Four Continents Figure Skating Championships
The Four Continents Figure Skating Championships (4CC) is an annual figure skating competition. The International Skating Union established it in 1999 to provide skaters representing non-European countries with a similar competition to the much older European Figure Skating Championships. The event's name refers to Africa, the Americas, Asia and Oceania (four of the continents represented in the Olympic rings, omitting Europe). Medals are awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Historically, the 4CC has been dominated by just four countries – Canada, China, Japan, and the United States, who have won a combined 213 out of 216 possible medals. Kazakhstan, South Korea, and Uzbekistan are the only other countries to have placed in the 4CC, winning one gold medal each.
Qualifying
Skaters must belong to a non-European member nation of the ISU. Each member country may enter three skaters or teams in each discipline. National governing bodies select their entries according to their own criteria. As with the other senior ISU Championships, eligible skaters must be older than fifteen before July 1 of the previous year.
The following countries are eligible to send skaters to the competition: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Chinese Taipei, DPR Korea, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Mongolia, New Zealand, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Republic of Korea, Singapore, South Africa, Thailand, United States of America, and Uzbekistan.[1]
Medalists
Men
Ladies
Pairs
Ice dancing
Cumulative medal count
References
- ISU Results: Men PDF (6.27 KB)
- ISU Results: Ladies PDF (6.31 KB)
- ISU Results: Pairs PDF (6.54 KB)
- ISU Results: Dance PDF (6.25 KB)
- ISU Constitution & General Regulations 2006 PDF (793 KB)
- ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules: Single and Pair Skating and Ice Dancing 2006 PDF (1.03 MB)
External links
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- 2001 Championships
- 2002 Championships
- 2003 Championships
- 2004 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2005 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2006 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2007 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2008 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2009 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2010 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2011 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2012 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2013 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2014 Championships at the International Skating Union
- 2015 Championships at the International Skating Union