The Penta Cup International (also known as the Novarat Trophy and Danubius Thermal Trophy)[1] was an international figure skating competition in Hungary. It formed the Donaupokal (Danube Cup) along with Austria's Karl Schäfer Memorial.[1] Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior and junior levels. In 1987, the competition was held in November.[2]

Senior medalists edit

Men edit

Senior men
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy   Angelo D'Agostino   Yuri Bureiko   Laurent Depouilly [1]
1986–87 Novarat Trophy   Brian Orser   Doug Mattis   Mark Mitchell [1]
1987–88 Novarat Trophy   Brian Boitano   Cameron Medhurst   Neil Paterson [1]
1988–89 Novarat Trophy   Mark Mitchell   Peter Johansson   Stephane Yvars [1]
1989–90 Novarat Trophy   Viacheslav Zagorodniuk   Daniel Doran   Ronny Winkler [1]
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
  Thierry Cerez   Marius Negrea   Szabolcs Vidrai [3]
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Zsolt Kerekes   Matthew Hall   Szabolcs Vidrai [1][4]

Ladies edit

Senior ladies
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy   Yvonne Gomez   Izumi Aotani   Sachie Yuki [1]
1986–87 Novarat Trophy   Cindy Bortz   Charlene Wong   Tonia Kwiatkowski [1]
1987–88 Novarat Trophy   Tracey Damigella   Carola Wolff   Evelyn Grossmann [1][2]
1988–89 Novarat Trophy   Nancy Kerrigan   Tamara Teglassy   K. Schroeter [1]
1989–90 Novarat Trophy   Josée Chouinard   Tanja Krienke   Holly Cook [1]
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
[3]
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Krisztina Czakó   Astrid Hochstetter   Nicole Skoda [1][4]

Ice dancing edit

Senior ice dancing
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1985–86 Danubius Thermal Trophy   Maia Usova / Alexander Zhulin   Klara Engi / Attila Toth   Lois-Marie Luciani / Russ Witherby [1]
1986–87 Novarat Trophy   Tracy Wilson / Rob McCall   Klara Engi / Attila Toth   Larisa Fedorinova / Evgeni Platov [1]
1987–88 Novarat Trophy   Klara Engi / Attila Toth   Ilona Melnichenko / Gennady Kaskov   Stefania Calegari / Pasquale Camerlengo [1]
1988–89 Novarat Trophy   Larisa Fedorinova / Evgeni Platov   Jodie Balogh / Jerod Swallow   Krisztina Kerekes / Csaba Szentpéteri [1]
1989–90 Novarat Trophy   Ludmila Berezova / Vladimir Fedorov   Elizabeth McLean / Ari Lieb   Monika Mandikova / Oliver Pekar [1]
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
[3]
1993–94 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Bérangère Nau / Luc Monéger   Janet Emerson / Steve Kavanagh   Laura Bonardi / Alessandro Reani [1][4]

Junior medalists edit

Men edit

Junior men
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Alexandre Boudjadi   Edoardo De Bernadis   Zoltán Kőszegi [5]

Ladies edit

Junior ladies
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Júlia Sebestyén   Diána Póth [5]

Ice dancing edit

Junior ice dancing
Season Title
Location
Gold Silver Bronze Details
1992–93 Penta Cup
Budapest
  Dominique Deniaud / Martial Jaffredo   Francesca Fermi / Andrea Baldi [3]
1995–96 Penta Cup
Székesfehérvár
  Ekaterina Davydova / Roman Kostomarov [5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Results Book, Volume 2: 1974–current" (PDF). Skate Canada. pp. 119–120. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2009.
  2. ^ a b Heeren, Dave (February 28, 1988). "Damigella Eyes Chance At Gold In Next Olympics". Sun-Sentinel. Archived from the original on November 29, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d "Penta Cup 1993, HUN, Budapest (1992–93 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016.
  4. ^ a b c "Penta Cup 1993, HUN, Budapest (1993–94 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 28 May 2016.
  5. ^ a b c "Penta Cup 1995, HUN, Székesfehérvár (1995–96 season)". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 28 May 2016.