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Preview: 2025 Junior and Senior Grand Prix Final

The Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final is the culminating event of the Grand Prix Series. The 2025 edition of the Grand Prix Final will take place in Nagoya, Japan Dec. 5-8. The event has been held since 1995. It was originally called the Champions Series Final when the series was known as the Champions Series. Since 2008, the Grand Frix Final has been held concurrently with the Junior Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final.

Men

Two-time Grand Prix Final Champion Ilia Malinin of U.S. is looking to take his third Grand Prix Final title. This season. he won both of his Grand Prix events — Grand Prix de France and Skate Canada International. At Skate Canada, he broke his own world record free skate score. The two-time World champion has not lost an event since 2023 Grand Prix de France.

Two-time Grand Prix Final medalist Yuma Kagiyama of Japan is expected to take home his third Grand Prix Final medal. This season, Kagiyama won both of his Grand Prix events — NHK Trophy and Finlandia Trophy.

Last year’s Grand Prix Final bronze medalist Shun Sato of Japan won his second consecutive Cup of China gold medal and finished second behind Kagiyama at NHK Trophy.

France’s Adam Siao Him Fa returns to the Grand Prix Final after missing the event last season due to ankle injury. He last competed at the Final in 2023 and finished in fourth place. This season, he finished second at Grand Prix de France and Finlandia Trophy. Kazhastan’s Mikhail Shaidorov, who replaced Siao Him Fa at the Final, qualified for the Final with a third place finish at Cup of China and second place finish at Skate America. The 2025 World silver medalist was fifth at the Final last season. Italy’s Daniel Grassl also competed at the Final last season. He finished in fourth place. He qualified for the Final this season with a silver at Cup of China and a fifth place finish at Skate America.

Highest Short Program scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
105.22 – Ilia Malinin (Grand Prix de France)
104.84 – Ilia Malinin (Skate Canada International)
98.58 – Yuma Kagiyama (NHK Trophy)
96.67 – Shun Sato (NHK Trophy)
94.13 – Shun Sato (Cup of China)
92.50 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Finlandia Trophy)
90.42 – Daniel Grassl (Cup of China)
89.67 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Skate America)
88.33 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Cup of China)
88.16 – Yuma Kagiyama (Finlandia Trophy)
84.87 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Grand Prix de France)
83.68 – Daniel Grassl (Skate America)

Highest Free Skate scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
228.97 – Ilia Malinin (Skate Canada International)
215.78 – Ilia Malinin (Grand Prix de France)
196.08 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Grand Prix de France)
189.04 – Shun Sato (NHK Trophy)
188.66 – Yuma Kagiyama (NHK Trophy)
183.99 – Shun Sato (Cup of China)
182.29 – Yuma Kagiyama (Finlandia Trophy)
179.01 – Daniel Grassl (Cup of China)
174.34 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Cup of China)
164.48 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Finlandia Trophy)
161.42 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Skate America)
152.76 – Daniel Grassl (Skate America)

Highest Total Scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
333.81 – Ilia Malinin (Skate Canada International)
321.00 – Ilia Malinin (Grand Prix de France)
287.24 – Yuma Kagiyama (NHK Trophy)
285.71 – Shun Sato (NHK Trophy)
280.95 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Grand Prix de France)
278.12 – Shun Sato (Cup of China)
270.45 – Yuma Kagiyama (Finlandia Trophy)
269.43 – Daniel Grassl (Cup of China)
262.67 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Cup of China)
256.98 – Adam Siao Him Fa (Finlandia Trophy)
251.09 – Mikhail Shaidorov (Skate America)
236.44 – Daniel Grassl (Skate America)

Women

Last season, Amber Glenn competed as the lone U.S. skater against five Japanese women to claim her first Grand Prix Final title. This season, the two-time U.S. Champion has qualified for her second straight Final, but will be joined by teammate, World Champion Alysa Liu. Glenn won gold at Cup of China and silver at Finlandia Trophy this season. Liu has qualified for her first Grand Prix Final with silver at Cup of China and gold at Skate America.

