U.S. Women [#8]: Meet Me in St. Louis

Bradie Tennell had a very thoughtful conversation with "St. Louis on the Air" NPR when she did a local media blitz there this past weekend (her photos https://instagram.com/p/DSOiIg-jFfW/):
She says she was attendance the last time St. Louis hosted Nationals in 2006 (age 7-almost-8)!
I agree @peibeck! :)
This is a great interview with thoughtful probing, but not invasive questions. And Bradie's responses are equally good, and she speaks quite reflectively and realistically about her injuries and goals coming into Nationals.
 
I wouldn't be surprised. Her three jump combo could then be a 3lz, 2a, 2a, in effect, replacing a 2lp with a 3a. Even if the 3a is underrotated, it's still about five extra points.
If the 3A is < then it's losing base value and probably getting a -2 at best. 6.40 points minus 1.28 (or more). That's 5.12 points. If she drops to a -3 then she's at 4.48 points. Underrotated jumps do not keep the full base value.

Her 2A at the end of the GPF free skate was (in the bonus) 4.29 points for comparison.

If she replaces the 2T with the 2A in the combo to open up the 3A attempt, then she gets 2.20 more base value points if it stays second half, but also has to get through a more difficult sequence to begin with.

If the 3A isn't squeaky clean, it's really not that much more of a benefit by possibly underrotating and get negative GOE.
 
If the 3A is < then it's losing base value and probably getting a -2 at best. 6.40 points minus 1.28 (or more). That's 5.12 points. If she drops to a -3 then she's at 4.48 points. Underrotated jumps do not keep the full base value.

Her 2A at the end of the GPF free skate was (in the bonus) 4.29 points for comparison.

If she replaces the 2T with the 2A in the combo to open up the 3A attempt, then she gets 2.20 more base value points if it stays second half, but also has to get through a more difficult sequence to begin with.

If the 3A isn't squeaky clean, it's really not that much more of a benefit by possibly underrotating and get negative GOE.
The 3 loop will also probably replace the 2 axel in bonus.
 
The 3 loop will also probably replace the 2 axel in bonus.
The difference is adding 0.16 additional points in TES for doing the loop in the second half instead versus what she was getting for the 2A in the second half bonus.
 
The triple axels we've seen aren't <. Also, IMO, skaters who land triple axels sometimes get PCS bumps as a result.

Of course, that doesn't mean that all her triple axels look like that in runthroughs.

Alysa didn't just start practicing triple axels last week. She has been practicing them since last season and more recently she said she has been practicing them most days. (Last week, she went to Philly and she didn't practice them every day, but that seems to be the exception.) She and her coaches obviously have considered whether it is worth the risk of putting it in the program. So far, they have decided that it is not.

However, she is pretty much a lock for the Olympic team, so she might decide that it is worth trying it at Nationals when there isn't that much on the line and she isn't competing against the Japanese women. She might just want to do it for the sake of it and the challenge. Like Ilia doing the quad axels and 7 quad long program at the GP Final even though he hadn't been doing that most of the season and the reward for a quad axel generally isn't worth the risk.
 
In this episode of Hometown Hopefuls, Bradie Tennell talks to NBC Chicago's Alex Maragos (who previously chatted with Jason Brown - link is posted in his fan thread) about her physical and mental strength to reach top skating form once again. She also shared...why she would “do it all over again.” (20-min. interview uploaded on 12/18/25):

NBC Washington's 3.5-minute story on Sarah Everhardt (Dec. 17): https://www.nbcwashington.com/video...e-skater-sets-sights-on-winter-games/4030955/
She graduated from Battlefield High School in Haymarket, Virginia, in May and the segment includes a clip of her parents, Jonathan and Ekaterina, in the audience watching her compete.
 
