Belton native elected to Figure Skating Hall of Fame
December 4, 2025

Special to the Journal
Joseph L. Inman has been elected to the United States Figure Skating Hall of Fame, Class of 2026. Inman graduated from Belton High School in 1964, where he was voted its most outstanding student. After graduation, he left Belton to pursue a formal education in music, specifically a double major in piano and percussion. Music later became his profession as a member of the U.S. Army Band (retired) and a teacher in the Washington, DC area.
During college, Inman took up figure skating seriously, competing as a pair skater. After injury forced his retirement from competitive skating, he decided to judge, working his way up to become one of the most respected officials in the world of figure skating.
After the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic judging scandal, the International Olympic Committee requested that a new system of judging be developed to replace the 6.0 system. Inman was chosen as a member of a small ad hoc group of top figure skating experts charged with designing a system that would be more objective, fairer and less prone to bias.
Combining his expertise in music performance and theory with his elite level of knowledge and experience as an Olympic-level judge, Joseph Inman brought an unique perspective to evaluating artistry in a figure skating program more objectively.
In 2017, Inman was awarded the International Skating Union's Gold Award of Merit, the highest award that the international governing body can bestow on a judge. He is one of only 22 recipients ever to have been so honored.
With his election to the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame, Joseph Inman will now receive the United States Figure Skating Association's highest honor when he is inducted into the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame on January 9, 2026, at the National Championships in St. Louis, Missouri.









