
Yuna Kim is Korea’s national figure skating icon, she was born on September 5th, 1990 and she won a gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympic Games.
Kim started skating at the age of six and gained her first international experience in 2002, when she competed in and won the Triglav Trophy competition at the novice level in Jesenice, Slovenia. In 2003 she got her first South Korean national title. The following year, Kim entered the Junior Grand Prix Circuit and won gold at the Junior Grand Prix in Hungary.
Kim moved up to the senior level in 2006-07, taking the overall title at the Grand Prix Finals and 2006 and 2007. At the 2007 World Championships she placed third place, many people think that she deserved first place instead. But soon thereafter she began training in Canada under two-time Olympic silver medalist Brian Orser. The following season Kim captured both the Cup of China and the Cup of Russia before securing another bronze medal at the 2008 World Championships.
At the 2009 World Championships, Kim made history as she took South Korea’s first senior-level world figure skating title. In addition, she finished with a record of 207.72 points, beating the previous mark of 199.52 set in 2006 by her longtime rival Asada Maso of Japan. Kim followed that performance with wins at two Grand Prix finals, making her a favorite going into the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Her almost flawless performance in Vancouver won her a gold medal-South Korea’s first Winter Games medal in a sport other than speed skating. Kim skated a complex, technically difficult, yet elegant routine that featured seven triple jumps, and she received a recorded 228.56 points, more than 23 points ahead of her nearest competitor. Kim placed second in both the 2010 and 2011 World Championships before announcing that she would take hiatus from competitive skating, sitting out the 2011-12 season. She returned in 2012 with a first-place performance in the NRW Trophy competition in Dortmund, Germany.
In 2013, Kim captured her second World Championship in dominant fashion, beating the second-place finisher by more than 20 points. She was the strong favorite to repeat as Olympic gold medalist heading into the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, but she was upset by Russia’s Adelina Sotnikova and finished with the silver medal. After receiving her medal, Kim announced her retirement from competition.
RELATED STORIES:
https://www.olympics.com/en/athletes/yuna-kim
https://supersmashbrosbowl.fandom.com/wiki/Kim_Yuna
https://kids.kiddle.co/Yuna_Kim
https://hearourvoicesmag.com/p5k93q4f7ckbriddegrol1u4erk7a0/
http://yunakim.uk/about-yuna-kim/
TAKE ACTION: