Carly Gold

Figure Skater

Carly Gold was born in Newton, Massachusetts, United States on August 17th, 1995 and is the Figure Skater. At the age of 28, Carly Gold biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Grace Elizabeth Gold
Date of Birth
August 17, 1995
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Newton, Massachusetts, United States
Age
28 years old
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Profession
Figure Skater
Carly Gold Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 28 years old, Carly Gold has this physical status:

Height
165cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Carly Gold Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Carly Gold Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Carly Gold Life

Grace Elizabeth Gold (born August 17, 1995), also known as Gracie Gold, is an American figure skater. She is a 2014 Olympic team event bronze medalist, the 2014 Trophée Éric Bompard champion, the 2015 Trophée Bumbard champion, and a two-time U.S. national champion (2014, 2016). She is also a two-time World Team Trophy champion (2013, 2015).

She is the 2012 World Junior silver medalist, the 2011 JGP Estonia champion, and the 2012 US junior national champion.

Gold is the first and only American woman to win an NHK Trophy title. In the 2016 World Championships, she also set the highest short program score ever recorded by an American woman: 76.43.43.43

Personal life

Grace Elizabeth Gold was born in Newton, Massachusetts, on August 17, 1995. Denise, an emergency room nurse, and Carl Gold, an anesthesiologist, are among her nieces. Carly Gold (named after their father) is younger by 40 minutes and has also competed in figure skating.

Gold was raised in Springfield, Missouri, before moving to Springfield, Illinois. She has also stated that she has lived in Corpus Christi, Texas. She spent ninth grade at Glenwood High School in Chatham, Illinois, before moving to online education at the University of Missouri. To improve her results, she has taken ballet lessons.

Gold has opened up about her mental health problems, including anxiety, depression, and an eating disorder. Since moving alone to Michigan in 2017 and isolating herself in her apartment, she spoke about suicidal thoughts. Ashley Wagner, a teammate, was the first to alert the United States. Figure Skating officials will seek medical assistance for Gold in 2016, but Gold will not accept their assistance until "snapping" in front of judges at the same USFSA event in 2017. Since returning to skating, she has redefined her goals and attempted to find a healthier approach to the sport. "Yes, things could be better, but look how far I've come," Gold told reporters in December 2019. "In The Weight of Gold (2020), an HBO Sports Documentary, Olympic athletes "explode(es) the mental health challenges that Olympic athletes often face."

She is currently in a relationship with two-time British junior ice dance national champion James Hernandez as of 2022.

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Carly Gold Career

Career

After attending a friend's birthday party at her local rink in Springfield, Missouri, Gold began skating at age 8. She continued training with Amy Vorhaben and Max Liu before moving coaches to Alexia Griffin. Susan Liss joined Susan Liss and later moved to Toni Hickey in Springfield, Illinois. Alex Ouriashev, who served with her at two rinks in the Chicago area, was her next coach.

Gold and Sean Hickey competed in pairs. At the 2007 United States Youth Championships, they ranked eighth in juvenile pairs. The junior championships have been held in the United Kingdom.

At the 2010 U.S. Championships, Gold finished fourth on the novice level. She played on the junior level last season, but she finished fifth at the Midwestern Sectionals and failed to qualify for the national championships. Following the event, she began preparing for the next season by increasing her technical content.

Gold medalist Gold at the Junior Grand Prix in Tallinn, Estonia, winning gold on her first international debut. She then qualified for the 2012 United States Championships on the junior level, winning both the short and long programs in order to win the gold medal. Her total score of 178.92 points at the U.S. Championships is a record for a junior lady. In all seven of her competitions this season leading up to the United States Championships, Gold medalists placed gold in all seven of her events. She then competed in the 2012 World Junior Championships in Minsk, Belarus, where she then competed. At the time, Gold also earned the silver medal. She joined the International Management Group.

For the 2012 World Team Trophy, Gold was awarded to the United States team. Adelina Sotnikova, a junior Worlds medalist, came in fifth overall on her debut at senior international level. Overall, Team USA came in second place.

In her senior Grand Prix debut at the 2012 Skate Canada, Gold came in seventh place. She then worked with a sports psychologist on her subject matter and refined her clinic in Canton, Michigan. She captured the silver medal at her second appearance in the 2012 Rostelecom Cup. Gold medalist in the short program and first in the free skate at her first senior nationals, winning the silver medal overall with a score of 186.57 points. She was selected to compete at the 2013 Four Continents, where she placed sixth. She finished ninth in the short program, fifth in the free skate, and sixth overall, a new personal record of 184.25 points. At the 2014 Winter Olympics, Gold's sixth-place finish, as well as teammate Ashley Wagner's fifth-place finish, earned three spots for the U.S. women.

