Japanese figure skating 2025-26 season news & updates

A moving interview with Masakazu Kagiyama, who is Yuma Kagiyama's coach/father since Yuma was 5 years old:

Long ago, coach/farther Masakazu had sensed his son had surpassed him. Immediately after Yuma won silver at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, with deeper convictions, he brought up the subject. “To take the next step, we need a different environment.” For two or three months, he tried to persuade his son, Yuma, to train under another coach. Yuma shook his head the entire time. "I need you," he said.

“Because we've always been together, I don't know if he'd say just having me nearby gives him strength, but I think I play a big role in his mental aspect,” Masakazu said. The new season was already approaching. Reflecting on how short his son's time as an athlete would be, Masakazu decided to continue as his coach “so he wouldn't have regrets,” leading to the present.

Masakazu competed in the 1992 Albertville and 1994 Lillehammer Olympics before transitioning to coaching in 2005. Born in 2003, Yuma began training at age 5 and inherited his father's analytical nature, pursuing the essence of things. During car rides between the practice rink and home, their conversations would persist, meticulously tracing the reasons behind every occurrence on the ice.

In 2018, when Yuma was in his 3rd year of middle school, Masakazu suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. During his approximately 6 months hospitalization, his son brought practice videos with him every time he visited his farther. The coach himself desperately made every effort to rehabilitate himself, thinking “I want to get to the rink on my own no matter what, even if I have to use a cane.” After returning to the rink, having lost his greatest teaching method—teaching his son directly on the ice—he spent every night poring over his notebook, devising ways to convey his message through words.

His most important role for his son is “how to give him that final push before the competition so he can skate comfortably.” This season, his second Olympic season, he proposed a program that brings out Yuma's signature skating skills. Yuma is now moving forward as a strong medal contender, having placed second at this month's Grand Prix Final.

Masakazu reveals that “In my mind, I feel this might be the final path Yuma and I walk together. As the countdown begins, each single session, each single practice, feels even more valuable.”

His father's final, powerful push propels his son toward the summit.
 
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International assignments after national results -

Olympics:

Men: Yuma Kagiyama, Shun Sato, Kao Miura
Alternates: Kazuki Tomono, Sota Yamamoto, Tatsuya Tsuboi

Women: Kaori Sakamoto, Ami Nakai, Mone Chiba
Alternates: Rinka Watanabe, Yuna Aoki

Pairs: Riku Miura / Ryuichi Kihara, Yuna Nagaoka / Sumitada Moriguchi
Ice Dance: Utana Yoshida / Masaya Morita

World Championships:

Men: Yuma Kagiyama, Shun Sato, Kao Miura
Alternates: Kazuki Tomono, Sota Yamamoto, Nozomu Yoshioka

Women: Kaori Sakamoto, Mone Chiba, Ami Nakai
Alternates: Rinka Watanabe, Yuna Aoki

Pairs: Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara, Yuna Nagaoka/Sumitada Moriguchi
Dance: Utana Yoshida/Masaya Morita

Four Continents Championships:

Men: Kao Miura, Kazuki Tomono, Sota Yamamoto
Alternates: Nozomu Yoshioka, Tatsuya Tsuboi

Women: Yuna Aoki, Mone Chiba, Ami Nakai
Alternates: Rinka Watanabe, Wakaba Higuchi, Saki Miyake

Pairs: Yuna Nagaoka/Sumitada Moriguchi
Dance: Utana Yoshida/Masaya Morita

Junior Worlds:

Men: Rio Nakata, Taiga Nishino, Daiya Ebihara
Alternates: Sena Takahashi, Ryoto Mori

Women: Mao Shimada, Mayuko Oka, Mei Okada
Alternates: Sumika Kanazawa, Yo Takagi
 
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I am curious as to why Japan has not sent Kushida/Shimada out to more internationals- they were less than 2 points away from the min for 4CC at Zagreb. Were they injured or not ready before that time?
 