The two U.S. women face four Japanese women, including three-time World Champion Kaori Sakamoto. Sakamoto will compete in her fifth Grand Prix Final. She won the event in 2023 and claimed the bronze in 2024. She qualified for the 2025 Final with a silver at Grand Prix de France and gold at NHK Trophy. 2025 World bronze medalist Mone Chiba was the only woman skater to qualify for the Final with two gold medals, She won gold at Skate Canada International and Finlandia Trophy. Chiba won the silver at this event last season. It has been three years since Rinka Watanabe has competed at the Grand Prix Final. She finished in 4th place in 2022. Watanabe qualified for the Final with a third place finish at Grand Prix de France and a second place finish at Skate America. Last season, Ami Nakai was competing international on the junior level. She won bronze at the Junior Grand Prix Final and finished fourth at the World Junior Championships. She surprised fans when she won gold at Grand Prix de France ahead of Sakamoto. Two weeks later, she earned a third place finish at Skate Canada International.

Highest Short Program scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
78.00 – Ami Nakai (Grand Prix de France)
77.05 – Kaori Sakamoto (NHK Trophy)
76.20 – Kaori Sakamoto (Grand Prix de France)
75.72 – Amber Glenn (Finlandia Trophy)
74.61 – Alysa Liu (Cup of China)
74.35 – Rinka Watanabe (Skate America)
74.01 – Rinka Watanabe (Cup of China)
73.73 – Alysa Liu (Skate America)
73.04 – Amber Glenn (Cup of China)
72.89 – Mone Chiba (Finlandia Trophy)
72.29 – Mone Chiba (Skate Canada International)
66.55 – Ami Nakai (Skate Canada International)

Highest Free Skate scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
150.13 – Kaori Sakamoto (NHK Trophy)
149.08 – Ami Nakai (Grand Prix de France)
148.03 – Kaori Sakamoto (Grand Prix de France)
144.94 – Mone Chiba (Skate Canada International)
144.33 – Mone Chiba (Finlandia Trophy)
141.74 – Amber Glenn (Cup of China)
140.54 – Alysa Liu (Skate America)
137.69 – Amber Glenn (Finlandia Trophy)
137.46 – Alysa Liu (Cup of China)
136.61 – Rinka Watanabe (Skate America)
136.54 – Ami Nakai (Skate Canada International)
124.62 – Rinka Watanabe (Cup of China)

Highest Total scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
227.18 – Kaori Sakamoto (NHK Trophy)
227.08 – Ami Nakai (Grand Prix de France)
224.23 – Kaori Sakamoto (Grand Prix de France)
217.23 – Mone Chiba (Skate Canada International)
217.22 – Mone Chiba (Finlandia Trophy)
214.78 – Amber Glenn (Cup of China)
214.27 – Alysa Liu (Skate America)
213.41 – Amber Glenn (Finlandia Trophy)
212.07 – Alysa Liu (Cup of China)
210.96 – Rinka Watanabe (Skate America)
203.09 – Ami Nakai (Skate Canada International)
198.63 – Rinka Watanabe (Cup of China)

Pairs

Four of the six teams at last year’s Final will be headed to the Grand Prix Final again this season. Last season, Germany’s Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nikita Volodin took home the title for the second-straight year. This season, the 2025 World silver medalists took home the silver medal at Skate Canada International, finishing behind 2024 World Champions Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps, but won the gold medal in Finland.

The 2025 World champions Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara, who won silver at the Final last season, are looking to be back on the top of podium after previously winning the event in 2022. The Japanese team won both of their Grand Prix events — Grand Prix de France and Skate America — this season.

Georgia’s Anastasiia Metelkina and Luka Berulava, who won the bronze at the Final last season, are hoping to rebound from a rough conclusion to Skate America and land on the podium in Nagoya. While they won the silver medal and placed first in the short program, the team made costly mistakes in the free skate to finish the segment in fourth place. They did win the gold medal at Cup of China a few weeks prior.