Gold in the short program and third in the free skate finished third overall, a personal and season best score total of 188.03 points. For the second time since 2009, Team USA captured the team gold.

Gold became a Pandora Jewelry ambassador in July 2013.

After parting with coach Alex Ourashiev in late August 2013, Gold spent time with Marina Zoueva and Oleg Epstein in Canton, Michigan, looking for a new permanent coach. At the U.S. International Figure Skating Classic, she took silver at her first event of the season. Following the case, she travelled to California for a week-long tryout with Frank Carroll at the Toyota Sports Center in El Segundo. Carroll will be her permanent coach on September 25, 2013, according to the newspaper.

Gold medalist overall at the 2013 Skate Canada, ranked first in the short program with a personal record of 69.45 and third in the free skate. She came in second place at the 2013 NHK Trophy. Gold was the third alternate in the Grand Prix Final.

Gold finished first in the short program with 72.12 points, the highest-ever women's score at the ISU Judging System at the United States Championships. She went on to win the free skate with a new record of 139.57, earning her her first senior national title. She was named in Sochi, Russia, to the United States team for the 2014 Winter Olympics. She won a bronze medal in the Olympic team competition and placed fourth in the ladies singles event with a score of 205.53 points. Gold was selected to the 2014 World Championships in Saitama, Japan, where she came fifth overall. She appeared with Stars On Ice at the end of the season.

Gold started her season at the 2014 Nebelhorn Trophy, an ISU Challenger Series event, where she defeated Russians Elizaveta Tuktamysheva and Alena Leonova, respectively. Gold was given the 2014 Skate America and the 2014 NHK Trophy for the 2014-2015 ISU Grand Prix season.

At NHK Trophy, she gained bronze and gold, marking her first appearance at a Grand Prix event and the first time an American woman had won the contest. She qualified for her first Grand Prix Final but she was disqualified on December 4, 2014 due to a stress fracture in her left foot.

After finishing second in both the short program and free skate, Gold took home a silver medal at the 2015 U.S. Championships in a score of 205.54. Gold placed second in the short program with a score of 62.69 but fifth in the free skate with a score of 113.58, finishing fourth overall with a score of 176.58.

With a score of 60.73, Gold placed eighth place in the short program, her lowest score of the season. Gold came back in the free skate with a score of 128.23, her season's best and second best free skate score of the ladies tournament. She came in third place overall, her highest finish at a World Championship so far.

At the 2015 World Team Trophy, Gold medalists represented Team USA. With a score of 71.26, she came in first in the short program, the highest score for an American woman in an ISU event ever recorded. Nonetheless, she came in fifth place in the free skate. Overall, Team USA came in first place.

The 2015 Skate America and 2015 Trophée Éric Bompard were among Gold's Grand Prix Series assignments. At Skate America, Gold took the silver medal, behind Russia's Evgenia Medvedeva. She then began her season by placing first in the Trophée Éric Bompard's short program, earning a score of 73.32.

Following the November 2015 Paris attacks, the festival was postponed on November 14 due to France's state of emergency. The ISU's short program standings would remain as final placements on November 23, according to the university. This earned her gold in the 2015 Grand Prix Final, where she came in 5th overall in both the short and free categories, placing 5th.

Gold gewan her second National Championship at the 2016 U.S. Championships in Saint Paul, Minnesota, on January 23. She took second place at the 2016 Four Continents Championships in Taipei, Taiwan, after winning her national crown.

Gold continued to compete in the 2016 World Championships in Boston, where she came in first in the short program with a score of 76.43, the highest short program score ever recorded by an American woman. She came in sixth place in the free program, dropping to fourth place overall. Gold finished her season by competing at the inaugural 2016 KOSÉ Team Challenge Cup, where she will help Team North America win the gold medal.

