World Championships, Zagreb 2004  
   

Zagreb, the capital city of Croatia, hosted the fifth World Synchronized Skating Championships from April 1 to 4, 2004, with over 550 skaters from 23 teams and 18 countries of the European, American, Asian, Australian and African continents. This took place only six years and three months i.e. 75 months after our club was founded.

The World Championships were held in Minneapolis, USA in 2000, Helsinki, Finland in 2001, Rouen, France in 2002, Ottawa, Canada in 2003, and will be held in Goteborg, Sweden in 2005 and Prague, The Czech Republic in 2006. Croatia was the fifth country entrusted by the International Skating Union to host the world championships in a sport symbolized by closeness, team spirit, seriousness and sacrifice, mutual respect and encouragement, a sport with no opponents, one which creates many friendships and brings young people, countries, cultures and continents together in the most beautiful way.

Zagreb is the cradle of Croatian sport. It is the hometown of three-time Olympic gold medallist from Salt Lake City, 2002, the queen of skiing, Janica Kostelić. Zagreb is also the hometown of Sanda Dubravčić-Šimunjak, the 1981 European figure skating silver-medallist, an athlete who was honored with lighting the Olympic torch at the Winter Olympic Games in Sarajevo two decades ago. Zagreb, with its long tradition of the "Golden Spin," hosted the European Figure Skating Championships in 1974 and 1979, and the World Junior Figure Skating Championships in 1998.




Thanks to its skating enthusiasts and wonderful people at the ISU, Zagreb, a city in a country with only two indoor ice rinks and only one synchronized skating club, quickly grew into one of the world centers of this beautiful sport. Our organizing abilities were recognized even at the early and difficult stages, and so was the warmth of the citizens of our historic 910-year-old city, which has always been a part of the Western European and Central European cultural circle.

That is exactly the reason why Zagreb entered history as the first city to host the unofficial world synchronized skating championships for juniors (the 2002 World Challenge Cup) and the World Synchronized Skating Championships for seniors. It was right here in Zagreb that synchronized skating celebrated its first 50 years since its beginnings in Michigan in the distant 1954. It also celebrated 15 years since the first international competition held in Sweden and ten years since the establishment of the first Technical Committee and the official membership in the large ISU family.

The World Synchronized Skating Championships were the only world championships held in Zagreb in 2004.

By the number of competitors, the wonderful atmosphere created throughout the city, the fifteen hundred guests from thirty countries all over the world, the five thousand ecstatic fans filling the Dom Sportova arena on both days of the competition, the excellent media coverage, the 85 journalists, photographers and cameramen (33 from abroad), it was one of the biggest and the most captivating athletic events ever to be held in Croatia's capital.

The honorary patronage of the Croatian president Stjepan Mesić and the patronage of Vlasta Pavić, the mayor of the city of Zagreb, added a special dimension to this event, which surpassed all athletic frameworks, and fascinated even those spectators of the highest athletic and aesthetic expectations

 

 

next>>>

 

Copyright© Zagreb Snowflakes 2001-2002