Rachael Flatt

Rachael Elizabeth Flatt (born July 21, 1992) is an American former competitive figure skater. She is the 2008 World Junior champion, a winner of four silver medals on the Grand Prix series, and the 2010 U.S. national champion.

Rachael Flatt
Flatt at the 2011 U.S. Championships gala
Full nameRachael Elizabeth Flatt
Born (1992-07-21) July 21, 1992 (age 31)
Del Mar, California, U.S.
Height5 ft 2 in (1.58 m)
Figure skating career
CountryUnited States
CoachJustin Dillon, Lynn Smith
Skating clubSt. Moritz FSC
Began skating1996
Retired2014
Medal record
Figure skating
Representing the  United States
World Team Trophy
Gold medal – first place2009 TokyoTeam
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place2008 SofiaLadies' singles
Junior Grand Prix Final
Silver medal – second place2007–08 GdanskLadies' singles

She was nominated to represent the United States at the 2010 Winter Olympics and placed 7th. She is a 2015 graduate of Stanford University.

Personal life

Flatt was born on July 21, 1992, in Del Mar, California.[5] She is an only child.[6] Her father is a biochemical engineer and her mother a molecular biologist.[7][8] Her grandfather competed on the national level in fencing.

Flatt is a 2010 graduate of Cheyenne Mountain High School in Colorado Springs, Colorado.[6] In spring 2015, she received a bachelor's degree from Stanford University, where she majored in biology with a minor in psychology.[9][10] She was the junior class president and a member of the Alpha Phi sorority.[9] In her senior year, she became a research assistant in the laboratory of Professor C. Barr Taylor.[11][12] As of September 2018, she is focusing on eating disorders as a Ph.D. student under Dr. Cynthia Bulik at the University of North Carolina.[13]

In June 2019, Flatt got engaged to travel writer Eric Iwashita. [14] The pair married on August 1, 2020, in Colorado Springs. [15] [16]

Career

Flatt began skating at age four.[17] In addition to her singles career, Flatt also competed as a pair skater from 2001 to 2004 with partner Andrew Speroff.[18] The pair won the silver medal at Nationals on the juvenile level in 2003 and the intermediate title in 2004.

Competing in ladies' singles, Flatt won the US Novice national title in 2005 at age 12. While, under other circumstances, this would have earned her an event on the Junior Grand Prix for the following season, Flatt was three weeks too young to compete internationally as a junior. She was invited to compete at the 2005 Triglav Trophy event in Slovenia, where she won the Novice competition. Later in 2005, Flatt was invited to compete at the 2005 North American Challenge competition as a junior lady, where she won the bronze medal. Flatt won the silver medal at US Nationals at the junior level in 2006.

2006–2007 season

Flatt missed the 2006–2007 ISU Junior Grand Prix season due to injury, but qualified through the regional and sectional qualifying competitions, winning both, and made her senior debut at the 2007 U.S. Championships, where she placed 5th and earned a bye to the 2008 U.S. Championships. Flatt made her international debut as a junior in March 2007 at the International Challenge Cup, which she won. Flatt was often referred to as "Rachael the Rock" and was often called " The Consistency Queen" because of her ability to compete cleanly, landing up to seven triples in a freeskate, including her triple-triple combinations.[19]

2007–2008 season

Flatt competed on the Junior Grand Prix for the first time in the 2007–2008 season, winning the gold medal at her first JGP in Vienna, Austria, and a silver medal at her second JGP in Chemnitz, Germany. She qualified for the Junior Grand Prix Final, placing third in the short program, first in the free skate, and winning the silver medal. At the 2008 U.S. Championships in St Paul, Minnesota, she won the silver medal on the senior level after winning the free skate.

Too young to be eligible for the senior World Championships, Flatt was placed on the team to the 2008 World Junior Championships. After placing third in the short program, she won the free skate and won the title overall. The American ladies – Flatt, Zhang and Nagasu – swept the podium.[20]

2008–2009 season

Flatt began her season at the 2008 Skate America, where she placed fourth overall. She also competed at 2008 Cup of Russia, winning the silver medal behind Carolina Kostner of Italy.[21] Flatt won the silver medal at the 2009 U.S. Championships. She placed 5th at the 2009 World Championships after Mao Asada.[citation needed]

