver: Katarzyna Wasick (POL) — 24.18
Bronze: Meg Harris (AUS) — 24.38
Bronze: Erika Brown (USA) — 24.38
5. Zhang Yufei (CHN) — 24.57
6. Torri Huske (USA) — 24.64
7. Anna Hopkin (GBR) — 24.71
8. Julie Jensen (DEN) — 24.96

Women’s 100m Freestyle
Gold: Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS) — 52.67
Silver: Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) — 52.80
Bronze: Torri Huske (USA) — 52.92
4. Penny Oleksiak (CAN) — 52.98
5. Cheng Yujie (CHN) — 53.58
6. Kayla Sanchez (CAN) — 53.59
7. Marie Wattel (FRA) — 53.60
8. Claire Curzan (USA) — 53.81

Women’s 200m Freestyle
Gold: Yang Junxuan (CHN) — 1:54.92
Silver: Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS) — 1:55.22
Bronze: Tang Muhan (CHN) — 1:56.25
4. Freya Anderson (GBR) — 1:56.61
5. Maddie Wilson (AUS) — 1:56.85
6. Charlotte Bonnet (FRA) — 1:57.24
6. Taylor Ruck (CAN) — 1:57.24
8. Isabel Gose (GER) — 1:57.38

Women’s 400m Freestyle
Gold: Katie Ledecky (USA) — 3:58.15
Silver: Summer McIntosh (CAN) — 3:59.39
Bronze: Leah Smith (USA) — 4:02.08
4. Lani Pallister (AUS) — 4:02.16
5. Isabel Gose (GER) — 4:03.47
6. Erika Fairweather — 4:04.73
7. Kiah Melverton (AUS) — 4:05.62
8. Tang Muhan (CHN) — 4:10.70

Women’s 800m Freestyle
Gold: Katie Ledecky (USA) — 8:08.04
Silver: Kiah Melverton (AUS) — 8:18.77
Bronze: Simona Quadarella (ITA) — 8:19.00
4. Leah Smith (USA) — 8:20.04
5. Li Bingjie (CHN) — 8:23.15
6. Isabel Gose (GER) — 8:23.78
7. Eve Thomas (NZL) — 8:30.37
8. Viviane Jungblut (BRA) — 8:37.04

Women’s 1500m Freestyle
Gold: Katie Ledecky (USA) –15:30.15
Silver: Katie Grimes (USA) — 15:44.89
Bronze: Lani Pallister (AUS) — 15:48.96
4. Moesha Johnson (AUS) — 15:55.75
5. Simona Quadarella (ITA) — 16:03.84
6. Beatriz Dizotti (BRA) — 16:05.25
7. Viviane Jungblut (BRA) — 16:13.89
8. Kristel Kobrich (CHI) — 16:20.24

Women’s 50m Backstroke
Gold: Kylie Masse (CAN) — 27.31
Silver: Katharine Berkoff (USA) — 27.39
Bronze: Analia Pigree (FRA) — 27.40
4. Ingrid Wilm (CAN) — 27.43
5. Regan Smith (USA) — 27.47
5. Kaylee McKeown (AUS) — 27.47
7. Medi Harris (GBR) — 27.72
8. Kira Toussaint (NED) — 27.80

Women’s 100m Backstroke
Gold: Regan Smith (USA) — 58.22
Silver: Kylie Masse (CAN) — 58.40
Bronze: Claire Curzan (USA) — 58.67
4. Wan Letian (CHN) — 59.77
5. Emma Terebo (FRA) — 59.98
6. Kira Toussaint (NED) — 59.99
7. Peng Xuwei (CHN) — 1:00.01
7. Medi Eira Harris (GBR) — 1:00.01

Women’s 200m Backstroke
Gold: Kaylee McKeown (AUS) — 2:05.08
Silver: Phoebe Bacon (USA) — 2:05.12
Bronze: Rhyan White (USA) — 2:06.96
4. Margherita Panziera (ITA) — 2:07.27
5. Kylie Masse (CAN) — 2:08.00
6. Peng Xuwei (CHN) — 2:09.13
7. Dora Molnar (HUN) — 2:10.08
8. Katalin Burian (HUN) — 2:10.37

