Amateur Competitive Results
Ice Dance (with Torvill)
| Event | 1975–76 | 1976–77 | 1977–78 | 1978–79 | 1979–80 | 1980–81 | 1981–82 | 1982–83 | 1983–84 | 1993–94 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winter Olympic Games | 5th | 1st | 3rd | |||||||
| World Championships | 11th | 8th | 4th | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | |||
| European Championships | 9th | 6th | 4th | 1st | 1st | WD | 1st | 1st | ||
| British Championships | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | |
| NHK Trophy | 1st | |||||||||
| St. Ivel International | 1st | 1st | ||||||||
| Nebelhorn Trophy | 2nd | 1st | ||||||||
| Grand Prix de St. Gervais | 1st | |||||||||
| Morzine Trophy | 1st | |||||||||
| John Davis Trophy | 1st | |||||||||
| Northern Championships | 1st | |||||||||
| Sheffield Trophy | 1st | |||||||||
| Rotary Watches Competition | 2nd |
Read more about this topic: Christopher Dean
Famous quotes containing the words amateur, competitive and/or results:
“I have been reporting club meetings for four years and I am tired of hearing reviews of the books I was brought up on. I am tired of amateur performances at occasions announced to be for purposes either of enjoyment or improvement. I am tired of suffering under the pretense of acquiring culture. I am tired of hearing the word culture used so wantonly. I am tired of essays that let no guilty author escape quotation.”
—Josephine Woodward, U.S. author. As quoted in Everyone Was Brave, ch. 3, by William L. ONeill (1969)
“Women of my age in America are at the mercy of two powerful and antagonistic traditions. The first is the ultradomestic fifties with its powerful cult of motherhood; the other is the strident feminism of the seventies with its attempt to clone the male competitive model.... Only in America are these ideologies pushed to extremes.”
—Sylvia Ann Hewitt (20th century)
“It is perhaps the principal admirableness of the Gothic schools of architecture, that they receive the results of the labour of inferior minds; and out of fragments full of imperfection ... raise up a stately and unaccusable whole.”
—John Ruskin (18191900)