2006-2007 Grand Prix Final

2006-2007 Grand Prix Final

2006-2007 Grand Prix Final
At the 2006-2007  Grand Prix Final in Saint Petersburg, RussiaKim Yu-Na was placed 3rd in the short program with 65.06 points and 1st place in the free skate with 119.14. points.  Yu-Na won the Grand Prix Final with 184.20 points, 11.68 points ahead of silver medalist Mao Asada.

Rank Name Nation Total Points SP FS
1 Kim Yu-Na  South Korea 184.20 3 1
2 Mao Asada  Japan 172.52 1 4
3 Sarah Meier  Switzerland 170.28 4 2
4 Fumie Suguri  Japan 158.78 5 3
5 Miki Ando  Japan 157.32 2 6
6 Júlia Sebestyén  Hungary 142.69 6 5

http://www.youtube.com/user/KimYuna2011


 2006-2007 Grand Prix Final 2006 Grand Prix Final GALA Yu-Na KIM Reflection

Kim Yuna 16 Year old Korean Yuna Kim or Kim Yu-Na Her first senior world championehip 2007 world SP Canada

2006-2007 Grand Prix Final

Hold on to your Hats

Hold on to your Hats

Hold on to your Hats  Something Korean is coming soon,  Coming soon,  Something Korean.  Kim Yu-na. The Young, Fit, Beautiful, Athletic, Well Mannered, Ice Dance Gold Medalist, and World Record Holder Kim Yuna

Kim Yu Na 김연아 Ladies Ice Dance Kim performing her short program to Danse Macabre at the 2009 World Championships.

Kim Yu-Na has a dominating performance in women’s short program The 18-year-old South Korean skates a nearly flawless routine to take control at the world championships.

Coming soon,  Something Korean.  Kim Yu-na. The Young, Fit, Beautiful, Athletic, Well Mannered, Ice Dance Gold Medalist, and World Record Holder Kim Yuna

lips start to quiver

lips start to quiver

 
For the first time, she stood on the ice after her performance and felt her lips start to quiver. As flowers and stuffed toys rained down from the stands, her tears began to flow.Kim yuna her lips start to quiver“I can’tbelieve this day has finally come for me,”  said Kim, who was taken aback by her own crying. That emotional release, so long in the making, quickly ended as soon as Kim, the reigning world champion in women’s figure skating, got a glimpse of her score.

Kim Yu Na Danse Macabre

Kim Yu Na Danse Macabre


Kim Yu Na Danse Macabre

Kim Yu Na 김연아 Ladies Ice Dance Kim performing her short program to Danse Macabre at the 2009 World Championships.
Kim Yu Na 김연아 Kim performing her short program to Danse Macabre at the 2009 World Championships.

Kim Yuna dances on ice to Danse Macabre 2008–2009 season
List of 2008–2009 figure skating season music From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThe 2008–2009 figure skating season began on July 1, 2008, and ended on June 30, 2009. Figure skaters use music in competition.Skaters in the four disciplines of  ladies’ singles, figure skating season used the following music in their 2008–2009 competitive programs.

“Great expectations and she delivered on every single one of them”

“That will be Impossible to beat”

Kim Yu-Na

By Michelle Kwan Thursday, Apr. 29, 2010
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1984685_1984949_1985220,00.html
Kim Yu Na ice skating Danse‑Macabre

I couldn’t have been more surprised or honored last summer when Korean figure skater Kim Yu-Na told me that as a 7-year-old, she was so inspired by my skating at the 1998 Winter Games that she memorized my skating routines, pretending to be at the Olympics. Twelve years later, she no longer had to pretend. I have never seen a skater with such a combination of artistry and athleticism. From the first notes of her sassy James Bond medley to the closing Gershwin strains, Kim’s inspiring performances in Vancouver changed the face of figure skating forever. Those 6½ minutes on the ice left not only a mark in the record book but also an indelible impression on millions of young girls around the world. For Kim, the dream that began as a 7-year-old has been realized. For these girls, thanks to her, a dream and journey are just beginning.
Kwan is the most decorated figure skater in U.S. history

Skaters Short program Free skating
Miki Ando The Chairman’s Waltz
from Memories of a Geisha (soundtrack)
by John Williams
Symphony No. 3 in C minor with Organ
by Camille Saint-Saens
Mao Asada Clair de Lune
by Claude Debussy
Waltz Masquerade
by Aram Khachaturian
Rachael Flatt
  • Moon River from Breakfast at Tiffany’s (soundtrack) by Henry Mancini
  • Piano Concerto No. 2
    by Sergei Rachmaninov
Romantic Rhapsody
by Mathieu
Yu-Na Kim Danse Macabre
by Camille Saint-Saens
Sheherazade
by Nikolai Rimski-Korsakov
Alena Leonova Al Andaluz
by Manolo Carrasco
La Leyenda del Beso
by Raul di Blasio
Laura Lepisto Imagined Oceans
by Karl Jenkins
Don Juan DeMarco (soundtrack)
by Michael Kamen
Joannie Rochette Summertime
by George Gershwin
Concierto de Aranjuez
by Joaquin Rodrigo

Kim Yu Na Danse Macabre