Mone Chiba

Mone Chiba (千葉 百音, Chiba Mone, born May 1, 2005) is a Japanese figure skater. She is the 2023 Four Continents bronze medalist, 2022 JGP Poland I silver medalist, 2022 Egna Trophy bronze medalist, 2023 Coupe du Printemps champion, a two-time Japanese Junior medalist and two-time Challenge Cup junior champion.

Mone Chiba
Personal information
Native name千葉 百音
Country representedJapan Japan
Born (2005-05-01) May 1, 2005
Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan
Home townSendai
Height1.55 m (5 ft 1 in)
CoachMie Hamada
Former coachSoshi Tanaka, Suguru Namioka, Ai Musha[1]
ChoreographerMisha Ge, Kenji Miyamoto, Akiko Suzuki
Former choreographerEiji Iwamoto
Skating clubKinoshita Academy
Former skating clubTohoku High School
Sendai FSC
Training locationsSendai
Began skating2010
ISU personal best scores
Combined total205.82
2022 JGP Poland
Short program70.16
2022 JGP Poland
Free skate137.70
2023 Four Continents
Medal record
Figure skating: Ladies' singles
Representing  Japan
Four Continents Championships
Bronze medal – third place2023 Colorado SpringsWomen's Singles

Early life and education

Chiba was born on 1 May 2005 in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. She attends Tohoku High School.[2] Chiba grew up idolizing Olympic gold medalist and Sendai hometown hero Yuzuru Hanyu;[2] they met on the ice several times and he was "like a big brother" for her before he moved to Toronto, Canada to further his training.[2]

Career

Early years

Chiba began skating in 2010. She placed twenty-first at 2015–16 Japan Novice B Championships and twenty-ninth at 2016–17 Japan Novice A Championships. She made her first international appearance at the 2017 Asian Open in the advanced novice category and was first after the short program. In the free program, she downgraded a jump and had a fall. She finished in fifth place. Chiba placed sixth at 2017–18 Japan Novice A Championships.[3]

Making her junior national championship debut at the 2018–19 Japan Junior Championships, Chiba finished in eighteenth place. The following year, she placed sixth at the 2019–20 Japan Junior Championships and was then invited to compete in the senior event because fourth place Momoka Hatasaki was still a novice skater. She finished in eighteenth place. In the junior category, she won the 2020 Challenge Cup.[3]

2020–21 season

She finished eighth place at the 2020–21 Japan Junior Championships and was invited to the 2020–21 Japan Championships, placing in twentieth there.[3]

2021–22 season

In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Japan Skating Federation opted not to send junior skaters out internationally in the fall of 2021. As a result, Chiba did not have the opportunity to compete on the Junior Grand Prix.[4] At 2021–22 Japan Junior Championships, Chiba was seventh after the short. However, after a clean free program, she won the bronze medal behind Rion Sumiyoshi and Mao Shimada. She finished eleventh at the senior event.[3]

Chiba was selected to 2022 Challenge Cup in the junior category and again won the competition. Two months later, she was sent to 2022 Egna Trophy, now competing in the senior category. Chiba got third place behind South Korea's Hae-in Lee and Japan's Hana Yoshida.[3]

2022–23 season

Chiba was initially scheduled to make her Junior Grand Prix debut at the Armenian stop on the 2022–23 circuit.[5] However, that was cancelled as a result of the September conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and skaters meant to attend were reassigned elsewhere.[6][7] Instead, she debuted at the Junior Grand Prix event in Gdańsk, Poland. In her short program, she received an edge call on her combination but otherwise gave a clean skate, placing her first with a score of 70.16 points.[8] During the free skate, Chiba landed all her jumps, albeit with a Lutz landed on a quarter. Chiba finished in second place behind Mao Shimada.[9] At her second assignment, the 2022 JGP Italy, Chiba finished third in the short program, but dropped to fourth place after making several errors. She was named the first of three alternates for 2022–23 Junior Grand Prix Final.[3]

Appearing next at the 2022–23 Japan Junior Championships, Chiba won the silver medal behind Shimada.[10] She then competed at the senior level, finishing a surprise third in the short program with a 71.06 score. She said that she "went into the short program with the frustration of last year," when she had finished eleventh in that segment.[11] Chiba struggled in the free skate, coming seventh in that segment and dropping to fifth place overall. Despite being the third-highest-ranked senior-eligible qualifier, she was not assigned to compete at the 2023 World Championships, that going instead to Rinka Watanabe. She was assigned to compete at the 2023 Four Continents Championships.[12][13]

At the Four Continents Championships in Colorado Springs, Chiba was seventh in the short program. However, a new personal best score in the free skate vaulted her into third overall, winning the bronze medal.[14] Saying she had "never dreamed of getting a bronze medal," she assessed that "my skating maybe was not as grand as I would have liked it, but I am still satisfied."[15]

Programs

Season Short program Free skating Exhibition
2023–2024
[16]
2022–2023
[17] [18] [19]
  • Schindler's List
    by John Williams, Itzhak Perlman
    choreo. by Akiko Suzuki

  • Finale
    (from East of Eden)
    by Lee Holdridge
    choreo. by Akiko Suzuki
2021–2022
[20]
  • Butterfly Lovers Concerto
    by Ssu-Yu Huang
    choreo. by Kenji Miyamoto
    2020–2021
    [21]
      2019–2020
      [21]
      • An American in Paris
        by George Gershwin
        choreo. by Eiji Iwamoto
        2018–2019
        • Giselle
          by Adolphe Adam
          choreo. by Eiji Iwamoto
          2017–2018
          • Csárdás
            by Vittorio Monti

            Competitive highlights

            JGP: Junior Grand Prix

            International
            Event 15–16 16–17 17–18 18–19 19–20 20–21 21–22 22–23
            Four Continents3rd
            Printemps1st
            Egna Trophy3rd
            International: Junior
            JGP ArmeniaC
            JGP Italy4th
            JGP Poland2nd
            Challenge Cup1st1st
            International: Advanced novice
            Asian Open5th
            National
            Japan18th20th11th5th
            Japan Junior18th6th8th3rd2nd
            Japan Novice21st B29th A6th A
            TBD = Assigned; WD = Withdrew; C = Cancelled
            A = Novice A; B = Novice B; J = Junior

            Detailed results

            Current personal best scores are highlighted in bold.

