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Daša Grm

Slovene figure skater From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daša Grm
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Daša Grm (born 18 April 1991) is a Slovenian retired figure skater. She is a two-time Dragon Trophy champion (2012, 2016), the 2015 Hellmut Seibt Memorial champion, the 2017 Ice Challenge champion, a two-time Golden Bear of Zagreb silver medalist (2013, 2017), and a seven-time Slovenia national champion (2014–2020). She has competed in the final segment at eight ISU Championships, including four World Championships (2015, 2018, 2019, 2022).

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Personal life

Daša Grm was born on 18 April 1991 in Celje, Slovenia.[1] She studied kinesiology at university and graduated with a bachelor's degree.[2][3] Her father, Stanislav Grm, is a former ski jumper.[2]

In September 2025, she welcomed a son with her partner, Anej Wagner.[4][5]

Career

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Grm appeared on the novice level until the end of the 2003–04 season.[6] She competed at her first ISU Junior Grand Prix (JGP) event in autumn 2004. Her ISU Championship debut came in March 2006 at the World Junior Championships in Ljubljana, Slovenia. She finished twenty-fifth that year and forty-third in 2007 in Oberstdorf, Germany.

Grm made her senior international debut in November 2008 at the Golden Spin of Zagreb, finishing fifteenth, but continued to appear sporadically on the junior level. She ranked forty-sixth at the 2009 World Junior Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Grm made her first appearance in a senior ISU Championship in January 2011 at the European Championships in Bern, Switzerland. She qualified for the free skate and finished twentieth overall. Competing in April 2011 at the World Championships in Moscow, she advanced from the preliminary round to the short program, where she was eliminated. Grm did not reach the short program at the World Championships in Nice, France. Anja Bratec coached her at the time.[7]

Jan Čejvan became Grm's coach by 2013.[8] In January 2014, she placed twenty-seventh in the short program at the European Championships in Budapest, Hungary; she did not qualify to the next segment. In the 2014–15 season, Grm competed at two ISU Challenger Series events, placing twelfth at the Warsaw Cup and then fourth at the Golden Spin of Zagreb. In January 2015, she won a bronze medal at the Toruń Cup but was unable to reach the free skate at the European Championships, placing thirtieth in the short program in Stockholm, Sweden. The following month, she won gold at the Hellmut Seibt Memorial. In March 2015, she competed at the World Championships in Shanghai, China. Ranked twenty-second in the short program, she qualified for the free skate, where she placed eighteenth, pulling her up to eighteenth overall.

During the 2017–18 season, Grm qualified to the free skater at both Europeans and Worlds. However, she failed to qualify for the 2018 Winter Olympics. The following year, Grm finished a career-best seventeenth-place at Europeans and for the second time placed in the top 20 at Worlds. She also successfully landed a Triple-Triple combination in competition at the short program at worlds for the first time in her career.

Grm failed to qualify for the free skating segment at the 2021 World Figure Skating Championships, thus failing to qualify a berth for the Beijing Olympics. At the Nebelhorn Trophy later in the year, Grm qualified as the fourth alternate for the Winter Olympics. She concluded the season with a disappointing twenty-fourth place at the 2022 World Championships.

Grm had a rough start to the new quad, not skating a clean SP or FS in the whole season. Grm however did manage to qualify for her fourth ISU European Championship, finishing in twenty-first place.

In April 2024, she announced her retirement from competitive figure skating.[9]

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Programs

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Results

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GP: Grand Prix; CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix

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References

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