Geoffrey Brissaud
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Geoffrey Brissaud (born 23 March 1998) is a French ice dancer. With his skating partner, Evgeniia Lopareva, he is a three-time French Figure Skating Championships, French national champion, the 2024 Grand Prix de France champion, a four-time ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix bronze medalist, a three-time ISU Challenger Series gold medalist, and a two-time International Challenge Cup champion (2021 and 2023 International Challenge Cup, 2023). Earlier in their career they finished in the top ten at the 2019 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, 2019 World Junior Championships. With his former skating partner, Sarah-Marine Rouffanche, Brissaud competed at the 2015 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, 2015 World Junior Championships in Tallinn, Estonia. They qualified for the free dance and finished fifteenth overall.


Personal life

Brissaud was born on 23 March 1998 in Limoges, France. He was formerly engaged to Azerbaijani single skating, single skater, Ekaterina Ryabova (figure skater), Ekaterina Ryabova from 2022 to 2023. As of 2024, he is in a relationship with French singles skater, Léa Serna.


Career


Early years

Brissaud began figure skating in 2000. Teaming up with Sarah-Marine Rouffanche, Brissaud started competing as an ice dancer in 2010. Brissaud/Rouffanche initially trained in Lyon under coaches, Muriel Zazoui, Romain Haguenauer, and Olivier Schoenfelder before later moving to Milan, Italy to train under Barbara Fusar Poli, Stefano Caruso, and Cedric Pernet. Together, the team would win silver on the junior level at the 2015 and 2017 French Figure Skating Championships, French Championships, and competed at the 2015 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, 2015 World Junior Championships, finishing fifteenth. Their partnership would dissolve following the 2016–17 season.


Partnership with Lopareva


2018–19 season

Before the start of the 2018–19 season, Brissaud teamed up with Russian ice dancer, Evgeniia Lopareva, to compete for France. It was subsequently announced that they would be coached by Ekaterina Rubleva in Moscow, Russia. The new team received two international assignments – the Egna Dance Trophy, 2019 Egna Dance Trophy, where they took silver in the junior division, and the 2019 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, where they placed tenth.


2019–20 season: Senior international debut

Lopareva/Brissaud made their senior international debut in September at their first assignment of the 2019–20 season, the 2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial, 2019 CS Nepela Memorial Trophy. Here, the team placed eighth in the rhythm dance but made a comeback in the free dance (fourth) to finish sixth overall. The pair also set new personal bests in all three segments at the event. At their next Challenger Series assignment, 2019 CS Warsaw Cup, Lopareva/Brissaud again set another personal best in the rhythm dance. After taking the bronze medal at the senior French Championships, they competed at the 2020 European Figure Skating Championships, European Championships for the first time, placing fifteenth. Following the season, the team would move their training from Moscow, Russia to Lyon, France, where they were coached by Roxane Petetin, Fabian Bourzat, Ekaterina Rubleva, and Ivan Shefer.


2020–21 season: World Championship debut

Lopareva/Brissaud were scheduled to make their 2020-21 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix debut at the 2020 Internationaux de France, but the event was cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. They made their World Championship debut at the 2021 World Figure Skating Championships, 2021 World Championships in Stockholm, placing seventeenth. Their placement, combined with the sixteenth-place finish of the other French dance team competing at the championships, qualified a single berth for France at the 2022 Winter Olympics and the following year's world championships.


2021–22 season

Lopareva/Brissaud made their seasonal 2021-22 ISU Challenger Series, Challenger debut at the 2021 CS Lombardia Trophy, placing eighth. They were initially assigned to make their 2021-22 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix debut at the 2021 Cup of China, but following its cancellation, they were reassigned to the 2021 Gran Premio d'Italia. They placed sixth at the event, setting new personal bests in the free dance and total score. They finished in fourth place at the 2021 Internationaux de France, setting new personal bests in the rhythm dance and total score. Lopareva said they were "very happy with the result" of their first Grand Prix season. After winning a silver medal at the International Cup of Nice, Lopareva/Brissaud won their second consecutive national silver medal. They were assigned to the 2022 European Figure Skating Championships, 2022 European Championships in Tallinn, where they finished ninth.


2022–23 season: Challenger and Grand Prix medals

Prior to the season, it was announced that Lopareva and Brissaud would begin splitting their time between training in Lyon, France under coach, Roxane Petetin, and in Montreal, Quebec, Canada under coaches, Romain Haguenauer, Marie France Dubreuil, Patrice Lauzon, and Pascal Denis. Lopareva/Brissaud began the season by winning the silver medal at the 2022 CS Budapest Trophy. With Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron sitting out at least the season, Lopareva/Brissaud, were the most senior French team assigned to compete at the 2022 Grand Prix de France, where they won the bronze medal, their first on the 2022-23 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix. They finished fifth at the 2022 NHK Trophy. At the French championships in Rouen, Lopareva/Brissaud won the national title for the first time in their career. At the 2023 European Figure Skating Championships, 2023 European Championships in Espoo, they finished sixth in the rhythm dance, missing the final flight of the free dance by 0.42 behind Czechs Natálie Taschlerová, Taschlerová/Filip Taschler, Taschler. They overtook the Czechs in the free dance, finishing fifth overall. They finished twelfth at the 2023 World Figure Skating Championships, 2023 World Championships. Lopareva/Brissaud then joined Team France for the 2023 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, 2023 World Team Trophy, finishing fifth in the rhythm dance and fourth in the free dance. Team France finished in fifth place.