            Senior level

            2022–23 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            March 17–19, 2023 2023 Coupe du Printemps 1
            66.97
            1
            124.02
            1
            190.99
            February 7–12, 2023 2023 Four Continents Championships 7
            67.28
            2
            137.70
            3
            204.98
            December 21–25, 2022 2022–23 Japan Championships 3
            71.06
            7
            129.06
            5
            200.12
            2021–22 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            April 7–10, 2022 2022 Egna Spring Trophy 2
            67.78
            3
            110.82
            3
            178.60
            December 22–26, 2021 2021–22 Japan Championships 9
            64.41
            12
            119.89
            11
            184.30
            2020–21 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            December 24–27, 2020 2020–21 Japan Championships 24
            54.45
            18
            103.77
            20
            158.22
            2019–20 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            December 18–22, 2019 2019–20 Japan Championships 17
            52.76
            19
            97.74
            18
            150.50

            Junior level

            2022–23 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            November 25–27, 2022 2022–23 Japan Junior Championships 2
            65.72
            2
            127.43
            2
            193.15
            October 12–15, 2022 2022 JGP Italy 3
            64.07
            4
            121.66
            4
            185.73
            September 28 – October 1, 2022 2022 JGP Poland I 1
            70.16
            2
            135.66
            2
            205.82
            2021–22 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            February 24–27, 2022 2022 Challenge Cup 1
            66.42
            1
            108.87
            1
            175.29
            November 19–21, 2021 2021–22 Japan Junior Championships 7
            58.97
            2
            116.44
            3
            175.41
            2020–21 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            November 21–23, 2020 2020–21 Japan Junior Championships 13
            53.17
            8
            99.30
            8
            152.47
            2019–20 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            February 20–23, 2020 2020 Challenge Cup 1
            64.65
            1
            117.21
            1
            181.86
            November 15–17, 2019 2019–20 Japan Junior Championships 7
            56.51
            6
            105.08
            6
            161.59
            2018–19 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            November 23–25, 2018 2018–19 Japan Junior Championships 8
            53.50
            19
            83.41
            18
            136.91

            Novice level

            2017–18 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            October 20–22, 2017 2017–18 Japan Novice Championships 6
            84.11
            6
            84.11
            August 2–5, 2017 Asian Open Trophy 1
            41.35
            5
            59.22
            5
            100.57
            2016–17 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            October 21-23, 2016 2016–17 Japan Novice A Championships 29
            65.11
            29
            65.11
            2015–16 season
            Date Event SP FS Total
            October 23-25, 2015 2015–16 Japan Novice B Championships 21
            53.73
            21
            53.73

            References

            1. "Mone CHIBA: 2019/2020". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2021-09-30.
            2. "Next-generation skating talent Chiba inspired by hometown hero Hanyu". Kyodo News. December 22, 2021.
            3. "Competition Results: Mone CHIBA". International Skating Union.
            4. "2021 Junior Grand Prix Series". International Figure Skating. July 5, 2021.
            5. "Six NextGen skaters head to Armenia for the fourth stop on the ISU Junior Grand Prix circuit". Skate Canada. September 15, 2022.
            6. "Cancellation of the ISU Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Yerevan (ARM)". International Skating Union. September 16, 2022.
            7. "Reallocation of entries of cancelled ISU Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating 2022 Yerevan, Armenia". International Skating Union. September 21, 2022.
            8. "JGP Gdańsk 2022 Judges Details Per Skater, Women's Short Program" (PDF). International Skating Union.
            9. "Shimada (JPN) scores second Junior Grand Prix victory". International Skating Union. October 3, 2022.
            10. Gallagher, Jack (November 28, 2022). "Mao Shimada Lands Quad Toe Loop, Retains Japan Junior Championships Crown". Japan Forward.
            11. Gallagher, Jack (December 22, 2022). "Kaori Sakamoto Seizes Lead after Short Program at Japan Championships". Japan Forward.
            12. Mitsuoka, Maria-Laura (December 24, 2022). "Japan's Kaori Sakamoto reclaims national title". Golden Skate.
            13. Gallagher, Jack (December 24, 2022). "Kaori Sakamoto Captures Third National Title at Japan Championships". Japan Forward.
            14. Slater, Paula (February 11, 2023). "Haein Lee catapults to gold at Four Continents". Golden Skate.
            15. "Haein Lee (KOR) surges from sixth to take Four Continents gold". International Skating Union. February 10, 2023.
            16. Ge, Misha. "Mone Chiba: 2023/24 SP". Instagram. Instagram. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
            17. "#千葉百音 選手 2022-2023シーズンプログラム". Quadruple Axel 編集部. Twitter. July 30, 2022.
            18. "〈 #DOI 〉 #千葉百音 選手 SP『Schindler's List』を披露しました。". Quadruple Axel 編集部. Twitter. July 1, 2022.
            19. "Mone CHIBA: 2022/2023". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on September 30, 2022.
            20. "Mone CHIBA: 2021/2022". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 2022-07-28.
            21. "Mone Chiba Profile". Fuji TV.
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