She has coached Jeremy Abbott (since May 2009), Alissa Czisny (2010-2014), Valentina Marchei (2011-2014), and choreographed for Takahiko Kozuka. She is a coach and choreographer at the Detroit Skating Club in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. She commentated for NHK during the 2006 Winter Olympics, including the broadcast of Shizuka Arakawa's winning performance. Sato has worked as a sports commentator for Japanese television. She is credited as a stunt performer in the 2007 figure skating comedy motion picture Blades of Glory. Sato also performed as a pair skater with Jason Dungjen.
She won the 1995, 2000, 20 World Professional Championships and placed second at that competition in 19.
In the free skate, she was beaten by Bonaly 8–1 in the technical mark but won the presentation mark 8–1, and became the World champion by a 5–4 vote between the judges.įollowing her win at the 1994 World Championships, Sato retired from amateur skating and began performing professionally in ice shows, including Stars on Ice. She placed first after the technical program, with Surya Bonaly and Tanja Szewczenko in second and third, respectively. She completed six triple jumps in the free skate and finished fifth overall.Īll of the Olympic medalists withdrew from the 1994 World Championships, which were held in Japan. At the Olympics, she popped an intended triple Lutz in the short program and placed seventh in that segment of the competition. She won her second Japanese national title that season to qualify for the 1994 Winter Olympics and the 1994 World Championships. In the 1993–94 season, Sato won the bronze medal at the 1993 NHK Trophy and placed sixth at the pre-Olympic Piruetten competition in Norway. She placed fourth at the 1993 World Championships. She won the silver medal at the 1992 NHK Trophy, gold at the Prague Skate, and gold at the Japanese Championships. In the 1992–93 season, Sato defeated Nancy Kerrigan and Chen Lu to win the 1992 Skate America. She was sent to the 1992 Winter Olympics, where she placed seventh, and the 1992 World Championships, where she finished eighth. In the 1991–92 season, Sato won the bronze medal at the 1991 Skate America and her second silver medal at the Japanese Championships. In the 1990–91 season, Sato placed fifth at the 1990 NHK Trophy and at the 1990 Nations Cup. She assigned to the World Junior Championships, where she won gold, and to the 1990 World Championships, where she placed 14th. In the 1989–90 season, Sato was the Japanese junior champion for the second year in a row and the silver medalist on the senior level. Around 1989, she moved to Canada and joined Peter Dunfield, who coached her for the next five years. Sato was taught by her parents in Japan until she was 16. She also qualified for Japan's senior championships, where she won the bronze medal behind Midori Ito and Junko Yaginuma. In the 1988–89 season, Yuka Sato won the Japanese junior title to qualify for the 1989 World Junior Championships, where she placed 10th. She was married to fellow figure skater Jason Dungjen. Her parents, as of 2011, live near Yokohama. Her father, Nobuo Sato, competed at the 1960 Winter Olympics and 1964 Winter Olympics while her mother, Kumiko Okawa, competed in the 1964 Winter Olympics and 1968 Winter Olympics. Yuka Sato was born in Tokyo to figure skating parents.