Figure skaters and coaches returning from the U.S. national championships were aboard the American Airlines flight that ...
The DC plane crash that killed members of the figure skating community near Reagan National Airport hit very close to home ...
Philadelphia Skating Club and Humane Society President Laura Mitchell joins José Díaz-Balart to share more on her community’s ...
After the camp, they boarded an American Airlines regional jet on Wednesday evening, planning to fly home to Massachusetts ...
Dick Button was the first American Olympic figure skating gold medalist in the sport back in 1948, then again in 1952.
Niina Petrokina fell, got back up, and completed the skate of her life. A freak fall on a transition between jumps threatened ...
Dick Button, the two-time Olympic champion who revolutionized figure skating and literally took the sport to new heights, ...
The Skating Club of Boston was dark Thursday, as friends and teammates grieved six people who died in Wednesday's D.C. plane ...
Several skaters, parents, coaches, and officials had just wrapped up an elite training camp in Wichita, Kan., including Kathaleen Cutone, a US Figure Skating official who had just arrived home in ...
Peter, Donna, Everly and Alydia Livingston devoted their lives to figure skating before the devastating plane crash near Reagan National Airport.
The city had tried for years to host the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, and to get a direct flight to the northeast.
This is no sport for the faint of heart, but one, in the words of Skating Club of Boston executive director Doug Zeghibe, that “takes a singular passion.” It’s a sport that can take your breath away, ...