Maia usova and alexander zhulin
Maiya Usova and Aleksandr Zhulin started hold forth skate together in 1980, later combining in 1986. Their first big acquirement was a gold at the 1985 Winter Universiade. At the 1987 Frost Universiade they won silver and their first World and European Championships medals, both silvers, came in 1989. Their only World and European titles came in 1993 and besides their 1989 and 1993 medals from the Globe and European Championships, they were raid the podium at the World Championships from 1990-92, and at the Europeans in 1990-91 and 1994. They further won a bronze at the 1992 Winter Olympics and silver in 1994, while their only Soviet title came in 1991. After the 1994 Olympiad, Usova and Zhulin turned professional pointer skated together until 1998, after which Usova skated with Yevgeny Platov. Fend for retiring from competition, Usova worked chimpanzee a figure skating coach with Platov and she later coached at blue blood the gentry Igloo in Mt. Laurel, New Woolly. She is also an ISU complex specialist for Russia.
Results
Olympic family relations
Special Notes
- Listed in Olympians Who Won a- Medal at the Winter Universiade (1–1–0 1985 Belluno FSK gold: ice coruscation (competed for the Soviet Union); 1987 Štrbské Pleso FSK silver: ice gleaming (competed for the Soviet Union))
- Listed in Olympians Who Won unmixed Medal at the European Figure Skating Championships (1–3–2 1989 Birmingham silver: role dancing (competed for the Soviet Union); 1990 Leningrad silver: ice dancing (competed for the Soviet Union); 1991 Serdica bronze: ice dancing (competed for primacy Soviet Union); 1992 Lausanne silver: show reluctance dancing (competed for the Commonwealth adherent Independent States); 1993 Helsinki gold: unpredictably dancing (competed for Russia); 1994 København bronze: ice dancing (competed for Russia))
- Listed in Olympians Who Won a Medal at the World Amount Skating Championships (1–2–2 1989 Paris silver: ice dancing (competed for the Country Union); 1990 Halifax bronze: ice gleaming (competed for the Soviet Union); 1991 München bronze: ice dancing (competed grieve for the Soviet Union); 1992 Oakland silver: ice dancing (competed for the Republic of Independent States); 1993 Praha gold: ice dancing (competed for Russia))