Michal Březina was born on 30 March 1990 in Brno.[1] He is the son of Edita Březinová and Rudolf Březina, a figure skating coach.[2] His younger sister, Eliška Březinová, competes in ladies' single skating.[3][4] At the age of 18 he intended to study sports at university and eventually become a skating coach.[5]
On 19 May 2015, Brezina announced his engagement to his girlfriend, fellow figure skater Danielle Montalbano.[7] They were married on 10 June 2017, at the Royalton.
Career
Early years
Březina was initially interested in ice hockey after watching the 1998 Winter Olympics, but his father advised him to learn to skate first, and after a few months, he dropped hockey to focus on figure skating.[5]
Březina first landed a triple Salchow at the age of 12, and a triple Axel at 15.[5] In practice, he has worked on a quad toe loop and quad Salchow.[5] He trained in his hometown of Brno with coach Petr Starec and in Oberstdorf, Germany with Karel Fajfr.[8][9][10]
2007–2008 season
Březina won the 2007 Nebelhorn Trophy over compatriot and reigning champion, Tomáš Verner. Two weeks later, he won his first Junior Grand Prix medal, a silver, in Chemnitz. Březina placed sixteenth at his first European Championships. He missed training time because of a broken wrist but was able to compete at the World Junior Championships, where he was fifth.[11]
2008–2009 season
Březina won both his junior Grand Prix events but was forced to miss the Junior Grand Prix Final and the Czech national championships due to a right knee injury that required surgery.[12] He returned in time for the 2009 Europeans, where he finished tenth, and then set a new personal best at the 2009 Junior Worlds to win the silver medal behind Adam Rippon.
Březina was forced to withdraw from the 2010 Cup of China after undergoing surgery for a varicose vein in his abdomen.[3][14] He later withdrew from the 2010 Trophée Eric Bompard as well. He took silver behind Verner at the Czech Championships. At the 2011 European Championships, Březina placed second in the short program but dropped to eighth overall following the free skate. At the 2011 World Championships, he successfully landed two quads, a Salchow and a toe loop, in the long program – his first quads landed in competition – but fell on two jumps toward the end of the program. He finished fourth at the event for the second straight year.[15][16]
2011–2012 season
Březina experienced some boot problems during the off-season.[10] He trained mainly in Oberstdorf.[3] He began his season at 2011 Nebelhorn Trophy where he won the silver medal. Skaters who had placed in the top six at the 2011 Worlds were given a newly introduced option of competing at three Grand Prix events.[17] Březina elected to do so and was assigned to 2011 Skate America, 2011 Trophée Eric Bompard, and 2011 Cup of Russia.[10] At Skate America, he won the short program by 8.39 points and placed third in the free skate to win the gold medal overall. Březina won the bronze medal in France, which qualified him for the Grand Prix Final.[18] He then placed fourth in the Cup of Russia. He was sixth at the Grand Prix Final. At the 2012 World Championships, Březina picked up a small silver medal for the short program and finished sixth overall after the free skate. In April 2012, he changed coaches from Starec and Fajfr to Viktor Petrenko.[19][20] He trained at the Ice House in Hackensack, New Jersey.[21]
2012–2013 season
Březina finished sixth at 2012 Skate America and won the bronze medal at the 2012 Rostelecom Cup. He withdrew from the Czech Championships due to a fever.[22] He dislocated his shoulder during practice on 21 January at the 2013 European Championships but went on to win bronze, his first European medal.[23]
2013–2014 season
In February 2014, Březina placed tenth at the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.[12] His next event was the 2014 World Championships in Saitama, Japan. He withdrew after the short program on 26 March, having pulled ligaments in his right ankle on the triple flip take-off.[24] His ankle was immediately put into a cast, and he recovered in two weeks.[25] Due to the high cost of training in the United States,[25] he decided in June 2014 to rejoin Karel Fajfr in Oberstdorf.[26]
His first event of the season was the 2015 Lombardia Trophy, which was not a Challenger event for that particular season. Following a sixth-place finish at Nebelhorn, Brezina placed eighth and seventh at these two Grand Prix assignments, Skate Canada International and the NHK Trophy. He went on to place tenth at Europeans and ninth at Worlds.
In December 2016, he placed first in the short program at the Four Nationals; he withdrew after injuring his arm during the free skate.[28] He placed twelfth at Europeans.
Březina began the season with a silver medal at the 2018 U.S. International Classic, his first Challenger Series medal in four years. He followed that up with a silver medal at the 2018 Skate America event, his first Grand Prix medal since his bronze at Rostelecom four years earlier.[30] At his second Grand Prix event, the 2018 Grand Prix of Helsinki, he set new personal bests in the short program and overall score to win a second silver medal.
His results qualified him for the Grand Prix Final, only the second time in his career he had done so and the first time in seven years.[31] Březina placed fourth at the Final, finishing 8.23 points behind Cha Jun-hwan after doubling a jump in his short program and falling on a quad Salchow in the free skate.[32] At the European Championships he placed eighth in the short program and moved up to seventh overall after placing sixth in the free program.[33]
Finishing his season at the 2019 World Championships, Březina placed eighth in the short program.[34] He remained in eighth place following the free skate, despite a single fall on a triple flip attempt.[35]
2019–2020 season
Březina opted not to begin his season with a Challenger event, instead competing at the 2019 Shanghai Trophy, where he placed fourth. Returning to Skate America, he placed fifth in the short program despite jump errors.[36] After doubling numerous jumps in his free skate, he fell to eleventh place.[37] He was ninth at the 2019 Rostelecom Cup.
Competing at the 2020 European Championships, Březina placed first in the short program despite performing only a quad-double in his combination jump, winning a gold small medal. He said he was undecided about whether it would be his final competition.[38] He fell twice in the free skate on quad Salchow attempts, placing eleventh in that segment and falling to seventh place overall.[39] He was scheduled to compete at the 2020 World Championships in Montreal, but these were cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[40]
Březina opened his season with a win at the 2021 U.S. International Classic.[44] Following the results of the 2021 CS Nebelhorn Trophy, he was announced as part of the Czech Olympic team, this time alongside his sister Eliška.[45] Competing on the Grand Prix at the 2021 Skate America, he finished in sixth.[46] At the 2021 Rostelecom Cup, he finished in tenth place. Discussing his results afterward, he cited his work with a mental coach as having improved his mindset, noting, "I wish I would have worked with a mental coach when I was younger. Maybe my career would have looked different."[47]
At the 2022 European Championships, Březina had a poor short program and finished in fifteenth place in that segment. He was fifth in the free skate, rising to tenth place overall.[48]
Březina began the 2022 Winter Olympics as the Czech entry in the men's short program of the Olympic team event. He placed seventh in the segment, securing four points for the Czech team.[49] They ultimately did not advance to the second phase of the competition, finishing eighth.[50] In the individual event, he placed twenty-fifth in the short program, not advancing to the free program.[51] He announced his retirement shortly after the event.[52]