Fraser and Jones made their debut in the Canadian Figure Skating Championships in 1974, reaching fourth place that year. The same year, the pair also won silver medals at the Grand Prix de Patinage Artistique in France, and the Nebelhorn Trophy in Germany.[4]
They have won a number of medals competing as professionals, including Gold medals at the World Professional Figure Skating Championships held in Jaca, Spain in 1977, 1978 and 1979.[6] They also won the International Professional Ice Skating Championships held at Madison Square Garden, New York in 1982,[7] which they also won the following year.[8]
As professionals, they invented a unique move, the no-hand death spiral, during which the man acting as the pivot releases his handhold on the female partner while she continues to spiral on her own in a backbend position, the man then jumps over her while she was doing the spiral.[4] Candy Jones discovered this move when she was demonstrating to another pair how to do a pivot; the boy slipped and lost his grip, and she realized that she could do the spiral on her own, after which Fraser and Jones incorporated it into their performances.[4][9]
Fraser and Jones were part of the 1977 Broadway production and the 1978 television broadcast of Toller Cranston's The Ice Show.[10][11]
Personal life
He married Candace and they have two sons, Jesse and Mat. He coached for a time after his skating career finished. He had a woodworking and furniture business.[1] He worked in real estate before giving up the job to stay at home after his wife qualified and worked as a doctor, first in Kingston, Ontario, before moving to Colchester, Vermont.[12]