I am curious as to why Japan has not sent Kushida/Shimada out to more internationals- they were less than 2 points away from the min for 4CC at Zagreb. Were they injured or not ready before that time?
Tweeted on Nov. 1, 2025: https://x.com/figureskatingm1/status/1984797820017123839
JPN ice dance qualifier [Western Sectional]
RD protocols for Ikura Kushida/Koshiro Shimada (1), Rika Kihira/Shingo Nishiyama (2), and Ayano Sasaki/Yoshimitsu Ikeda (3).
The winning team can be assigned to Golden Spin if the total TES (RD+FD) is at least 85 points.
 
Links to the official team announcements on JSF's website: https://www.skatingjapan.or.jp/figure/news/detail.php?id=285

ETA Women's and Men's Nationals final standings:

Today:
GOLD #6! Kaori Sakamoto Sysmex 234.36 1 1
SILVER Mao Shimada Kinoshita Group 228.08 2 2
BRONZE Mone Chiba Kinoshita Group 216.24 4 4
4 Ami Nakai TOKIO Inkarami 213.56 3 7
5 Yuna Aoki MF Academy 212.00 7 3
6 Mayuko Oka Kinoshita Academy 211.73 5 6
7 Rinka Watanabe Sanwa Kenso/Hosei University 211.52 6 5
8 Wakaba Higuchi Noevir 203.06 8 8
9 Saki Miyake Sysmex 195.49 12 9
10 Mai Mihara Sysmex 190.63 13 11
11 Rino Matsuike Chukyo University 190.20 16 10
12 Mana Kawabe Oriental Bio/Chukyo University 187.36 10 14
13 Maria Egawa Meiji University 187.29 9 15
14 Mei Okada Meito FSC 185.29 18 12
15 Mako Yamashita Chukyo University 183.18 11 16
16 Sumika Kanazawa Kinoshita Academy 181.67 19 13
17 Yo Takagi Solar Life 179.73 15 17
18 Rion Sumiyoshi Oriental Bio/Meiji University 173.19 21 18
19 Kaoruko Wada Chukyo University Chukyo High School 170.90 17 21
20 Ikura Kushida Kinoshita Academy 170.86 22 19
21 Haruna Murakami Kinoshita Academy 170.79 20 20
22 Kei Yamada Kinoshita Academy 158.23 14 23
23 Arisa Kamoi Fukuoka Figure Academy 149.82 23 22
24 Haruka Iwasaki Konan Women's University 145.35 24 24

Yesterday:
GOLD Yuma Kagiyama Oriental Bio/Chukyo University 287.95 1 2
SILVER Shun Sato Aim Service/Meiji University 276.75 5 1
BRONZE Kao Miura Oriental Bio/Meiji University 261.18 2 3
4 Rio Nakata TOKIO Inkarami 248.65 3 4
5 Sota Yamamoto WALK 238.94 6 5
6 Kazuki Tomono Daiichi Jyukken Group 229.74 4 7
7 Daiya Ebihara Komaba Gakuen High School 218.99 16 6
8 Nozomu Yoshioka Hosei University 214.59 9 10
9 Takeru Amine Kataise Kansai University 213.16 7 12
10 Kosho Oshima Fuji Yakuhin 212.98 12 9
11 Taiga Nishino Seisa International Yokohama 211.11 17 8
12 Tsudoi Suto Meiji University 210.11 13 11
13 Tatsuya Tsuboi Sysmex 207.43 10 15
14 Ryoto Mori MF Academy 205.44 14 13
15 Sena Takahashi Kinoshita Academy 205.44 11 16
16 Takumi Sugiyama Okayama University 202.71 18 14
17 Sena Miyake Nippon Tatemono Kanzai 200.95 8 20
18 Haru Kakiuchi Hyogo Nishinomiya FSC 199.56 15 17
19 Shunsuke Nakamura Kinoshita Academy 194.10 22 18
20 Ryoga Morimoto Doshisha University 193.18 21 19
21 Shun Uemura Shujitsu Gakuen 191.87 20 21
22 Yuto Kishina Kansai University 174.82 23 22
23 Yujin Takeda Seisa International High School Sapporo 174.13 24 23
24 Shuntaro Asaga Kansai University 173.62 19 24