Skate America and Trophée de France were two Grand Prix events, with Gold being awarded to two events. She began her season at the 2016 Japan Open. She earned a score of 108.24 points in the free skate and helped Team North America win the bronze medal. After a fall on her triple flip, Gold placed third in the short program, behind American Ashley Wagner and Japan's Mai Mihara. She struggled in the free skate, suffered multiple slips, and dropped to 5th overall with a total score of 184.22. Gold cited "globes summer depression" as a reason for not being prepared, saying that she had only recently "felt like herself" again. Her struggles at the 2016 Tropheé de France continued; she earned 165.89 for 8th place, her lowest Grand Prix finish in her career;

In late December 2016, Gold resumed her friendship with her former coach, Alex Ouriashev, after working with him in Chicago before returning to Los Angeles, where she was coached by Frank Carroll. For the first time in her senior career, she finished 6th at the 2017 United States Championships, and she was left off the Four Continents and World Championship teams for the first time; she had been on every world championship squad since 2013. Carroll revealed after the fact that they were part of a company that was not recognized. He didn't warn Gold before revealing the media, triggering a lot of backlash on social media. Despite being disappointed with Carroll's decision to notify the public before revealing her, Gold still expressed the "most reverence for Frank" and said she'd take the time to make the right decision on coaching arrangements going into the Olympic season.

Marina Zoueva and Oleg Epstein, who also worked as a choreographer), will be her trainers at the Arctic Edge ice rink in Canton, Michigan, on February 8, 2017.

Nike had a tradition of urging the young women it sponsored to shed significant amounts of weight, according to Lindsay Crouse, a writer for The New York Times. Gold's coaches pushed her to experience disordered eating in a way that she considered suicide.

Gold descended on the Japan Open, planned to be her season open, and also withdrew from the 2017 CS Ondrej Nepela Trophy due to personal reasons. Gold had been enrolled in two Grand Prix tournaments, the 2017 Cup of China and 2017 Internationaux de France, both of which she retrained from in October due to continuing therapy for anxiety, depression, and an eating disorder. Gold later withdrew from U.S. Nationals, saying she did not have adequate preparation before. It was announced that Gold had been recruited as a coach in Arizona at the end of the season.

Following rumors that she would return to the sport, it was announced on June 28, 2018. Gold was selected to compete at the 2018 Rostelecom Cup. Vincent Restencourt, a Pennsylvania-based coach, is based in Pennsylvania. Jeremy Abbott, a former figure skater, choreographed her short and long programs. Gold's latest short film, according to reports, portrays a more vivacious and sexy person, and her free program depicts her transition from personal struggles to her comeback. She doubled her triple Lutz-triple toe loop combo at the 2018 Rostelecom Cup, under-rotated and collapsed on her triple flip, and popped her proposed double Axel. She scored 37.51, the lowest short program score she has ever received since the start of her junior career, placing her in 10th and last place. Gracie revealed via Twitter that she had dropped out of the free skate in order to not harm her mental stability and hope due to her short program. She later announced that she was planning to become a Nationals coach in order to better prepare for the 2019-2020 season. She has also confirmed that she is working in Beijing, 2022, for the 2022 Winter Olympics. Her instructor's videos on Instagram have shown that she has started practicing jumps off the harness and is successfully landing them.

Gold will compete in international competitions in the hopes of winning a spot at the 2020 US Championships, despite being ineligible for a spot in a Grand Prix event. On his Instagram, Restencourt began posting hopeful videos of Gold's triple Axels and quadruple salchows in harness, as well as every triple jump. After making significant mistakes in both programs, Gold in the short program and fourth in the free program at the 2020 South Atlantic Regional Atlantic Championships finished third in the short program and fourth in the free program. However, Gold finished third overall and advanced to the 2020 Eastern Sectional Championships, where she earned her a qualifying spot for the 2020 US Championships. At the national championships, she came in twelfth.

Gold was announced to the United States by the United States. Figure Skating's international selection pool determines she is eligible to participate in international competition in the 2020-2021 figure skating season, and she will be considered for assignment to such events. She had been selected to compete in the 2020 Skate America, the ISU having decided to host the Grand Prix mainly in skaters' training locations to minimize international travel during the coronavirus pandemic. She came in twelfth.

At the 2021 U.S. Championships, gold finished thirteenth in 13th place.

Gold in the short program at the 2022 U.S. Championships came sixth, but after the free skate, the result dropped to tenth place overall.

"I really want to change from the 'good for her for being out there' mentality to, 'Oh, she's really good.' "She's incredibly tough,'" she says. At the age of 27, she earned the bronze medal at the Philadelphia Summer International, becoming the oldest female skater to win a triple Lutz-triple loop pair in internationaly competition. At the 2022 Skate America, Gold was twelfth at the 2022 CS Nebelhorn Trophy and sixth in 2022 Skate America.

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