Cha Jun-hwan

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Cha Jun-hwan
2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki Cha Jun-hwan 2018-11-04 17-15-58.jpg
Personal information
Native name차준환
Country representedSouth Korea South Korea
Born (2001-10-21) October 21, 2001 (age 19)
Seoul, South Korea
Home townSeoul
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
CoachBrian Orser, Tracy Wilson
Former coachShin Hea-sook
ChoreographerDavid Wilson, Shae-Lynn Bourne
Former choreographerJeffrey Buttle, Kenji Miyamoto, Cindy Stuart, Joey Russell, Shin Yea-ji
Skating clubToronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club
Training locationsToronto, Canada
Former training locationsTaeneung, South Korea
Began skating2009
World standing9 (As of 27 March 2021)[1]
Season's bests10 (2018–19)[2]
25 (2017–18)[3]
24 (2016–17)[4]
50 (2015–16)[5]
ISU personal best scores
Combined total265.43
2020 Four Continents Championships
Short program97.33
2019 Four Continents Championships
Free skate175.06
2020 Four Continents Championships
hide
Medal record
Representing  South Korea
Figure skating: Men's singles
Grand Prix Final
Bronze medal – third place 2018–19 Vancouver Men' singles
Junior Grand Prix Final
Bronze medal – third place 2016–17 Marseille Men' singles

Cha Jun-hwan (Hangul: 차준환; born October 21, 2001) is a South Korean figure skater who competes in the men's singles discipline. He is the 2018–2019 Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, the 2016–17 Junior Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, and a five-time South Korean national champion (2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021). He has won two bronze medals on the ISU Grand Prix series and two silver medals on the ISU Challenger Series. He represented South Korea at the 2018 Winter Olympics.

Personal life[]

Cha was born on October 21, 2001, in Seoul.[6] He has worked as a child actor, model, and ballet dancer.[7][8] His brother is four years older.[9] Cha appeared on music variety television show King of Mask Singer in June 2020.[10]

Career[]

Cha began skating at the age of seven,[11] during a school excursion.[9] His first coach was Shin Hea-sook.[8] His skating idols were Evgeni Plushenko and Daisuke Takahashi.[12]

Early career[]

Cha placed fourth as a junior skater at the 2011 South Korean Championships. In 2012, he won the junior level at the South Korean Championships. In the 2012–13 season, he took the novice gold medal at the Asian Trophy and repeated as the junior champion at the South Korean Championships. At the 2014 Korean Championships, he placed fifth at the senior level. This was his first senior experience at national championships.

During the 2014–15 season, Cha won the novice gold medal at the Merano Cup and the senior bronze medal at the South Korean Championships. In March 2015, he began training in Toronto under Brian Orser to improve his jumps, including the triple Axel and quads.[13]

2015–16 season: Junior international debut[]

Cha performing his short program at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics.

Making his junior international debut, Cha won gold at the 2015 Skate Canada Autumn Classic by over 30 points. Competing with an ear infection at the 2016 South Korean Championships, he repeated as the senior national bronze medalist.[14] In February, he represented South Korea at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, placing fourth in the short program, fifth in the free skating, and fifth overall. In March, Cha competed in Debrecen, Hungary at the 2016 World Junior Championships, placing seventh in the short program, sixth in the free skating, and seventh overall.

2016–17 season: Junior Grand Prix Final bronze[]

In the 2016–17 season, Cha made his Junior Grand Prix debut at the JGP Japan. He performed a clean short program except for his flying camel spin, which got a level 2. He received 79.34 points, which put him in second place. In the free program, he skated cleanly except for an under-rotation on his triple Salchow. He was the last skater in the free skate, placing first by scoring another personal best of 160.13 points, and set a new world record of 239.47 points for junior men's combined total score.[15] He won a second gold medal at the 2016 JGP Germany, which qualified him for the 2016–17 Junior Grand Prix Final, where he won the bronze medal.

Cha won his first national title in January 2017, at the South Korean Championships.[16][17] He finished fifth at the 2017 World Junior Championships.

2017–18 season: Pyeongchang Olympics[]

Cha at the exhibition gala at the 2018 Winter Olympics

Cha had to overcome injuries and boot problems to win his second national title in January 2018, at the South Korean Championships.[18] Having accumulated the highest point total across the three qualifying events, Cha was selected to represent South Korea at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, where he placed fifteenth as the youngest competitor in the men's event.[19]

2018–19 season: Grand Prix Final bronze[]

Cha began his season by winning the silver medal at the 2018 Autumn Classic, after placing second in the short program with 90.56 points and first in the free skate with 169.22, ahead of training mate Yuzuru Hanyu.[20] He won the silver medal at the 2018 Finlandia Trophy with a total score of 239.19 points, behind Mikhail Kolyada.[21]

Cha at the 2018 Skate Canada podium.

