Oksana Chusovitina
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Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Artistic Gymnastics | |||
Summer Olympics | |||
Gold | 1992 Barcelona | Team competition | |
World Championships | |||
Gold | 1991 Indianapolis | Team competition | |
Gold | 1991 Indianapolis | Floor Exercise | |
Gold | 2003 Anaheim | Vault | |
Silver | 1991 Indianapolis | Vault | |
Silver | 2001 Ghent | Vault | |
Silver | 2005 Melbourne | Vault | |
Bronze | 1992 Paris | Vault | |
Bronze | 1993 Birmingham | Vault | |
Bronze | 2002 Debrecen | Vault | |
Bronze | 2006 Aarhus | Vault | |
European Championships | |||
Bronze | 2007 Amsterdam | Vault | |
Gold | 2008 Clermont-Ferrand | Vault | |
Asian Games | |||
Silver | 2002 Busan | All-around | |
Bronze | 1994 Hiroshima | Vault | |
Bronze | 1994 Hiroshima | Uneven bars |
Oksana Aleksandrovna Chusovitina (Russian:Оксана Александровна Чусовитина; born June 19, 1975 in Bukhara, Uzbek SSR, USSR) is an Olympic medalist and World Champion gymnast who has competed for Germany since 2006. She was formerly a citizen of, and a competitor for, the Soviet Union (before 1993) and Uzbekistan (1993-2006).
To date, Chusovitina's career in elite gymnastics has spanned almost twenty years. She won the USSR Junior Nationals in 1988 and began competing at the senior international level in 1989, before many of her current rivals were even born. She is the only female gymnast ever to compete in four Olympic Games, and has also competed in ten World Championships, three Asian Games and three Goodwill Games. In addition, Chusovitina holds the record for the most individual World Championships medals on a single event (8, on the vault). She is also one of only a handful of women, along with Cuban Leyanet Gonzalez and Soviet legend Larissa Latynina, to return to high-level gymnastics and international competition after becoming a mother. Chusovitina is remarkable in her ability to remain competitive for so many years, often in the face of great adversity, and has been cited as a role model and an inspiration by many of her peers in the gymnastics community.[1]
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[edit] Soviet Union
Chusovitina began gymnastics in 1982.[2] In 1988, at the age of 13, she won the all-around title at the USSR National Championships in the junior division.[3]
By 1990 Chusovitina was a vital member of the Soviet team, and was sent to compete in various international meets. She was the vault gold medalist at the 1990 Goodwill Games and nearly swept the 1990 World Sports Fair in Japan, winning the all-around and every event except the uneven bars. The following year she won the floor exercise gold at the 1991 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships and placed second on the vault. In 1992 Chusovitina competed at the Olympics with the Unified Team, shared in the team gold medal and placed seventh in the floor final. She also won her second World Championships vault medal, a bronze.[4]
[edit] Uzbekistan 1993-2006
After the 1992 Olympics, when the former Soviet gymnasts returned to their home republics, Chusovitina began competing for Uzbekistan and training with UZB head coach Svetlana Kuznetsova. Conditions at the national training facility in Tashkent were a far cry from the Soviet Round Lake training center, and Chusovitina was forced to practice on antiquated, and in some cases, unsafe equipment. In spite of this setback, she was able to consistently produce world-class routines.[5]
Chusovitina represented Uzbekistan from 1993 to 2006 and competed for them at the 1996, 2000 and 2004 Olympics, the 1994, 1998 and 2002 Asian Games and the 1994 and 2001 Goodwill Games. During this era she was the strongest gymnast on the Uzbekistan national team, earning over 70 medals in international competitions and qualifying to the Olympics three times.[6]
For her contributions to gymnastics, Chusovitina was granted the title of "Honored Athlete of the Republic of Uzbekistan" by the Uzbekistan Ministry of Cultural and Sports Affairs.[7] In 2001, she was named as the first WAG representative to the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG)'s Athletes' Commission.[8] In addition, Chusovitina graduated from the Sports University in Tashkent.[9]
In late 1997 Chusovitina married Uzbekistani Olympic wrestler Bakhodir Kurpanov. The couple originally met at the 1994 Asian Games in Hiroshima, where they were both competing.[10] The couple's son, Alisher, was born in November 1999.[11]
[edit] Move to Germany
In 2002, Alisher was diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL).[12] Seeking advanced medical treatment for their son, Chusovitina and her husband accepted an offer of help from Shanna and Peter Brüggemann, head coaches of the Toyota Cologne club, and moved to Germany.[13] With prize money earned from gymnastics competitions, along with the help of the Brüggemanns and members of the international gymnastics community who fundraised and donated to the cause, Chusovitina was able to secure treatment for Alisher at the University of Cologne's hospital.[14][15][16] While Alisher underwent treatment in Cologne, Chusovitina trained with the German team.