Women’s 50m Breaststroke
Gold: Ruta Meilutyte (LTU) — 29.70
Silver: Benedetta Pilato (ITA) — 29.80
Bronze: Lara van Niekerk (RSA) — 29.90
4. Tang Qianting (CHN) — 30.21
5. Anna Elendt (GER) — 30.22
6. Eneli Jefimova (EST) — 30.25
7. Lilly King (USA) — 30.40
8. Jhennifer Conceicao (BRA) — 30.45

Women’s 100m Breaststroke
Gold: Benedetta Pilato (ITA) — 1:05.93
Silver: Anna Elendt (GER) — 1:05.98
Bronze: Ruta Meilutyte (LTU) — 1:06.02
4. Lilly King (USA) — 1:06.07
5. Reona Aoki (JPN) — 1:06.38
6. Sophie Hansson (SWE) — 1:06.39
7. Tang Qianting (CHN) — 1:06.41
8. Molly Renshaw (GBR) — 1:06.60

Women’s 200m Breaststroke
Gold: Lilly King (USA) — 2:22.41
Silver: Jenna Strauch (AUS) — 2:23.04
Bronze: Kate Douglass (USA) — 2:23.20
4. Kelsey Wog (CAN) — 2:23.86
5. Kotryna Teterevkova (LTU) — 2:23.90
6. Molly Renshaw (GBR) — 2:23.92
7. Francesca Fangio (ITA) — 2:25.08
8. Abbie Wood (GBR) — 2:26.19

Women’s 50m Butterfly
Gold: Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) — 24.95
Silver: Melanie Henique (FRA) — 25.31
Bronze: Zhang Yufei (CHN) — 25.32
4. Farida Osman (EGY) — 25.38
5. Claire Curzan (USA) — 25.43
6. Torri Huske (USA) — 25.45
7. Marie Wattel (FRA) — 25.79
8. Maaike De Waard (NED) — 25.85

Women’s 100m Butterfly
Gold: Torri Huske (USA) — 55.64
Silver: Marie Wattel (FRA) — 56.14
Bronze: Zhang Yufei (CHN) — 56.41
4. Louise Hansson (SWE) — 56.48
5. Claire Curzan (USA) — 56.74
6. Brianna Throssel (AUS) — 56.98
7. Farida Osman (EGY) — 57.66
8. Lana Pudar (BIH) — 58.44

Women’s 200m Butterfly
Gold: Summer McIntosh (CAN) — 2:05.20
Silver: Hali Flickinger (USA) — 2:06.08
Bronze: Zhang Yufei (CHN) — 2:06.32
4. Regan Smith (USA) — 2:06.79
5. Elizabeth Dekkers (AUS) — 2:07.01
6. Lana Pudar (BIH) — 2:07.85
7. Helena Bach (DEN) — 2:08.12
7. Boglarka Kapas (HUN) — 2:08.12

Women’s 200m Individual Medley
Gold: Alex Walsh (USA) — 2:07.13
Silver: Kaylee McKeown (AUS) — 2:08.57
Bronze: Leah Hayes (USA) — 2:08.91
4. Rika Omoto (JPN) — 2:10.01
5. Anastasia Gorbenko (ISR) — 2:11.02
6. Kim Seoyeong (KOR) — 2:11.30
7. Katinka Hosszu (HUN) — 2:11.37
8. Mary-Sophie Harvey (CAN) — 2:12.77

Women’s 400m Individual Medley
Gold: Summer McIntosh (CAN) — 4:32.04
Silver: Katie Grimes (USA) — 4:32.67
Bronze: Emma Weyant (USA) — 4:36.00
4. Katinka Hosszu (HUN) — 4:37.89
5. Yui Ohashi (JPN) — 4:37.99
6. Ge Chutong (CHN) — 4:38.37
7. Jenna Forrester (AUS) — 4:42.39
8. Ageha Tanigawa (JPN) — 4:44.28