At his first Grand Prix assignment, the 2018 Skate Canada, he placed third in the short program and third in the free skate to win the bronze medal overall, landing two clean quadruple salchows across both segments of the competition. With this finish, Cha became the second-ever South Korean figure skater to win a Grand Prix medal, after Yuna Kim, and the first-ever South Korean man to make the podium at a Grand Prix.[22] Cha then won a second bronze medal at 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki with a total of 243.19 points,[23] making him the first-ever South Korean man to win two medals on the Grand Prix series. These two bronze medals gave him 22 qualification points, enough for him to qualify for the 2018 Grand Prix Final, making him the first South Korean man to do so and the first from his country since Kim.

Cha concluded the Grand Prix series at the final, placing fourth in the short program and third in the free skate, with a season's best of 174.42 in the free skate and 263.49 for his total score. This put him on the podium in third place, earning him the bronze medal. He is the first South Korean man to win a Grand Prix Final medal, and the second-ever South Korean skater to do so since Kim.

After winning this third consecutive South Korean national title, Cha competed at the 2019 Four Continents Championships. He placed second in the short program, winning a small silver medal.[24] He struggled in the free skate, where six of his jumps were called underrotated. He placed eighth in the free skate, and dropped to sixth place overall.

He concluded his season at the 2019 World Figure Skating Championships. He placed eighteenth in both the short program and free skate to finish nineteenth overall.

2019–20 season[]

Beginning the season at the 2019 CS Autumn Classic International, Cha attempted the quad flip in competition for the first time. Cha was fourth overall in the competition after a number of jumps were called underrotated.[25] At his first Grand Prix assignment, 2019 Skate America, Cha doubled his planned quad in the short program placing seventh.[26] Multiple falls in the free skate dropped him to eighth overall.[27] Cha was sixth at the 2019 Cup of China.[28]

After winning another Korean national title, Cha competed at the 2020 Four Continents Championships, held in Seoul. He earned a season's best in the short program despite underrotating his triple Axel attempt.[29] In the free skate, four of his jumps were called underrotated, which was sufficient to keep him off the podium at the event.[30] Cha was supposed to represent South Korea at World Figure Skating Championship 2020 but the competition was cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic.[31]

2020–21 season[]

Cha was assigned to compete at the 2020 Skate Canada International, but the event was also cancelled as a result of the pandemic.[32]

Remaining in South Korea for training, Cha's first event of the season was the 2021 South Korean Championships, where he won his fifth consecutive title. He was assigned to Korea's lone men's berth at the 2021 World Championships in Stockholm.[33] Cha placed eighth in the short program.[34] Errors in the free skate had him place thirteenth in that segment, but he held tenth overall.[35] Cha's result qualified one berth for Korea at the 2022 Winter Olympics, with the possibility of a second to be earned later.[36]

Records and achievements[]

Historical record[]

Programs[]

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2020–2021
[37]
2019–2020
[38][39]
2018–2019
[40][41][42]

2017–2018
[44][45][46][47]





2016–2017
[6][15]

2015–2016
[49]

2014–2015
2013–2014
2012–2013

  • Gopher Mambo
    by Yma Sumac
    choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
2011–2012
  • St. Louis Blues Mambo
    by Pérez Prado
    choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
  • Piano Concerto No. 2
    by Sergei Rachmaninoff
    choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
2010–2011
  • Strictly Ballroom
    by David Hirschfelder
    choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
2009–2010

Competitive highlights[]

Cha (right) at the 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki podium

GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

International[50]
Event 15–16 16–17 17–18 18–19 19–20 20–21 21–22
Olympics 15th
Worlds 19th C 10th
Four Continents WD 6th 5th
GP Final 3rd
GP Cup of China 6th TBD
GP Finland 3rd
GP NHK Trophy TBD
GP Skate America WD 8th
GP Skate Canada 9th 3rd C
CS Autumn Classic 2nd 4th
CS Finlandia 2nd
Shanghai Trophy WD
International: Junior[50]
Junior Worlds 7th 5th WD
Youth Olympics 5th
JGP Final 3rd
JGP Germany 1st
JGP Japan 1st
Autumn Classic 1st
National[50]
South Korea 3rd 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st
Team events
Olympics 9th T
6th P
Youth Olympics 6th T
3rd P
TBD = Assigned; C = Event cancelled
Levels: J = Junior
T = Team result; P = Personal result. Medals awarded for team result only.