Italy’s Sara Conti and Niccolo Macii are competing in their fourth Grand Prix Final. They reached the podium at Final in 2022 and 2023, but were fourth last season. This season, the 2025 World bronze medalists were second at Cup of China and won gold at NHK Trophy.

Canada’s Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps are returning to the Final after having to withdraw last season due to illness. They won the bronze medal at the Final in 2023. This season, they won silver at Grand Prix de France and gold at Skate Canada International. Also making a return to the Final is Hungary’s Maria Pavlova and Alexei Sviatchenko. They competed at the Final in 2023 and finished fourth. This season, they qualified for their second Final with a bronze at Grand Prix de France and a silver at NHK Trophy.

Short Program scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
79.44 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Grand Prix de France)
78.83 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Skate America)
77.77 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Cup of China)
77.53 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin (Skate Canada International)
74.42 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Skate America)
74.26 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (Grand Prix de France)
73.69 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (NHK Trophy)
73.41 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (Cup of China)
73.04 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (NHK Trophy)
73.03 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (Skate Canada International)
70.40 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin  (Finlandia Trophy)
70.15 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (Grand Prix de France)

Free Skate scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
141.57 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Skate America)
140.37 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (Skate Canada International)
139.71 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Grand Prix de France)
139.47 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Cup of China)
136.48 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin  (Finlandia Trophy)
136.47 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (Cup of China)
134.89 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (NHK Trophy)
134.24 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (NHK Trophy)
129.65 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin (Skate Canada International)
123.40 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (Grand Prix de France)
122.61 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (Grand Prix de France)
116.90 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Skate America)

Total scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
219.15 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Grand Prix de France)
217.24 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Cup of China)
215.99 – Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara (Skate America)
213.40 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps  (Skate Canada International)
209.88 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (Cup of China)
208.58 – Sara Conti / Niccolo Macii (NHK Trophy)
207.28 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (NHK Trophy)
207.18 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin (Skate Canada International)
206.88 – Minerva Fabienne Hase / Nikita Volodin  (Finlandia Trophy)
197.66 – Deanna Stellato-Dudek/Maxime Deschamps (Grand Prix de France)
195.73 – Anastasiia Metelkina/Luka Berulava (Skate America)
192.76 – Maria Pavlova/Alexei Sviatchenko (Grand Prix de France)

Dance

For a preview of the dance event, visit Ice-Dance.com.

Rhythm Dance scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
85.38 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Skate Canada International)
84.77 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Skate America)
84.44 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Cup of China)
84.38 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (Grand Prix de France)
81.57 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (NHK Trophy)
80.98 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Grand Prix de France)
80.89 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Skate Canada International)
80.43 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Cup of China)
79.89 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Finlandia Trophy)
79.56 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Finlandia Trophy)
78.51 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Finlandia Trophy)
78.00 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Grand Prix de France)

Free Dance scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
133.02 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Grand Prix de France)
127.81 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Skate America)
125.86 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (Grand Prix de France)
124.31 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (NHK Trophy)
124.29 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Finlandia Trophy)
123.81 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Cup of China)
122.55 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Finlandia Trophy)
121.84 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Cup of China)
120.07 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Grand Prix de France)
120.03 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Skate Canada International)
117.51 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Skate Canada International)
117.51 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Finlandia Trophy)

Total scores of the Grand Prix Finalists
212.58 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Skate America)
211.02 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Grand Prix de France)
210.24 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (Grand Prix de France)
208.25 – Madison Chock / Evan Bates (Cup of China)
205.88 – Lilah Fear / Lewis Gibson (NHK Trophy)
204.18 – Laurence Fournier Beaudry / Guillaume Cizeron (Finlandia Trophy)
202.89 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Skate Canada International)
202.27 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Cup of China)
202.11 – Piper Gilles / Paul Poirier (Finlandia Trophy)
201.05 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Grand Prix de France)
200.92 – Allison Reed / Saulius Ambrulevicius (Skate Canada International)
196.02 – Emilea Zingas / Vadym Kolesnik (Finlandia Trophy)

