Ivan Shmuratko

Ivan Oleksiyovych Shmuratko (Іван Олексійович Шмуратко, born December 21, 2001) is a Ukrainian figure skater. On the senior level is the 2018 Volvo Open Cup bronze medalist, 2018 Bosphorus Cup silver medalist, and four-time Ukrainian national champion (2019–22). On the junior level, he is the 2019 JGP Italy bronze medalist. He has competed in the final segment at two ISU Championships. Earlier in his career, he won silver in the team event at the 2016 Youth Olympics.

Personal life
Shmuratko was born on December 21, 2001, in Kyiv, Ukraine. He has a younger brother named Ilya.

He is fluent in Russian, Ukrainian, and English.

Early years
Shmuratko started learning to skate in 2006 at the age of four and a half years old after his parents signed him up for the sport on the advice of his doctors to improve the catarrhal diseases that he suffered from as a child. In the 2014–15 season, he won bronze at the Ukrainian Junior Championships.

2015–16 season
Coached by Vira Volpova in Kyiv, Shmuratko won two junior international medals: gold at the Ice Star and silver at the Santa Claus Cup. Competing at the senior level, he finished 4th at the Ukrainian Championships. He was named to Ukraine's team to the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics in Lillehammer. There, he placed 14th in men's singles and won a silver medal as part of the team event as a member of Team Future, which also included Diāna Ņikitina of Latvia, Anna Dušková and Martin Bidař of the Czech Republic, and Julia Wagret and Mathieu Couyras of France.

2018–19 season
Shmuratko opened his season on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series, placing 10th in Lithuania and 7th in Armenia. In November, making his senior international debut, he won bronze at the Volvo Open Cup in Latvia. The following month, he received medals at two senior events – silver at the Bosphorus Cup in Turkey and gold at the Ukrainian Championships. In January, he competed at his first ISU Championship, the 2019 European Championships in Minsk, Belarus. He qualified to the final segment and placed twenty-second overall. He also advanced to the free skate at the 2019 World Junior Championships, which took place in March in Zagreb, Croatia. Ranked thirteenth in the short and seventeenth in the free, he finished sixteenth overall.

2019–20 season
Shmuratko started his season on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series, placing seventh in Poland, and winning the bronze in Italy with a personal best score. In October, he competed at the Halloween Cup, winning the silver medal. In December, he won his second straight senior national title. He was named to the 2020 European Figure Skating Championships but withdrew. He placed fifteenth at the 2020 World Junior Figure Skating Championships. Shmuratko was assigned to compete at the World Championships in Montreal, Canada, but these were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

2020–21 season
With pandemic-related travel restrictions limiting where skaters could compete, Shmuratko began the season at a European-only 2020 Nebelhorn Trophy, where he placed twelfth. After winning his third consecutive Ukrainian national title, Shmuratko competed at the 2021 World Championships in Stockholm, Sweden, placing twenty-first. His result qualified a men's berth for Ukraine at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China.

2021–22 season
On the Challenger series, Shmuratko was fifth at the 2021 Denis Ten Memorial Challenge and seventeenth at the 2021 Warsaw Cup. After winning the Ukrainian national title again, he was named to the Ukrainian Olympic team and placed twelfth at the 2022 European Championships.

Shmuratko tested positive for COVID-19 upon arrival in Beijing and so was unable to participate in the Olympic team event. He stated that he was asymptomatic and hoped to be cleared to compete in the later men's event. Shmuratko subsequently was allowed to resume competition, placing twenty-second in the short program to qualify to the free skate. He finished twenty-fourth overall.

Returning to Kyiv following the Olympics, Shmuratko soon found himself in the midst of Russia's invasion, with his home city being one of the largest points of conflict. Despite the war and the resultant limitations on his training, Shmurtako still traveled to attend the 2022 World Championships in Montpellier, France, a journey that took three days. He received a standing ovation from the crowd and qualified for the free program, ultimately finishing twenty-third overall. On his decision to attend, he said, "it's important for Ukraine to have athletes who represent it on the international scene."

2022–23 season
Following the World Championships, Shmuratko spent April training at Club Olympique de Courbevoie in Paris, on the invitation of Ukrainian emigrant pair skater Denys Strekalin. He subsequently relocated his training base to Oberstdorf, Germany, adding coaches Michael Huth, Robert Dierking, and Anna Bernauer to his team. Beginning the season, he placed seventh and sixth at 2022 Nebelhorn Trophy and 2022 Finlandia Trophy. Before making his senior Grand Prix debut at the 2022 Grand Prix de France, Shmuratko once again relocated back to Courbevoie, France, with Laurent Depouilly and Nathalie Depouilly becoming his coaches. He subsequently finished in eighth place at the Grand Prix de France after placing eighth in both the short program and free skate.

He was forced to sit out the rest of the season due to a foot injury.

2023–24 season
Shmuratko opted to return to train in Ukraine, explaining that "it‘s my home." He designed both of his programs to reflect the realities of the ongoing war, and said "it's one of my missions coming out of Ukraine to tell the stories through my art and my voice. It's my way to fight for my country." Shmuratko's short program presented a story of a child killed by a missile and the child's father being forced to live with it, and his free skate presented a continuation of that story.

In his competitive debut for the season, he finished eighth at the 2023 Nepela Memorial. He was invited to appear on the Grand Prix at the 2023 Grand Prix of Espoo, coming eighth.

At the 2024 European Championships in Kaunas, Lithuania, Shmuratko placed nineteenth in the short program, but twelfth in the free skate, moving up to fourteenth-place overall. During his free skate, Shmuratko notably wore a white shirt with a red splotch spattered across his chest to signify blood stains. Following the event, he said, "This is the astral between life and death. No more, and no less. It is incomparably more than words can convey. The element with blood? Because that's how it is, literally. People die from missiles like this, with blood."

Competitive highlights

 * GP – Event of the ISU Grand Prix Series
 * JGP – Event of the ISU Junior Grand Prix Series
 * CS – Event of the ISU Challenger Series
 * C – Event was cancelled