Freeskating
Freeskating is individual performance. It involves a choreographed routine to music that incorporates jumps, spins and intricate footwork. Skaters taking up freeskating learn coordination, techniques of jumps and spins and also the creativity of dance and drama in their artistic impression. For couples, this discipline extends to pairs skating where athletic power and strength produces magic routines involving overhead lifts and breathtaking spins in duets.
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Dance Skating
Dance skating combines the grace of ballet and the rhythm and precision of ballroom dancing. Individuals or couples can perform dance. Skaters start by learning compulsory dances such as tangos, waltzes and marches. As part of their dance training, skaters learn timing, poise and expression. For couples, this discipline can progress to Free Dance where skaters perform duets involving a range of lifts, footwork and imaginative choreography in time to music.
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Precision Skating
Precision skating is team skating. Precision involves creatively choreographed and presented routines involving set patterns and manoeuvres performed to music, by teams of between 6 and 24 skaters. It relies less on the high level of skills required for freeskating and dance and more on teamwork and accuracy to skate in unison.
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Figure Skating
Figure skating incorporates the most basic and important skills of artistic roller skating – skating on “edges”. Intricate turns and shapes are tracked on predetermined circles marked on the floor. Skaters learn balance and the skill of fine control over their skates as they learn and progress through more than sixty different figures.
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