2009–2010 season

Flatt won silver at the 2009 Skate America and finished 4th at 2009 Cup of China. She placed ahead of later Olympic champion Yuna Kim in the long program at Skate America.[22] She won gold at the 2010 U.S. Championships and was named in the U.S. Olympic team.[23] At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Flatt placed 7th with 182.49 points. She finished ninth at the 2010 World Championships.[citation needed]

2010–2011 season

Flatt won a silver medal at the 2011 U.S. Championships.[24][25] She was sent to the 2011 World Championships. A week before the event, Flatt was diagnosed with a stress fracture in her right tibia (her landing leg).[26] Nevertheless, her coach Tom Zakrajsek stated that he felt that Flatt could complete her elements despite the stress fracture and did not request that the alternate, Mirai Nagasu, compete in her place.[27] During the competition, Flatt had errors on one of her jumps in the short program and three in the free skate and finished in 12th place. In May 2011, Flatt confirmed that she was leaving Colorado Springs in order to study chemical engineering at Stanford University and would look for a new coach in the Bay Area.[28] In June 2011, U.S. Figure Skating reprimanded and fined Flatt for not informing them of her injury in advance.[29]

2011–2012 season

On August 19, 2011, Flatt announced that she would be working with Justin Dillon and Lynn Smith in Oakland, California.[7][30] She also spent some time training with Sergei Ponomarenko in San Jose and Charlie Tickner in Redwood City.[6][7] Flatt was 10th at 2011 Skate Canada International.[31] Before leaving for Rostelecom Cup, she sprained ligaments around her ankle joint and finished 9th at the event.[32] Flatt said she would spend her holiday break in Colorado Springs working with Tom Zakrajsek and Becky Calvin.[32] She competed at the 2012 U.S. Championships and placed sixth.[citation needed]

2012–2013 season

Flatt finished ninth at the 2012 Skate America.[33] On October 30, 2012, Flatt said she would miss the rest of the season due to the recurrence of an injury in her right lower leg and ankle.[34]

2013–2014 season

Flatt completed the first step in qualifying for nationals by winning the 2014 Central Pacific Regionals. She placed first in both the short and the long with an overall score of 139.48.[35] This was her first step in attempting to make her second Olympic team.[36] In January 2014, she placed 18th at the U.S. Championships and announced her retirement from competitive skating.[37]

Endorsements and public life

Flatt signed an endorsement deal with AT&T, the Colorado Potato Administrative Committee (CPAC), and has also served as a spokesperson for Reading Is Fundamental,[8][38] as well as the US Anti-Doping Agency. In the lead-up to the 2010 Olympics, she was endorsed by MAC Cosmetics.[39]

In 2016, she was inducted into the Colorado Springs Sports Hall Of Fame.[40]

Programs

Flatt performs her One Day I'll Fly Away exhibition at the 2009 World Team Trophy.
SeasonShort programFree skatingExhibition
2013–2014
[41]
2012–2013
[5]
2011–2012
[42]
2010–2011
[43][41]
  • "East of Eden"
    (1981 TV mini-series)
    by Lee Holdridge
    performed by the London Symphony Orchestra

2009–2010
[44]


2008–2009
[45][46]

  • "Dialogue du vent et de la mer"
    (from La Mer)
    by Claude Debussy
  • "En Bateau"
    (from Petite Suite)
    by Claude Debussy
    arranged by H. Busser
  • "Dialogue du vent et de la mer"


2007–2008
[18]

2006–2007
[47]
  • Scherzo: Allegro Molto
    (from Trio No. 1 in B Major, Opus 8)
    by Johannes Brahms
2005–2006
[41][48][49]
2004–2005
[41][50]

Competitive highlights

GP: Grand Prix; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

Ladies' singles

International[51]
Event05–0606–0707–0808–0909–1010–1111–1212–1313–14
Olympics7th
Worlds5th9th12th
Four Continents7th4th
GP Final6th
GP Cup of China4th
GP NHK Trophy2nd
GP Rostel. Cup2nd9th
GP Skate America4th2nd2nd9th
GP Skate Canada10th
Cup of Nice9th
International: Junior[51]
Junior Worlds1st
JGP Final2nd
JGP Austria1st
JGP Germany2nd
Challenge Cup1st J
National[41]
U.S. Champ.2nd J5th2nd2nd1st2nd6th18th
Team events
World Team
Trophy
1st T
4th P
J = Junior
T = Team result; P = Personal result. Medals awarded for team result only.

