Erik Millau ( French: Éric Millot , born December 12, 1968 ) is a French male figure skater , four - time champion of France in figure skating, twice representing the country at the 1992 and 1994 Winter Olympics . [1] He also participated in the World and European Championships many times, in particular, twice took the fifth place in the world championship, and in 1993 won the bronze medal at the European Championship . After finishing his sports career in 1997, he became a professional.
| Eric Millau | |
|---|---|
| Presents | |
| Date of Birth | December 12, 1968 (50 years old) |
| Place of Birth | Reims |
| Growth | 165 cm |
| Trainer | Annik Gayage |
| Place of residence | Palm Springs , USA |
| Sports achivments | |
| The best results on the ISU system (at international amateur competitions) | |
| Amount | Not competed in New judicial system |
| Finished speaking | |
Coach Millau - Annique Gayage . He was distinguished by an artistic emotional style. He possessed the high-quality technique of performing a triple rittberger , which allowed him to make a cascade of a triple rittberger - a triple rittberger (1996) for the first time in history, as well as one of the first triple flip - a triple rittberger, however, problems with the execution of the key triple axel in those years did not allow to become a leader .
On April 27, 2000, a match was held between the skaters of France and Russia, in which the most titled athletes of both countries took part. Eric Millau joined the French team along with skaters such as Suria Bonali , Marina Anisina and Gwendal Peiser . [2]
See also
- Junior World Figure Skating Championship 1987
- Figure Skating at the 1992 Winter Olympics - Singles (men)
- Figure Skating at the 1994 Winter Olympics - Singles (men)
Notes
- ↑ Éric Millot Biography and Statistics . Sports Reference LLC. Date of treatment April 2, 2009. Archived April 4, 2012.
- ↑ Figure skating: Paris . Sport Express (April 8, 2000). Date of treatment July 20, 2009. Archived April 4, 2012.