Junior

Men

Only two of the six Junior Grand Prix Finalists competed at the Final last season. The 2025 World Junior Champion Rio Nakata, of Japan, took the bronze at the Final last season. This season, Nakata won both of his Junior Grand Prix events in Latvia and Thailand. He also recently won the Japan Junior Championships. He will face competition from a familiar face, Korea’s Minkyu Seo, who won silver at the Final last season. The 2025 World Junior silver medalist won both of his Junior Grand Prix events in Azerbaijan and Turkey. Japan’s Taiga Nishino is making his Junior Grand Prix Final debut after winning the Junior Grand Prix event in Varese, Italy and taking the silver medal at Junior Grand Prix Solidarity Cup (Gdansk, Poland). Korea’s Habin Choi competed in the same events at Nishino. He won silver in Varese and took the title in Gdansk. This is also his first Junior Grand Prix Final. Two silver medals for Germany’s Denis Krouglov qualified him for his first Junior Grand Prix Final. His silver medals came in the Junior Grand Prix events in the United Arab Emirates and Azerbaijan. After having competed in a Junior Grand Prix event since 2022, Team USA’s Lucius Kazanecki qualified for the Final by winning gold in the United Arab Emirates and taking bronze in Turkey. This is his Junior Grand Prix Final.

Short Program scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
88.72 – Rio Nakata (JGP Latvia)
83.56 – Rio Nakata (JGP Thailand)
82.67 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Azerbaijan)
81.46 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Turkey)
78.81 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Poland)
78.53 – Habin Choi (JGP Poland)
77.76 – Habin Choi (JGP Italy)
75.97 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Italy)
75.30 – Denis Krouglov (JGP United Arab Emirates)
73.75 – Denis Krouglov (JGP Azerbaijan)
73.01 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP United Arab Emirates)
70.71 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP Turkey)

Free Skate scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
162.64 – Rio Nakata (JGP Thailand)
161.81 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Turkey)
158.22 – Rio Nakata (JGP Latvia)
157.53 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Italy)
154.43 – Habin Choi (JGP Italy)
153.78 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Azerbaijan)
148.73 – Habin Choi (JGP Poland)
146.62 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP United Arab Emirates)
142.89 – Denis Krouglov (JGP United Arab Emirates)
140.54 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Poland)
139.72 – Denis Krouglov (JGP Azerbaijan)
131.96 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP Turkey)

Total scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
246.94 – Rio Nakata (JGP Latvia)
246.20 – Rio Nakata (JGP Thailand)
243.27 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Turkey)
236.45 – Minkyu Seo (JGP Azerbaijan)
233.50 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Italy)
232.19 – Habin Choi (JGP Italy)
227.26 – Habin Choi (JGP Poland)
219.63 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP United Arab Emirates)
219.35 – Taiga Nishino (JGP Poland)
218.19 – Denis Krouglov (JGP United Arab Emirates)
213.47 – Denis Krouglov (JGP Azerbaijan)
202.67 – Lucius Kazanecki (JGP Turkey)

Women

Mao Shimada has won the last three Junior Grand Prix Finals and with the highest total score of the women during the series this season, it is expected that she will add number four to her resume this week. At only 17, she is not yet eligible for senior events, which has made her the most dominant skater in the junior field. She has won eight gold medals on Junior Grand Prix circuit, three gold medals at the Junior Grand Prix Final, three World Junior titles and gold at the Winter Youth Olympics. She also is a five-time Japanese junior national champion.

At this year’s Final, she will compete against three up and coming Japanese skaters and twin sisters from Korea. Mei Okada was the second alternate for the Final last season. This season, she qualified for the Final by winning gold at the first JGP event of the season, Riga Cup, in Riga, Latvia. She took the silver at the JGP in Bangkok, Thailand. Also from Japan and competing in their first Junior Grand Prix Final is Mayuko Oka. This was Oka’s first season on the JGP. She won gold in Ankara, Turkey and silver in Baku, Azerbaijan. Like Oka, Sumika Kanazawa also made her JGP debut this season. She won gold in Varese, Italy, and finished just off the podium at Solidarity Cup in Gdansz, Poland.