Detailed results

The ladies medalists at the 2008 World Junior Championships display the United States flag during the medals ceremony.
2013–14 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
January 5–12, 20142014 U.S. Championships20
46.57
17
88.57
18
135.14
November 19–23, 20132014 Pacific Coast Sectional3
51.61
2
96.62
2
148.23
October 23–27, 20132013 Cup of Nice18
41.59
7
88.59
9
130.18
October 12–15, 20132014 Central Pacific Regional1
49.82
1
89.66
1
139.48
2012–13 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
October 19–21, 20122012 Skate America10
43.72
9
92.37
9
136.09
2011–12 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
January 22–29, 20122012 U.S. Championships9
52.71
4
112.27
6
164.98
November 24–27, 20112011 Cup of Russia8
53.36
9
94.27
9
147.63
October 27–30, 20112011 Skate Canada3
54.23
10
73.99
10
128.22
2010–11 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
April 25 – May 1, 20112011 World Championships8
57.22
14
97.39
12
154.61
February 15–20, 20112011 Four Continents Championships3
62.23
4
118.08
4
180.31
January 22–30, 20112011 U.S. Championships3
62.32
2
121.06
2
183.38
December 9–12, 20102010–2011 ISU Grand Prix Final6
45.19
6
82.38
6
127.57
November 11–14, 20102010 ISU Grand Prix Skate America4
51.02
1
111.84
2
162.86
October 22–24, 20102010 ISU Grand Prix NHK Trophy3
53.69
1
107.35
2
161.04
2009–10 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
March 22–28, 20102010 World Championships6
60.88
9
106.56
9
167.44
February 14–27, 20102010 Winter Olympic Games5
64.64
8
117.85
7
182.49
January 14–24, 20102010 U.S. Championships3
69.35
1
130.76
1
200.11
November 12–15, 20092009 Skate America2
58.80
1
116.11
2
174.91
Oct. 29 – Nov. 1, 20092009 Cup of China5
58.80
5
98.91
4
157.71
2008–09 season
DateEventSPFSTotal
April 16–19, 2009World Team Trophy5
58.40
4
113.41
4
171.81
March 23–29, 20092009 World Championships7
59.30
5
113.11
5
172.41
February 4–8, 20092009 Four Continents Championships8
55.44
7
107.39
7
162.83
January 18–25, 20092009 U.S. Championships2
60.19
2
113.59
2
173.78
November 20–23, 20082008 Cup of Russia3
55.92
2
110.14
2
166.06
October 23–26, 20082008 Skate America5
54.92
4
100.81
4
155.73
2007–08 season
DateEventLevelSPFSTotal
Feb. 25 – March 2, 20082008 World Junior ChampionshipsJunior3
60.16
1
112.03
1
172.19
January 20–27, 20082008 U.S. ChampionshipsSenior3
62.91
1
125.82
2
188.73
December 6–9, 20072007–08 Junior Grand Prix FinalJunior3
52.11
1
107.55
2
159.66
October 10–13, 20072007 Junior Grand Prix, GermanyJunior3
47.64
2
83.21
2
130.85
September 12–15, 20072007 Junior Grand Prix, AustriaJunior2
49.63
1
105.02
1
154.65
2006–07 season
DateEventLevelQRSPFSTotal
March 7–11, 20072007 Challenge CupJunior1
46.00
1
100.42
1
146.42
January 21–28, 20072007 U.S. ChampionshipsSenior6
56.51
5
103.24
5
159.75
November 16–18, 20062007 Midwestern SectionalsSenior1
53.55
1
105.72
1
159.27
October 11–14, 20062007 Southwestern RegionalsSenior1
93.21
2
46.54
1
87.76
1
134.30
2005–06 season
DateEventLevelQRSPFSTotal
January 7–15, 20062006 U.S. ChampionshipsJunior1
53.58
5
83.87
2
137.45
November 17–19, 20052006 Midwestern SectionalsJunior2
45.86
1
86.20
1
132.06
October 18–22, 20052006 Southwestern RegionalsJunior1111
August 25–28, 20052005 North American Challenge, KansasJunior6
32.62
3
74.44
3
107.06
2004–05 season
DateEventLevelQRSPFSTotal
April 13–17, 20052005 Triglav TrophyNovice111
January 9–16, 20052005 U.S. ChampionshipsNovice221
November 18–20, 20042005 Midwestern SectionalsNovice111
October 12–16, 20042005 Southwestern RegionalsNovice1111
  • QR = Qualifying round
  • Personal bests under ISU highlighted in bold

References

External links