2010–11 to 2014–15: Pre-junior international debut[]

International: Novice[50]
Event 10–11 11–12 12–13 13–14 14–15
Asian Open 1st
Merano Cup 1st
National[50]
South Korea 4th J 1st J 1st J 5th 3rd
J = Junior level

Detailed results[]

Senior level[]

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships. At team events, medals awarded for team results only. Personal best highlighted in bold.

2020–21 season
Date Event SP FS Total
22–28 March 2021 2021 World Championships 8
91.15
13
154.84
10
245.99
24–26 February 2021 2021 South Korean Championships 1
90.36
1
166.76
1
257.12
2019–20 season
Date Event SP FS Total
6–9 February 2020 2020 Four Continents Championships 6
90.37
4
175.06
5
265.43
4–5 January 2020 2020 South Korean Championships 1
93.45
1
185.09
1
278.54
8–10 November 2019 2019 Cup of China 11
69.40
6
152.86
6
222.26
25–27 October 2019 2019 Skate America 7
78.98
9
140.69
8
219.67
12–14 September 2019 2019 Autumn Classic International 4
84.23
4
146.21
4
230.44
2018–19 season
Date Event SP FS Total
March 18–24, 2019 2019 World Championships 18
79.17
18
150.09
19
229.26
February 7–10, 2019 2019 Four Continents Championships 2
97.33
8
158.50
6
255.83
January 9–13, 2019 2019 South Korean Championships 1
89.12
1
156.40
1
245.52
December 6–9, 2018 2018–19 Grand Prix Final 4
89.07
3
174.42
3
263.49
November 2–4, 2018 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki 4
82.82
3
160.37
3
243.19
October 26–28, 2018 2018 Skate Canada International 3
88.86
3
165.91
3
254.77
October 4–7, 2018 2018 CS Finlandia Trophy 2
84.67
2
154.52
2
239.19
September 20–22, 2018 2018 CS Autumn Classic International 2
90.56
1
169.22
2
259.78
2017–18 season
Date Event SP FS Total
February 14–23, 2018 2018 Winter Olympics (men's singles) 15
83.43
14
165.16
15
248.59
February 9–12, 2018 2018 Winter Olympics (team event) 6
77.70
9T
January 5–7, 2018 2018 South Korean Championships 1
84.05
1
168.60
1
252.65
November 3–5, 2017 2017 Skate Canada 11
68.46
8
141.86
9
210.32

Junior level[]

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only at ISU Championships. At team events, medals awarded for team results only. Previous ISU world bests highlighted in bold.

2016-17 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
March 15–19, 2017 2017 World Junior Championships Junior 2
82.34
6
160.11
5
242.45
January 6–8, 2017 2017 South Korean Championships Senior 1
81.83
1
157.24
1
238.07
December 8–11, 2016 2016–17 JGP Final Junior 4
71.84
3
153.70
3
225.55
October 5–9, 2016 2016 JGP Germany Junior 1
76.82
1
143.72
1
220.54
September 8–11, 2016 2016 JGP Japan Junior 2
79.34
1
160.13
1
239.47
2015–16 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
March 14–20, 2016 2016 World Junior Championships Junior 7
74.38
6
132.73
7
207.11
February 12–21, 2016 2016 Youth Olympics - team event Junior -
-
3
139.97
6T
February 12–21, 2016 2016 Youth Olympics Junior 4
68.76
5
130.14
5
198.90
January 8–10, 2016 2016 South Korean Championships Senior 4
58.60
3
131.38
3
189.98
October 12–15, 2015 2015 Skate Canada Autumn Classic Junior 1
65.48
1
132.96
1
198.44
2014–15 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
January 5–9, 2015 2015 South Korean Championships Senior 4
58.28
3
122.85
3
181.13
November 14–16, 2014 2014 Merano Cup Novice 1
46.16
1
88.68
1
134.84
2013–14 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
January 3–5, 2014 2014 South Korean Championships Senior 5
60.44
3
123.94
5
184.38
2012–13 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
January 2–6, 2013 2013 South Korean Championships Junior 1
50.67
1
100.07
1
150.74
August 7–12, 2012 2012 Asian Trophy Novice 2
36.15
1
79.01
1
115.16
2011–12 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
January 4–8, 2012 2012 South Korean Championships Junior 1
46.26
1
86.95
1
133.21
2010–11 season
Date Event Level SP FS Total
January 12–16, 2011 2011 South Korean Championships Junior 3
37.16
4
70.65
4
107.81

Television appearances[]

References[]