Cross-posting from the 2026 U.S. Nationals forum in Kiss & Cry:
PRACTICE GROUPS (as of 12/10/25; Subject to change): https://usfigureskating.org/documents/2025/12/10/2026_U.S._Championships_Practice_Groups.pdf

CHAMPIONSHIP WOMEN
Group A: Starr Andrews, Sonja Hilmer, Isabeau Levito, Elyce Lin-Gracey, Erica Machida, Katie Shen
Group B: Brooke Gewalt, Amber Glenn, Logan Higase-Chen, Bradie Tennell, Sherry Zhang, Ava Ziegler
Group C: Sarah Everhardt, Sophie Joline von Felten, Josephine Lee, Alysa Liu, Emilia Nemirovsky, Anabel Wallace
The Practice Groups document was updated today (12/29) and Ava Ziegler's name in Group B has been replaced by first alternate Alina Bonillo (5th at Mids).
 
Last edited:
Posted in this thread on Dec. 9:
Just a Q - Who is Alina Bonillo? I saw her ranked on skating scores dot com, but don't see her on the list of entries for Nationals although skating scores notes that she is eligible for Seniors as of last year.
https://usfigureskating.org/sports/figure-skating/roster/alina-bonillo/1282

COMPETITIVE HISTORY
  • 2025 Tallinn Trophy – 3rd (her ISU CS debut)
  • 2026 Midwestern Sectional Singles Final – 5th :(
  • 2025 Tayside Trophy – 1st
  • 2025 Maria Olszewska Memorial – 6th
  • 2025 U.S. Championships – 15th [she attempted 3A in practice in Wichita]
  • 2025 Midwestern Sectional Singles Final – 1st
  • 2024 Cranberry Cup International, Junior – 14th
  • 2024 U.S. Championships, Junior – 13th ...
Alina's 3A in practice in Dec. 2023: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0aGSGYLKb8/
I don't believe she has attempted 3A in competition yet.
 
2026 ISU Four Continents Championships (Jan. 21-25 in Beijing) preliminary entries were published online today and the USFS is being allowed to submit their entries & subs after Nationals (Women's FS is on Friday, Jan. 9).

12 of the 18 women currently scheduled to compete at 2026 Nationals have the 2026 4CC minimum CTES of 75 (as usual, the 3 selected for the Olympic team will bypass 4CC):
Amber GLENN USA 125.30
Alysa LIU USA 119.50
Bradie TENNELL USA 117.03
Elyce LIN-GRACEY USA 114.59
Sarah EVERHARDT USA 111.19
Isabeau LEVITO USA 109.66
Starr ANDREWS USA 102.20
Alina BONILLO USA 96.59
Sonja HILMER USA 85.03
Josephine LEE USA 82.07
Katie SHEN USA 81.62
Brooke GEWALT USA 79.83

5 more have the minimum CTES but are not competing at 2026 Nationals:
Kendall ERNE USA 84.86 (Mids, 6th; won Collegiates in July repping Purdue U Global)
Ava Marie ZIEGLER USA 83.79 (Easterns, 2nd; listed as WD from Nationals today)
Alexa GASPAROTTO USA 80.92 (Mids, 7th)
Michelle LEE USA 79.66 (Easterns, 4th)
Clare SEO USA 77.86 (Easterns, 7th; 2nd at Collegiates repping Stony Brook Univ.)

ETA: 2026 Worlds minimum CTES is 88.
 
Last edited:
15 ISU Junior age-eligible women currently scheduled to compete at 2026 Nationals have the 2026 Junior Worlds CTES of 72 (U.S. has 2 spots; dates are March 3–8 in Tallinn):

Sophie Joline VON FELTEN USA 116.83 (Senior at Nationals)
Jessica JURKA USA 103.03
Logan HIGASE-CHEN USA 102.89 (Senior)
Emilia NEMIROVSKY USA 101.92 (Senior)
Elyce LIN-GRACEY USA 101.89 (Senior)
Sofia BEZKOROVAINAYA USA 98.17
Sherry ZHANG USA 97.78 (Senior)
Annika CHAO USA 95.80
Angela SHAO USA 95.33
Josephine LEE USA 94.34 (Senior)
Rachel SAMIRI USA 93.98
Kaya TIERNAN USA 91.79
Alayna COATS USA 89.72
Cleo PARK USA 77.34
Jiaying Ellyse JOHNSON USA 77.16

(Mia KALIN 91.87 decided to take a break from competing this season.)
 
Last edited:

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
Do Not Sell My Personal Information