ETA #2:
Note: Miura/Kihara WD before the Pairs FS due to her shoulder injury - her quote in the mixed zone after the SP: https://x.com/AnythingGOE/status/2002311904807588267
My shoulder dislocated [in the 6-min. warmup before the SP], but my trainer was at the rink side so we could deal with it and the trainer could put it back in. It’s not that painful, it was worst at last year’s GPF.

Pairs final:
1 Yuna Nagaoka / Sumitada Moriguchi Kinoshita Academy/Kinoshita Academy 215.30 2 1
2 Ayumi Kagotani / Lucas Tsuyoshi Honda Kinoshita Academy/Kinoshita Academy 133.47 3 2
WD Rika Miura / Ryuichi Kihara Kinoshita Group/Kinoshita Group 84.91 1

Ice Dance final:
1 Utana Yoshida / Masaya Morita Kinoshita Academy/Kinoshita Academy 172.29 1 1
2 Ikura Kushida / Koshiro Shimada Kinoshita Academy/Kinoshita Group 165.75 2 2
3 Ayano Sasaki / Yoshimitsu Ikeda Seibu Higashifushimi FSC/Seibu Higashifushimi FSC 146.22 4 3
4 Rika Kihira / Shingo Nishiyama Toyota Motor Corporation/Oriental Bio 144.41 3 4
5 Chisato Uramatsu / Atsuhiko Tamura Chukyo University/Seibu Higashifushimi FSC 131.55 5 5

Junior Ice Dance final:
1 Kaho Yamashita / Yuto Nagata, both Nihon University 140.20 1 1
2 Ayumi Shibayama / Tomoki Kimura, both Kinoshita Academy 137.64 2 2
3 Sumire Yoshida / Ibuki Ogawara Somei Gakuin Junior High School/Okayama University of Science High School 129.25 3 3
4 Mizuho Sugimoto / Eisuke Kumano Seibu Higashifushimi FSC/Musashi University 92.94 4 4
 
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I'm surprised both Mone and Ami have chosen to do 4CC. Beijing is closer for them than the NA skaters, though.

For the team event, Japan cannot split dance and I can’t imagine they split pairs, so ladies and men are likely to be split (unless they don’t use all their splits, but they always have before). I think it’s likely that whichever of Ami and Mone is chosen for the team event won’t go to 4CC.

For the men, I think it is clear that Yuma should do the SP and Shun the LP. For the ladies, Kaori seems to have been stronger in the LP this year? But the SP matters more. Between Ami and Mone, Ami has much higher scoring potential, but it is also her first senior season. Mone is a reigning world medalists, but she has been up and down this season.
 
Maria Egawa (22, Meiji University), who has competed in the All Japan Championships four times, announced on the 21st that she will retire from active competition at the end of this season. Starting in April next year, she will challenge herself to become a professional skater on board the American luxury cruise ship "Utopia of the Seas."
 
Rinka Watanabe (23, Sanwa Kenso/Hosei University), who placed 6th in the short program (SP), landed two triple axels, creating a stir. Even a single jump is difficult, but she opened the program with a triple axel-triple toe loop combination. She then landed a single jump, earning a performance score of 1.94 in front of Midori Ito and Mao Asada. Although she fell short of the Olympics, she expressed her confidence, saying, "I was actually thinking about retiring this season, but maybe it was just a sign to 'do it.' I still want to do it for another four years. I can't stop until my dream comes true."
Midori Ito's selfie with Mao Asada :):
 

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