CBC Lite Sections Sports • Olympics • Winter Sports • Figure Skating Fabbri and Ayer 4th in ice dance, Daleman 7th in women's at Four Continents The Canadian Press | Posted: January 23, 2026 4:42 PM | Last Updated: January 23 Americans Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik win gold in dance, Japan's Yuna Aoki in women's singles Image | 2257131866 Caption: Canada's Alicia Fabbri and Paul Ayer perform in the ice dance free skating during the ISU figure skating Four Continents Championships in Beijing on Friday. (AFP via Getty Images) (BUTTON) Load image Open image in new tab Canadian figure skaters Alicia Fabbri and Paul Ayer finished fourth in ice dance, while Gabrielle Daleman placed seventh in women's singles at the Four Continents Championships on Friday in Beijing. The Americans swept the ice dance podium. Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik captured gold with 202.86 points, while Caroline Green and Michael Parsons claimed silver (194.72) and Oona and Gage Brown took bronze (190.78). Fabbri and Ayer, who are two-time Canadian championship bronze medallists, scored 183.49 points. Yuna Aoki won gold in the women's event with 217.39 points. Fellow Japanese skaters Ami Nakai (215.78) and Mone Chiba (202.23) earned silver and bronze. Daleman, a two-time Olympian, fell from fourth after her short program to seventh following the free skate, finishing with 183.47 points. * Daleman opens up in 2018 about mental health struggle * Schizas takes back Canadian women's crown in 2025 The 28-year-old from Newmarket, Ont., competed in just her second international competition since missing three seasons with a back injury and two ankle surgeries. She returned this season with hopes of becoming the first Canadian woman to reach three Olympics in singles, but Madeline Schizas earned Canada's lone spot for February's Milan Cortina Games. Several Olympic-bound skaters, including Schizas, did not compete at Four Continents because of its close timing with the Games More Stories Like This The related links below are generated automatically based on the story you’ve just read. Loading... CBC Lite is a low-bandwidth website. To see what's new, check out our release notes. For high quality images, media, comments, and other additional features visit the full version of this story. We and select advertising partners use trackers to collect some of your data in order to enhance your experience and to deliver personalized content and advertising. If you are not comfortable with the use of this information, please review your device and browser privacy settings before continuing your visit. Learn more about Online Tracking and Privacy Choices. * Corrections and Clarifications * Terms of Use * Reuse & Permission * Privacy * Accessibility * Contact a Newsroom * Submit Feedback * Lite Help Centre * Jobs * RSS CBC Lite version: 1.8.10. ©2026 CBC/Radio-Canada. All rights reserved.