Popova and her family moved to Germany when she was seven.[1] She speaks German, Russian, English, and French.[2]
Career
Early years
Popova began skating in Moscow.[1] She was initially a singles skater and competed on the Nachwuchs and Jugend levels in Germany in 2006 and 2007.[3][4] She took up pair skating in 2009 and trained with coach Ingo Steuer in Germany.[5][6] She skated with Ilja Glebov and Sergei Karev but did not compete with either in any major event.[7]
Partnership with Massot
Popova and French skater Bruno Massot decided to team up in March 2011 and began serious training in June.[8] They trained mainly in Caen, France, with Jean-Francois Ballester.[1][5] In their first season together, they also trained about three weeks every three months with Ingo Steuer in Chemnitz, Germany.[6][9]
In 2013–14, Popova had a problem with the sole of one of her boots at the start of the season.[2] She and Massot placed eighth at their first Grand Prix assignment, the 2013 Cup of China. Popova then ceased training for six weeks due to a stress fracture in the third metatarsal bone of her left foot, causing the pair to withdraw from the 2013 Trophée Eric Bompard and French Championships.[2] Having resumed training in mid-December 2013, the pair elected to reduce the difficulty of some elements for the 2014 European Championships in January.[2] They finished 11th at Europeans in Budapest. On 21 January 2014, it was reported that Popova had not received French nationality in time and France's second spot would be transferred to Austria.[14] Popova/Massot finished 15th at the 2014 World Championships after placing 15th in both segments of the competition. After the competition, Massot left their partnership to skate with Aliona Savchenko.[15]
Partnership with Novoselov
After spending a week in mid-May 2014 helping Brian Joubert learn pair skating in Caen, Popova flew to Moscow in search of a new partner.[16] On July 16, 2014, she announced she would skate for France with Andrei Novoselov and said they planned to divide their training between Moscow, coached by Inna Utkina, and Paris, coached by Claude Péri.[15] However, Popova decided to retire from competitive figure skating on July 31, 2015.[17]