Women’s 4x100m Freestyle Relay
Gold: Australia — 3:30.95
Silver: Canada — 3:32.15
Bronze: USA — 3:32.58
4. China — 3:35.25
5. Great Britain — 3:35.43
6. Brazil — 3:38.10
7. Netherlands – 3:38.18
8. Hungary — 3:38.20

Women’s 4x200m Freestyle Relay
Gold: U.S. — 7:41.45
Silver: Australia — 7:43.86
Bronze: Canada — 7:44.76
4. China — 7:45.72
5. Hungary — 7:57.90
6. Brazil — 7:58.38
7. New Zealand — 7:59.08
8. Japan — 8:00.03

Women’s 4x100m Medley Relay
Gold: USA — 3:53.78
Silver: Australia — 3:54.25
Bronze: Canada — 3:55.01
4. Sweden — 3:55.96
5. Netherlands — 3:57.24
6. China — 3:57.73
7. Italy — 3:58.86
8. France — 3:59.94

Mixed 4x100m Freestyle Relay
Gold: Australia — 3:19.38 WR
Silver: Canada — 3:20.61
Bronze: U.S. — 3:21.09
4. Great Britain — 3:22.44
5. Netherlands — 3:24.24
6. Brazil — 3:24.78
7. Italy — 3:25.83
8. China — 3:26.92

Mixed 4x100m Medley Relay
Gold: U.S. — 3:38.79
Silver: Australia — 3:41.34
Bronze: Netherlands — 3:41.54
4. Great Britain — 3:41.65
5. Italy — 3:41.67
6. China — 3:43.55
7. Japan — 3:45.28
8. Germany — 3:46.64

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Shoma Uno repeats as world figure skating champion; Ilia Malinin tries 6 quads for bronze

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Japan’s Shoma Uno repeated as world figure skating champion, performing the total package of jumps and artistry immediately after 18-year-old American Ilia Malinin attempted a record-tying six quadruple jumps in his free skate to earn the bronze medal.

Uno, 25 and the leader after Thursday’s short program, prevailed with five quad attempts (one under-rotated) in Saturday’s free skate.

He finished, fell backward and lay on home ice in Saitama, soaking in a standing ovation amid a sea of Japanese flags. Japan won three of the four gold medals this week, and Uno capped it off with guts coming off a reported ankle injury.

He is the face of Japanese men’s skating after two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu retired in July and Olympic silver medalist Yuma Kagiyama missed most of this season with leg and ankle injuries.

“There were many shaky jumps today, but I’m happy I was able to get a good result despite not being in a good condition these past two weeks,” Uno said, according to the International Skating Union (ISU). “I know I caused a lot of concerns to everyone around me, but I was able to pay them back and show my gratitude with my performance today.”

Silver medalist Cha Jun-Hwan became the first South Korean man to win a world championships medal. Cha, a 21-year-old who was fifth at the Olympics, had to change out broken skate boots before traveling to Japan, one year after withdrawing from worlds after a 17th-place short program, citing a broken skate boot.

FIGURE SKATING WORLDS: Results

Malinin, ninth in his senior worlds debut last year, planned the most difficult program of jumps in figure skating history — six quads, including a quad Axel. Malinin is the only person to land a quad Axel in competition and did so again Saturday. He still finished 12.7 points behind Uno and 7.59 behind Cha.

Malinin had the top technical score (jumps, spins, step sequences) in both programs, despite an under-rotation and two other negatively graded jumps among his seven jumping passes in the free skate.

His nemesis was the artistic score, placing 10th and 11th in that category in the two programs (18.44 points behind Uno). Unsurprising for the only teen in the top 13, who is still working on that facet of his skating, much like a young Nathan Chen several years ago.

“After doing a lot of these jumps — hard, difficult jumps — it’s really hard to try to perform for the audience,” said Malinin, who entered worlds ranked second in the field by best score this season behind Uno.

Chen, who is unlikely to compete again after winning last year’s Olympics, remains the lone skater to land six fully rotated quads in one program (though not all clean). Malinin became the youngest U.S. male singles skater to win a world medal since Scott Allen in 1965. He was proud of his performance, upping the ante after previously trying five quads in free skates this season, but afterward weighed whether the risk was worth it.

