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Nebelhorn Trophy

About:

The Nebelhorn Trophy is an international senior-level figure skating competition organized by the Deutsche Eislauf-Union and held annually in Oberstdorf, Germany. The competition is named after the Nebelhorn, a nearby mountain.

It is usually one of the first international senior competitions of the season. Skaters are entered by their respective national federations and compete in four disciplines: ladies' singles, men's singles, pairs, and ice dancing. The Fritz-Geiger-Memorial Trophy is presented to the team with the highest placements across all disciplines.

Results:

Name Date Location Nation
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2023 Sep 21 – Sep 23, 2023 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2022 Sep 21 – Sep 24, 2022 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2021 Sep 22 – Sep 25, 2021 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2020 Sep 23 – Sep 26, 2020 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2019 Sep 25 – Sep 28, 2019 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2018 Sep 26 – Sep 29, 2018 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2017 Sep 27 – Sep 30, 2017 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2016 Sep 22 – Sep 24, 2016 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2015 Sep 24 – Sep 26, 2015 Oberstdorf
ISU CS Nebelhorn Trophy 2014 Sep 25 – Sep 27, 2014 Oberstdorf

Background:

The Nebelhorn Trophy competition has been held annually since 1969 and is thus one of the oldest international figure skating competitions that remains in existence. In its early years, this competition was paired with a now-defunct French event, the Grand Prix International St. Gervais (unrelated to the current ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating event), to form the Coupe des Alpes, with many of the same skaters participating in both events and a team trophy presented to the country with the highest combined placements across both competitions. During the 1980s and early 1990s, before the establishment of a regular junior international competition circuit, younger skaters were often sent to these events as their first senior international competition assignments.

In recent years, the Nebelhorn Trophy has also been used by the International Skating Union to experiment with new judging and scoring systems for figure skating. Specifically, the 1997 competition was used as the test event for the switch from the “best of majority” ordinal system to the “one-by-one” method; the 2002 event was used for an initial test of the ISU Judging System which was then under development, and the 2003 event was the first competition where that system was used to determine the official results; and the 2006 event was used for a trial of using separate panels of judges for technical elements and program components.

The 2009 competition was used as the final Olympic qualifying competition.