Last season, Korea’s Yuseong Kim finished fifth at the Final. This season, she is returning to the Final with her twin sister, Yujae Kim. For Yuseong, she competed at Riga Cup, where she placed fifth, and in Baku, Azerbaijan, where she won the gold medal. This is her third consecutive time qualifying for the Final. For Yujae, who is the oldest by six minutes, this is her first time qualifying for the Final. She won silver in Turkey and gold in Poland. 

Short Program scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
70.36 – Mao Shimada (JGP Thailand)
68.38 – Mei Okada (JGP Latvia)
68.03 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Turkey)
65.95 – Mei Okada (JGP Thailand)
65.37 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Italy)
65.18 – Mao Shimada (JGP United Arab Emirates)
64.26 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Poland)
62.69 – Yujae Kim (JGP Poland)
62.52 – Yujae Kim (JGP Turkey)
59.68 – Yuseong Kim (JGP Azerbaijan)
58.03 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Azerbaijan)
54.70 – Yuseong Kim (JGP United Arab Emirates)

Free Skate scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
137.17 – Yujae Kim (JGP Poland)
135.99 – Mao Shimada (JGP United Arab Emirates)
133.58 – Yujae Kim (JGP Turkey)
131.14 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Turkey)
128.71 – Mao Shimada (JGP Thailand)
126.31 – Yuseong Kim (JGP Azerbaijan)
126.19 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Azerbaijan)
125.04 – Mei Okada (JGP Thailand)
124.15 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Poland)
121.29 – Mei Okada (JGP Latvia)
120.40 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Italy)
116.69 – Yuseong Kim (JGP United Arab Emirates)

Total scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
201.17 – Mao Shimada (JGP United Arab Emirates) 
199.86 – Yujae Kim (JGP Poland)
199.17 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Turkey)
199.07 – Mao Shimada (JGP Thailand)
196.10 – Yujae Kim (JGP Turkey)
190.99 – Mei Okada (JGP Thailand)
189.67 – Mei Okada (JGP Latvia)
188.41 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Poland)
185.99 – Yuseong Kim (JGP Azerbaijan)
185.77 – Sumika Kanazawa (JGP Italy)
184.22 – Mayuko Oka (JGP Azerbaijan)
171.39 – Yuseong Kim (JGP United Arab Emirates)

Pairs

In the junior pairs’ event, it is a battle between Team China and Team Canada. And with the exception of Canada’s Jazmine Desrochers and Kieran Thrasher, these are all new teams competing at the Final this year. Desrochers and Thrasher won the bronze at the Final last year. This season, they won silver at both their Grand Prix events. They are joined by Ava Kemp and Yohnathan Elizarov, who missed last year’s Junior Grand Prix Series due to injury. In their return to circuit, they won gold at the first two JGP events in Latvia and Turkey. This is not Kemp and Elizarov’s first time at the Final. In 2023, they took home the silver medal. The other Canadian team is Julia Quattrocchi and Etienne Lacasse. While this is Lacasse’s first Final, Quattrocchi competed at the Final last season with her previous partner,
Simon Desmarais. In this new partnership, Quattrocchi and Lacasse were third in Turkey and fourth in Poland.

Three teams will represent China in the Final. For two of the teams, this is their first season on the Junior Grand Prix. The only team that previously competed on the Junior Grand Prix circuit last season is Xuanqi Zhang and Wengiang Feng. They had one event last season – Czech Skate, where they won the gold medal. This season, they won silver in Riga, Latvia and gold at Solidarity Cup in Gdansk, Poland. Rui Guo and Yiwen Zhang made their Junior Grand Prix debut in Ankara, Turkey, where finished second. They later won the gold medal in Baku, Thailand to qualify for the Final. Yuxuan Chen and Yinbo Dong’s Junior Grand Prix debut was in Riga, Latvia, where they finished in fourth place. They did make it onto the podium and finished in third place at Solidarity Cup in Poland.