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  2. ^ "Seasons Best Score 2018/2019". International Skating Union.
  3. ^ "Seasons Best Score 2017/2018". International Skating Union.
  4. ^ "Seasons Best Score 2016/2017". International Skating Union.
  5. ^ "Seasons Best Score 2015/2016". International Skating Union.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "Jun Hwan CHA: 2016/2017". International Skating Union.
  7. ^ 동욱, 김 (December 8, 2015). "국내 男피겨 '역대 최고점' 차준환 "연기활동 위해 배운건데…"" [Figure skater Cha Jun-hwan]. The Dong-a Ilbo (in Korean).
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b 진성, 곽 (July 21, 2011). "피겨 프린스 차준환, 내일은 피겨왕!" [Figure skating prince Cha Jun-hwan]. 오마이뉴스 (in Korean). Archived from the original on February 20, 2016.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Flade, Tatjana (March 14, 2017). "Featured Interview: Jun Hwan Cha (KOR)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on March 14, 2017.
  10. ^ [복면가왕] '긁지 않은 복권'의 정체는?! 빙상계의 아이돌 ��준환! 20200628 [[King of Mask Singer] What's the identity of 'Lottery Ticket'?! Jun-Hwan Cha, an idol in the ice world! 20200628] (YouTube) (in Korean). MBC Entertainment. June 28, 2020.
  11. ^ 영준, 조 (February 3, 2015). "4대륙 피겨 특집 평창 피겨 팀, 2018년에는 '드림팀' 꿈꾼다" [2018 dream team]. SPOTV NEWS (in Korean).
  12. ^ 영록, 김 (January 5, 2013). "차준환 "다카하시 다이스케 닮고 싶다"" [Cha Jun-hwan: "I want to be like Daisuke Takahashi"]. The Dong-a Ilbo (in Korean).
  13. ^ "Figure skater Cha Joon-hwan emerges as Male Kim Yu-na". The Dong-a Ilbo. December 9, 2015.
  14. ^ 이, 성필 (January 10, 2016). "이준형, '男 피겨 역대 최고점' 종합선수권 2연패" [Lee June-hyoung's second straight title]. 조이뉴스24 (in Korean).
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  17. ^ Baek, Byung-yeul (January 8, 2017). "Teenage figure skater Cha Jun-hwan wins nat'l championship". The Korea Times. Archived from the original on January 9, 2017.
  18. ^ Boram, Kim (February 17, 2018). "(Olympics) Teenage skater Cha Jun-hwan eyes Beijing 2022". Yonhap.
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  21. ^ Tone, Florentina (October 26, 2018). "Russian skaters, good as gold in Finlandia Trophy". Inside Skating.
  22. ^ Lee, Soon-Heung (October 28, 2018). "Figure Skater Cha Jun-hwan Wins Bronze Medal at ISU Grand Prix in Canada". The Chosun Ilbo.
  23. ^ "Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu cruises to gold in Finland". Eurosport. November 4, 2018.
  24. ^ Slater, Paula (February 8, 2019). "USA's Zhou brings out the goods at 4CCs". Golden Skate.
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  26. ^ Slater, Paula (October 19, 2019). "USA's Nathan Chen 'not entirely happy' with short program at 2019 Skate America". Golden Skate.
  27. ^ Slater, Paula (October 20, 2019). "USA's Nathan Chen takes third consecutive Skate America gold". Golden Skate.
  28. ^ Slater, Paula (November 9, 2019). "Boyang Jin wins first Grand Prix gold on home ice". Golden Skate.
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  30. ^ Slater, Paula (February 9, 2020). "Hanyu bags first Four Continents gold". Golden Skate.
  31. ^ Ewing, Lori (March 11, 2020). "World figure skating championships cancelled in Montreal". CBC Sports.
  32. ^ "Skate Canada International in Ottawa cancelled as COVID-19 cases rise". CBC Sports. October 14, 2020.
  33. ^ Goh, ZK (26 February 2021). "Cha Jun-hwan and Kim Ye-lim win South Korean figure skating nationals". Olympic Channel.
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  35. ^ Slater, Paula (March 27, 2021). "Nathan Chen takes third consecutive world title". Golden Skate.
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  37. ^ ㅅㅅㅅ 배거슨 라이브_Round24_'피겨 왕자' 차준환 / 풀버전 [습츠_ㅅㅅㅅ] (YouTube). SBS Sports. October 21, 2020.
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  50. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Competition Results: Jun Hwan CHA". International Skating Union.
  51. ^ Lee Seung-jin (June 28, 2020). "'복면가왕' 오승아·창빈·차준환·강재준 아쉽게 1R 탈락…반전의 실력(종합)". News1 (in Korean). Retrieved June 28, 2020.
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External links[]

Media related to Cha Jun-hwan at Wikimedia Commons

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