Top pairs' teams Tatiana Volosozhar / Maxim Trankov and Yuko Kavaguti / Alexander Smirnov appealed to the president of the Russian Figure Skating Federation, Alexander Gorshkov, to release them on medical grounds from participating in the championship, which is part of the selection process for the European and World Championships. Gorshkov said the pairs had earned their berths by virtue of their strong Grand Prix results and granted their exemptions from the Russian Championships.[4]Nikolai Morozov, the coach of Grand Prix Final bronze medalist Alena Leonova, said she had also already earned her place in the team and could have missed the event but she chose to compete.[5]
Evgeni Plushenko placed first in the men's short program, with Artur Gachinski and Zhan Bush in second and third respectively.[6] Plushenko won his ninth national title.[7] Gachinski won silver and Voronov climbed from fifth after the short to take the bronze medal.[8][9][10]
Adelina Sotnikova won the ladies' short program, Ksenia Makarova was second, and Yulia Lipnitskaya third.[11] Sotnikova won her third national title, Lipnitskaya won silver, and Leonova took bronze.[9][10][12] In the free skate, Lipnitskaya earned the highest TES (technical elements score), followed by 12-year-olds Radionova and Medvedeva,[13] who were ineligible for junior international competitions.
Ekaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev placed first in the short dance, with Elena Ilinykh / Nikita Katsalapov and Ekaterina Riazanova / Ilia Tkachenko in second and third respectively.[16] Bobrova / Soloviev won their second national title, Ilinykh / Katsalapov won silver, and Riazanova / Tkachenko held on for the bronze although Pushkash / Guerreiro were third in the free dance.[10][17] Riazanova was injured a couple of weeks before the event; she sustained a concussion and a broken nose when her partner accidentally elbowed her in practice.[9][17]
The team to the European Championships was named on December 28, 2011.[18] The World Championships team was announced on February 23, 2012, but only two ladies were confirmed,[19] with the third lady (Makarova) confirmed on March 14.[20]
Vasilisa Davankova / Andrei Deputat won the junior pairs' title while Ekaterina Petaikina / Maxim Kurdyukov were the silver medalists and Kamilla Gainetdinova / Ivan Bich the bronze medalists.[26] Deputat was released by Ukraine to skate for Russia at the World Junior Championships, along with the other medalists.[27][30] In the free skate, Gainetdinova/Bich successfully landed side-by-side (sbs) triple lutzes, receiving 6.70 points for the element, and also included a sbs triple loop, double axel sequence, receiving 5.99 points due to some negative grades of execution.[26]