Never before had an Italian figure skater or ice dancer won gold at a Junior World Championship—until Thursday. Noemi Maria Tali and Noah Lafornara have etched their names into the history books.
Thursday evening at the Főnix Arena in Debrecen brought breathtaking free dances in the ice dance event, where the top 20 duos took the ice to showcase their performances.
Leading after the rhythm dance, Italy’s Noemi Maria Tali and Noah Lafornara took the ice last, carrying the weight of expectation yet embracing the challenge with competitive excitement. It was well past 9 p.m. by the time 19 pairs had already performed, and only after a heartfelt embrace with their coaches did Tali and Lafornara step onto the ice for their moment.
Moments later, they left the rink with smiles, and just a few minutes after that, tears of joy flowed freely—the young duo had made history, as no Italian skater had ever claimed gold at a World Championship in either figure skating or ice dance before.
“We are incredibly happy. We gave it our all, and we are thrilled to have won, but there is also a bit of sadness because we have to say goodbye to this program—we loved performing it,” the newly crowned world champions shared.
The silver medal went to the impressive American duo of Katarina Wolfkostin and Dimitry Tsarevski, while the bronze was claimed— for the third consecutive time—by Germany’s Darya Grimm and Michail Savitskiy.
During the medal ceremony, alongside a representative of the International Skating Union, the awards were presented by Tamás Deutsch, Vice President of the Hungarian Olympic Committee.
“It is always a great joy when Hungary hosts a major international championship, whether junior or senior—we excel at this,” said Tamás Deutsch. “And Debrecen is an outstanding host city. It would be easier to list the sports that have not yet been welcomed here than those that have. At this Junior World Championship, we are witnessing the future stars of the sport—athletes who may not yet make their mark in Milan next year but will surely shine at the 2030 Olympics. For now, our focus is on Milan, and it’s clear that we can expect the most from our skaters at the Winter Games, particularly in short track speed skating. But we won’t be without chances in long track either. As Lajos Kósa, President of the Hungarian Skating Federation, has stated, the long-term goal is to have Hungarian representation in all four disciplines at the Olympics—meaning not just in pairs, but also in men’s and women’s singles, as well as in ice dance.”
The World Championships continue on Friday with the pairs’ short program. The Hungarian duo of Mózes József Berei and Lily Wilberforce will be the first to take the ice at the Főnix Arena at 13:36.
The Junior World Championships can be followed on the event’s social media pages (WHJCH Instagram, WHJCH Facebook event) and the official competition website: [https://hunskate.hu/wjch2025/](https://hunskate.hu/wjch2025/).