2023–24 season

For the 1980s-themed rhythm dance, Lopareva and Brissaud desired to skate to a less conventional choice, and took their coach's recommendation of the work of French synth-pop singer Mylène Farmer. Their free program was a "biographical" story using the music of Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff, with Brissaud playing Rachmaninoff and Lopareva his "muse and inspiration." Lopareva/Brissaud began the season at the 2023 CS Autumn Classic International, winning the silver medal. They were invited to participate in the Shanghai Trophy, earning a second silver medal. They started on the 2023-24 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix at the 2023 Skate America, where they finished third in the rhythm dance, only 0.60 points behind Canadian training mates Marjorie Lajoie, Lajoie/Zachary Lagha, Lagha. They were third in the free dance as well, albeit slightly further behind second-place, and won the bronze medal. Lopareva called the result "very, very special" given the strong field. With their home 2023 Grand Prix de France, Grand Prix de France as their second event, Lopareva/Brissaud finished third in both segments to take the bronze medal. They noted some technical issues, particularly lost levels on their free program dance spin, they said they had felt they had improved their performance elements, with Brissaud saying "we feel like we are improving little by little, step by step." The podium of gold medalists Charlene Guignard, Guignard/Marco Fabbri, Fabbri, silver medalists Laurence Fournier Beaudry, Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Sørensen, Sørensen, and bronze medalists Lopareva/Brissaud was the same as the previous year. Following the Grand Prix, the duo won gold at the 2023 CS Warsaw Cup. After retaining their French national title, Lopareva/Brissaud competed at the 2024 European Figure Skating Championships, 2024 European Championships, where they placed fourth in both segments and fourth overall, 6.20 points back of bronze medalists Allison Reed, Reed/Saulius Ambrulevičius, Ambrulevičius of Lithuania. Lopareva/Brissaud concluded the season at the 2024 World Figure Skating Championships, 2024 World Championships in Montreal, where they finished seventh in the rhythm dance, breaking the 80-point threshold. They dropped to eighth after the free dance, but broke the 200-point threshold overall, which Brissaud called a "gift", noting that the free dance occurred on his birthday.


2024–25 season: European silver and Grand Prix gold

Lopareva/Brissaud made their season debut at the Shanghai Trophy, 2024 Shanghai Trophy, where they won the silver medal. Going on to compete on the 2024–25 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, 2024–25 Grand Prix circuit, they won the bronze medal at the 2024 Skate Canada International. At the 2024 Grand Prix de France, Lopareva and Brissaud had a surprise victory after Italian pre-event favourites Charlène Guignard and Marco Fabbri unexpectedly faltered during their free dance. Lopareva said she was “speechless and shocked” by the result, adding that it felt “amazing” to have achieved their goal of qualifying for the 2024–25 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, Grand Prix Final for the first time in their careers. Lopareva/Brissaud subsequently competed on the 2024–25 ISU Challenger Series, winning gold at both the 2024 CS Tallinn Trophy and the 2024 CS Warsaw Cup. At the Grand Prix Final, held on home ice in Grenoble, the Lopareva/Brissaud finished in sixth place. Both praised the support they had received from the French crowds, Brissaud remarking “when you first start the element, they clap. It’s great!” Two weeks later, they captured their third consecutive national title at the French Figure Skating Championships, 2025 French Championships. While the ice dance event at the 2025 European Figure Skating Championships, 2025 European Championships had been widely perceived as a contest between defending champions Guignard/Fabbri and the British team Lilah Fear, Fear/Lewis Gibson (figure skater), Gibson, Lopareva/Brissaud unexpectedly came second in the rhythm dance, having bested the British in the segment by 1.18 points. They were second in the free dance as well, claiming the silver medal, their first at the European Championships. Brissaud admitted afterward: "It’s a surprise to finish second. We wanted to come for a medal, but we didn’t at all expect the silver." Lopareva/Brissaud were ninth in both segments at the 2025 World Figure Skating Championships, 2025 World Championships in Boston, but came eighth overall, replicating their placement from the previous year. Lopareva reflected on their European silver medal as "the moment we really realized we had made a step forward this season." Selected to compete for Team France at the 2025 ISU World Team Trophy in Figure Skating, 2025 World Team Trophy, Lopareva/Brissaud finished fourth in the ice dance event and Team France placed fourth overall.


Programs


Ice dance with Evgeniia Lopareva


With Rouffanche


Competitive highlights


Ice dance with Evgeniia Lopareva


Ice dance with Sarah-Marine Rouffanche


Detailed results


Ice dance with Evgeniia Lopareva


Senior level


Junior level


References


External links

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Evgenia Lopareva & Geoffrey Brissaud
at Skating Scores * {{DEFAULTSORT:Brissaud, Geoffrey 1998 births French male ice dancers Living people Sportspeople from Limoges 21st-century French sportsmen European Figure Skating Championships medalists