Short Program scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
64.85 – Rui Guo and Yiwen Zhang (JGP Turkey)
63.94 – Ava Kemp and Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Turkey)
63.57 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Poland)
62.67 – Ava Kemp and Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Latvia)
60.84 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Latvia)
59.04 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Thailand)
57.56 – Rui Guo and Yiwen Zhang (JGP Thailand)
57.30 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Poland)
54.51 – Julia Quattrocchi and Etienne Lacasse (JGP Poland)
53.89 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Poland)
53.22 – Julia Quattrocchi and Etienne Lacasse (JGP Turkey)
47.30 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Latvia)

Free Skate scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
115.49 – Ava Kemp / Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Turkey)
113.24 – Ava Kemp and Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Latvia)
105.54 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Poland)
105.47 – Rui Guo and Yiwen Zhang (JGP Thailand)
103.20 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Poland)
101.61 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Thailand)
101.29 – Rui Guo / Yiwen Zhang (JGP Turkey)
99.92 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Latvia)
98.88 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Poland)
95.94 – Julia Quattrocchi / Etienne Lacasse (JGP Poland)
93.45 – Julia Quattrocchi / Etienne Lacasse (JGP Turkey)
85.30 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Latvia)

Total scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
179.43 – Ava Kemp / Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Turkey)
175.91 – Ava Kemp / Yohnathan Elizarov (JGP Latvia)
169.11 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Poland)
166.14 – Rui Guo / Yiwen Zhang (JGP Turkey)
163.03 – Rui Guo and Yiwen Zhang (JGP Thailand)
160.76 – Xuanqi Zhang / Wenqiang Feng (JGP Latvia)
160.65 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Thailand)
160.50 – Jazmine Desrochers / Kieran Thrasher (JGP Poland)
152.77 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Poland)
150.45 – Julia Quattrocchi / Etienne Lacasse (JGP Poland)
146.67 – Julia Quattrocchi / Etienne Lacasse (JGP Turkey)
132.60 – Yuxuan Chen / Yinbo Dong (JGP Latvia)

Dance

For a preview of the ice dance event at the Junior Grand Prix Final, visit Ice-Dance.com

Rhythm Dance scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
66.70 – Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP United Arab Emirates)
65.69 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Poland)
65.58 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Azerbaijan)
64.35 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP Latvia)
64.16 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys  (JGP Latvia)
63.60 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys (JGP Poland)
63.08 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Turkey)
62.21 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP United Arab Emirates)
62.08 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Italy)
61.00  – Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP Thailand)
56.91 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Latvia)
53.18 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Italy)

Free Dance scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
100.41 – Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP United Arab Emirates)
98.44 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Poland)
97.84 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys (JGP Poland)
97.67 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys  (JGP Latvia)
96.63 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Azerbaijan)
95.78 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP Latvia)
95.47 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP United Arab Emirates)
94.44 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Italy)
94.00 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Italy)
92.96 – Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP Thailand)
92.06 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Turkey)
90.92 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Latvia)

Total scores of the Junior Grand Prix Finalists
167.11Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP United Arab Emirates)
164.13 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Poland)
162.12 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Azerbaijan)
161.83 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys (JGP Latvia)
161.44 – Layla Veillon / Alexander Brandys (JGP Poland)
160.13 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP Latvia)
157.68 – Dania Mouaden / Theo Bigot (JGP United Arab Emirates)
156.62 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Italy)
155.14 – Iryna Pidgaina / Artem Koval (JGP Turkey)
153.96 – Hana Maria Aboian / Daniil Veselukhin (JGP Thailand)
147.83 – Jasmine Robertson / Chase Rohner (JGP Latvia)
147.18 – Ambre Perrier Gianesini / Samuel Blanc Klaperman (JGP Italy)