“Sometimes going for the risk, you get really good rewards, but I think that maybe sometimes it’s OK to lower the risks and try not to take as much risk and go for a lot cleaner skate,” he said. “I think that’ll be beneficial to do next season is to lower the standards a bit.”

Malinin was followed by Frenchman Kévin Aymoz, who before the pandemic was the world’s third-ranked skater behind Chen and Yuzuru Hanyu, then placed ninth, 11th and 12th at the last three global championships.

Jason Brown, a two-time U.S. Olympian, was fifth in his first international competition since last year’s Olympics. He was the lone man in the top 15 to not attempt a quad, a testament to his incredible artistic skills for which he received the most points between the two programs.

“I didn’t think at the beginning of the year that I even would be competing this year, so I’m really touched to be here,” the 28-year-old said, according to the ISU. “I still want to keep going [competing] a little longer, but we’ll see. I won’t do promises.”

Earlier Saturday, Madison Chock and Evan Bates became the oldest couple to win an ice dance world title and the second set of Americans to do so. More on that here.

World championships highlights air Saturday from 8-10 p.m. ET on NBC, NBCSports.com/live and the NBC Sports app.

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2023 World Figure Skating Championships results

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2023 World Figure Skating Championships in Saitama, Japan, top 10 and notable results …

Women
Gold: Kaori Sakamoto (JPN) — 224.61
Silver: Lee Hae-In (KOR) — 220.94
Bronze: Loena Hendrickx (BEL) — 210.42
4. Isabeau Levito (USA) — 207.65
5. Mai Mihara (JPN) — 205.70
6. Kim Chae-Yeon (KOR) — 203.51
7. Nicole Schott (GER) — 197.76
8. Kimmy Repond (SUI) — 194.09
9. Niina Petrokina (EST) — 193.49
10. Rinka Watanabe (JPN) — 192.81
12. Amber Glenn (USA) — 188.33
15. Bradie Tennell (USA) — 184.14

Men
Gold: Shoma Uno (JPN) — 301.14
Silver: Cha Jun-Hwan (KOR) — 296.03
Bronze: Ilia Malinin (USA) — 288.44
4. Kevin Aymoz (FRA) — 282.97
5. Jason Brown (USA) — 280.04
6. Kazuki Tomono (JPN) — 273.41
7. Keegan Messing (CAN) — 265.16
8. Lukas Britschgi (SUI) — 257.34
9. Matteo Rizzo (ITA) — 256.04
10. Adam Siao Him Fa (FRA) — 253.11
15. Sota Yamamoto (JPN) — 232.39
21. Andrew Torgashev (USA) — 210.59

FIGURE SKATING WORLDS: Broadcast Schedule

Pairs
Gold: Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (JPN) — 222.16
Silver: Alexa Knierim/Brandon Frazier (USA) — 217.48
Bronze: Sara Conti/Niccolo Macii (ITA) — 208.08
4. Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (CAN) — 199.97
5. Emily Chan/Spencer Howe (USA) — 194.73
6. Lia Pereira/Trennt Michaud (CAN) — 193.00
7. Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (HUN) — 190.67
8. Anastasia Golubova/Hektor Giotopoulos Moore (AUS) — 189.47
9. Annika Hocke/Robert Kunkel (GER) — 184.60
10. Alisa Efimova/Ruben Blommaert (GER) — 184.46
12. Ellie Kam/Danny O’Shea (USA) — 175.59

Ice Dance
Gold: Madison Chock/Evan Bates (USA) — 226.01
Silver: Charlene Guignard/Marco Fabbri (ITA) — 219.85
Bronze: Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier (CAN) — 217.88
4. Lilah Fear/Lewis Gibson (GBR) — 214.73
5. Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Soerensen (CAN) — 214.04
6. Caroline Green/Michael Parsons (USA) — 201.44
7. Allison Reed/Saulius Ambrulevicius (LTU) — 199.20
8. Natalie Taschlerova/Filip Taschler (CZE) — 196.39
9. Juulia Turkkila/Matthias Versluis (FIN) — 193.54
10. Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko (USA) — 190.10
11. Kana Muramoto/Daisuke Takahashi (JPN) — 188.87

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