Majorov was born on 19 July 1991 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.[2] When he was an infant, his family began spending half a year in Sweden and half in Russia,[3] settling in Luleå when he was six years old.[4] His father, Alexander senior, is a figure skating coach,[5] who was the first coach of Alexei Yagudin.[6] His mother, Irina Majorova, runs a dance and ballet school in Luleå.[7] He has a younger brother, Nikolaj, who also competes in figure skating.[8]
Majorov holds dual Swedish and Russian citizenship and speaks both languages.[6] He has a degree in physiotherapy.[9] He is a bone marrow donor for his father, who was diagnosed with severe MDS in June 2015 and acute leukaemia a few months later.[10]
Career
Majorov began competing on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series in 2005. He made his senior international debut at the 2007 Golden Spin of Zagreb, placing 11th, but continued competing also on the junior level.
In 2010–11, Majorov won his first JGP medal, bronze, at the JGP in Ostrava. He also won two senior events, the Ice Challenge in Graz and the 2010 NRW Trophy. In March 2011, he won the bronze medal at the World Junior Championships. It was Sweden's first ISU Championships medal in 74 years.[6] Majorov had back problems in 2011.[11]
In the 2015–16 season, Majorov placed 8th at the 2015 CS Finlandia Trophy and won silver medals at two events – the International Cup of Nice and Volvo Open Cup. To prepare for his father's treatment, one bag of blood was drawn from the skater a week before the Volvo Open Cup and another a week before the 2015 Rostelecom Cup, from which he withdrew.[10] He withdrew from the Swedish Championships to recover after an operation to extract bone marrow for his father.[10] Majorov won gold at the Nordics Open in February 2016. His withdrawal from the 2016 World Championships in Boston followed the detection of a precursor to a stress fracture of the pelvis.[12]
In the 2016–17 season, Majorov competed at the Rostelecom Cup. He had a nosebleed during his free skate and made several errors on his jumps, and he placed last in the men's field.[13] A few weeks later, he won gold at the Warsaw Cup, and he also won the NRW Trophy. In January, he again placed 11th at the European Championships; shortly after, he competed at the 2017 Winter Universiade, where he won the bronze medal and set a new personal best.[14] At the 2017 World Championships, he ended in 23rd place.