Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir

Canadian ice dancers
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Quick Facts
Born:
May 17, 1989, London, Ontario, Canada
Born:
September 2, 1987, London, Ontario, Canada

Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir (respectively, born May 17, 1989, London, Ontario, Canada; born September 2, 1987, London, Ontario, Canada) are Canadian ice dancers who became the first North Americans to win the Olympic gold medal in ice dancing when they triumphed at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver. The pair subsequently won a second Olympic gold medal at the 2018 Winter Games.

Virtue and Moir began skating together when they were aged seven and nine, respectively. Moir’s aunt, who was also his skating coach at the time, thought that the two similarly small, athletic children would make a good match on the ice, and the pair started training at a skating rink in Kitchener, almost 70 miles (113 km) away from their homes in the London area. The two had a natural chemistry, and their performances around London often drew thousands of spectators. After six years of skating together, Virtue and Moir moved to Kitchener to further commit themselves to their training. Later they relocated to a suburb of Detroit to work with renowned coaches Marina Zoueva and Igor Shpilband. Virtue and Moir’s first major success came in 2004 when the pair won the Canadian junior national championship, and in 2006 they were the ice dancing world junior champions.

They made their senior international debut during the 2006–07 skating season. During the 2007–08 season, Virtue and Moir won the gold medal at the Canadian championships and the silver at the world championships. They repeated as national champions the following season, when they also won the world championship bronze medal. After years spent approaching the top of international ice dancing, Virtue and Moir had a near-perfect season in 2009–10. At a November 2009 event at their old training rink in Kitchener, the two were awarded the first perfect performance score in the history of the then-five-year-old 10-point scoring system. Three months later the duo, performing in a stadium packed with their fellow Canadians, captured the ice dancing gold medal at the Vancouver Olympic Winter Games. Their winning free-dance routine included their signature move, “the goose,” an audacious—and borderline illegal, by ice dancing’s rigid technical standards—maneuver that consisted of Virtue balancing on a crouched Moir’s back and extending her arms like wings before flipping through the air to be caught by her partner. The pair became not only the first non-Europeans to win the Olympic ice dancing gold but also the youngest winners in the event’s Olympic history. In March 2010 Virtue and Moir capped their tremendous season by winning their first world championship.

Serena Williams of the United States returns a shot during her women's singles final match against Victoria Azarenka of Belarus on Day Fourteen of the 2013 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 8, 2013 in New York City.
Britannica Quiz
Women in Sports: Who Said It?

Virtue and Moir won a silver medal at the 2011 world championships, where they were edged out of first place by their American training partners, Meryl Davis and Charlie White. The next year, the pair rebounded to capture their second world championship as well as the first of three consecutive Canadian titles. At the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, Virtue and Moir again finished behind Davis and White, taking home the ice dancing silver medal. Virtue and Moir won another gold medal at the 2017 world championships, which they followed by capturing the ice dancing gold at the 2018 Winter Olympics in P’yŏngch’ang, South Korea. The pair retired from competitive ice dancing in September 2019.

Adam Augustyn