Yelena Shushunova
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Olympic medal record | |||
Women's gymnastics | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gold | 1988 Seoul | Team competition | |
Gold | 1988 Seoul | All-around | |
Silver | 1988 Seoul | Balance beam | |
Bronze | 1988 Seoul | Uneven bars | |
World Championships | |||
Gold | 1985 Montreal | All-around | |
Gold | 1985 Montreal | Team | |
Gold | 1985 Montreal | Vault | |
Gold | 1987 Rotterdam | Vault | |
Gold | 1987 Rotterdam | Floor Exercise | |
Silver | 1985 Montreal | Floor exercise | |
Silver | 1987 Rotterdam | Team | |
Silver | 1987 Rotterdam | All-around | |
Silver | 1987 Rotterdam | Balance beam | |
Bronze | 1985 Montreal | Balance beam | |
Bronze | 1987 Rotterdam | Uneven bars | |
European Championships | |||
Gold | 1985 Helsinki | All-around | |
Gold | 1985 Helsinki | Vault | |
Gold | 1985 Helsinki | Uneven bars | |
Gold | 1985 Helsinki | Floor exercise | |
Gold | 1987 Moscow | Vault | |
Bronze | 1985 Helsinki | Balance beam | |
Bronze | 1987 Moscow | All-around |
Yelena Lvovna Shushunova (Russian: Елена Львовна Шушунова) (born April 23, 1969, in Leningrad) is a Russian (former Soviet) gymnast, World, European, and Olympic Champion. Shushunova is renowned for her dynamic vaulting and tumbling skills as well as her longevity and exceptional consistency. Shushunova was the first to perform several unique and difficult skills including a Yurchenko vault with 1.5 twists, a release on the unevens, and her signature Shushunova on floor exercise.
Shushunova's career highlights as a junior gymnast include gold medals at the 1982 Moscow News (now known as Moscow Stars of the World) and the Junior European Championships. In 1983 she won the USSR Cup, which she won every year until 1988 with the exception of 1984. Shushunova was unable to compete at the 1984 Summer Olympics, which were boycotted by the Soviet Union. Instead, she competed at the 1984 Friendship Games in Olomouc, Czechoslovakia, where she finished third all around and helped the USSR to a gold in the team event, which they dominated.
The following year she made her breakthrough by winning the all around title at the European Championships. She also won the three gold medals in the event finals on vault, floor exercise, and uneven bars which she shared with East German Olympian Maxi Gnauck. At the World Championships she won five medals including the all-around title, which she shared with compatriot Oksana Omelianchik. She took first on vault, third on beam, and second on floor to her teammate Oksana Omelianchik. In her floor exercise set to the Charleston she tumbled a double layout, and side Arabian 1 and 3/4 salto, both rare skills for women at that time. In fact women are no longer allowed to compete saltos which end in a roll. Here she displayed her signature skill, a straddle jump to prone support, rare and innovative for the 80s but fairly common for recent gymnastics exercises. Neither Shushunova nor Omelianhchik actually qualified to the all around as their teammates Irina Baraksanova and Alternate Games Champion Olga Mostepanova earned higher preliminary scores. However considering their recent successes at the European Championships, the Soviet coaches guessed that they were the two best hopes for a world title.
Shushunova's dominance in women's gymnastics continued at the 1986 World Cup in Beijing. There she won the all around, vault, uneven bars, and floor exercise titles. In this competition she displayed an increased level of difficulty on two apparatus, showing a Rulfova flic (full twisting Korbut flic) on balance beam and a tucked full in double salto dismount on the uneven bars.
1987 showcased the growing rivalry between the Soviet Shushunova and Romanian Daniela Silivaş. In Moscow, Shushunova was not in peak form and she lost the European title to Silivaş, suffering a costly fall on a double layout dismount from the unevens. At the Europeans she earned a bronze in the all around and a gold on vault, a low medal count for her standards. She continued to show increased difficulty on all apparatus by competing a double layout dismount on the unevens, a layout Thomas salto on floor, and a full in dismount on beam. Later that year her team lost the World Championships team title, placing second to the champion Romanians in an upset defeat. This was only the third time the USSR failed to win the team title. Elena also lost the world title to the graceful Romanian Aurelia Dobre, finishing in second place. In the event finals Elena did provide them with one taste of gold, retaining her vault title with her textbook Yurchenko full and Yurchenko 1.5, beating Romanian Eugenia Golea who showcased a Yurchenko double full. She also earned a bronze medal on uneven bars, debuting a unique and difficult skill, a giant with a half turn to a Markelov (commonly called a full twisting Tkatchev). She also won the world title on floor exericse sharing the title with Daniela Silivaş, with both gymnasts earning a perfect combined score of 20.
Next year Elena was a leading contender for the all-around title at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. After defeating the Romanians in the team competition there was a close battle for the title between Shushunova and Daniela Silivaş (Romania). Shushunova entered the all around competition with a lead of 0.05 points, competing with Silivaş in the same rotation. What followed was a closely matched and exciting battle with both gymnasts fully aware that any error could cost them the gold. Each was majestic, and the pair scored multiple tens. In the last rotation on vault, Silivas performed first and did well enough to ensure that Elena required a ten to take the title, which she did to become Olympic all-around champion. In the finals she won only two more medals; a bronze on uneven bars and a silver on balance beam. The tally could have been higher, but Elena faltered on her two strongest apparatus, falling on a Yurchenko double full and making an uncharacteristic stumble on floor exercise.
Shushunova retired after the Olympics and currently lives in her hometown of Saint Petersburg, site of the 1998 European Championships which she helped to organize. In 2004 she was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ YELENA SHUSHUNOVA. International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. Retrieved on May 12, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Elena Shushunova at the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique profile page
- List of competitive results at Gymn Forum
- (Russian) Biography
- Whatever Happened to Elena Shushunova?
- Schuschunova element on the floor (3rd one in the sequence) - animated .gif
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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