Uzbekistan released Chusovitina to compete for Germany in 2003. However, due to rules requiring three years of residency, she was unable to gain German citizenship immediately. From 2003 to 2006 she trained in Germany but continued to compete for Uzbekistan, representing them at the 2003 and 2005 World Championships and the 2004 Olympics. In 2003, thirteen years after her World Championships debut, Chusovitina won the gold medal on the vault at that year's World Championships in Anaheim.[17]
In 2006, Chusovitina obtained German citizenship.[18] Her first competition for Germany was the 2006 World Championships, where she won a bronze medal on the vault and placed ninth in the all-around.[19]
[edit] Current status
As of 2008, Chusovitina is still active on the international competition circuit. In July 2007, she won the all-around title at the 2007 German National Championships.[20] At her first European Championships, she placed second on the vault.[21] At the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart, Chusovitina helped the German squad to a 10th place finish in the preliminary round, which qualified them to send a full team to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.[22]. She qualified for the vault event final, finishing in 6th place after falling on her first vault.[23]
Chusovitina competed on three events at the 2008 Women's European Championships in Clermont-Ferrand, France, helping the German team to a 7th place finish in the team finals. In the vault event final, she defeated reigning European champion Carlotta Giovannini to win the gold medal.[24]
[edit] Skills
- Floor Exercise: Chusovitina is credited as being the first woman to successfully perform a layout-full out on floor.[25] Her music for floor routines has included:
- 1991: "William Tell Overture (Overture de Guillaume Tell)" from William Tell (opera) by Gioacchino Rossini
- 1992: "Triumphal March" from Spartacus by Aram Khachaturyan
- 1994: "In the Hall of the Mountain King" from Peer Gynt by Edvard Grieg
- Vault: Chusovitina is renowned as a vault specialist. She is the only top female vaulter in the world who does not perform Yurchenko style vaults. Instead, she competes only front entry and Tsukahara-family vaults. She currently performs the handspring laid-out Rudi (which is named after her in the Code of Points) and a Tsukahara with 3/2 twist.
- Uneven bars: Chusovitina is also credited with her own release move in the Code of Points, a hop-full pirouette.[26]
[edit] References
- ^ "Love for her son drives Olympic medallist on" Linda Pearce, The Age, November 22 2005
- ^ "In our Spotlight: Oksana Chusovitina" International Gymnast, February 2001
- ^ Biography at gymn-forum
- ^ Biography at gymn-forum
- ^ Report on the Tashkent gym from Team UZB
- ^ Biography at gymn-forum
- ^ "Our Stars" Ministry of Cultural and Sports Affairs of the Republic of Uzbekistan
- ^ "IG Online interview: Oksana Chusovitina" International Gymnast, 2001
- ^ "For petite gymnast, burly wrestler it was a match made at the games" Associated Press, October 6 2002
- ^ "For petite gymnast, burly wrestler it was a match made at the games" Associated Press, October 6 2002
- ^ "In our Spotlight: Oksana Chusovitina" International Gymnast, February 2001.
- ^ "German women, Chusovitina, tune up in Utah" International Gymnast, July 31 2003
- ^ "Kleine Frau, großes Herz" Markus Wessel, WDR.DE, January 31, 2007
- ^ "Gymnastics community rallies to help sick child" International Gymnast October 26, 2002
- ^ "Oxana Chusovitina spurred on by son's illness" Reuters, October 2002
- ^ "Love for her son drives Olympic medallist on" Linda Pearce, The Age, November 22 2005
- ^ "German Women, Chusovitina Tune Up in Utah"International Gymnast, July 31 2003
- ^ "Kleine Frau, großes Herz" Markus Wessel, WDR.DE, January 31, 2007
- ^ "Uzbekistan veteran Chusovitina to compete for Gemany" Xinhua/People's Daily Online, October 15 2006
- ^ "Chusovitina, Hambüchen Win German Nationals" International Gymnast, July 22 2007
- ^ "Chusovitina springt unglücklich an Gold vorbei"Sport.de, 2007
- ^ "Top Ten of the Day"Paul Ziert, International Gymnast, September 1 2007
- ^ Official results of vault event final, September 8 2007
- ^ Romanians Lead European Championships Qualification (International Gymnast Magazine) Retrieved 2008-04-06
- ^ Biography and list of results at gymn-forum
- ^ Breakdown of the pre-2005 Code on the uneven bars at shanfan.com
[edit] External links
- Oxana Chusovitina at the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique profile page
- List of competitive results
1928: Netherlands • 1936: Germany • 1948: Czechoslovakia • 1952: Soviet Union • 1956: Soviet Union • 1960: Soviet Union • 1964: Soviet Union • 1968: Soviet Union • 1972: Soviet Union • 1976: Soviet Union • 1980: Soviet Union • 1984: Romania • 1988: Soviet Union • 1992: Unified Team • 1996: United States • 2000: Romania • 2004: Romania |
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