Almudena Cid Tostado

Almudena Cid

Cid in 2008
Personal information
Full name Almudena Cid Tostado
Country represented  Spain
Born (1980-06-15) June 15, 1980
Vitoria, Spain
Height 167 cm (5 ft 6 in)
Discipline Rhythmic gymnastics
Years on national team 1994~2008
Club Beti Aurrera
Assistant coach(es) Anna Baranova
Former coach(es) Iratxe Aurrekoetxea
Eponymous skills Cid Tostado Element (ball)
Retired 2008

Almudena Cid Tostado (born 15 June 1980 in Vitoria, País Vasco, Spain) is a former Spanish individual rhythmic gymnast who competed on the Spanish national team.

She has been the only rhythmic gymnast who has competed in four Olympic Finals.

She became the first Spanish gymnast in history to have competed in two Olympic finals, Atlanta and Sydney, and she is the only rhythmic gymnast to make the finals at four consecutive Olympic Games: Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008

She also won the gold medal in the XVth Mediterranean Games Almería 2005 and she has been awarded many other national and international recognitions; among others, the gold medal in the Royal Order of Sports Merit in 2009, which is a Spanish civil Order of Merit intended to recognise yearly activities in the fields of sport and physical education.    

In June 2001, the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique announced that Almudena's "body-apparatus relationship" with the ball was approved by the Rhythmic Gymnastics Technical Committee. As the code describes the Cid Tostado element:

Starting position: on one knee, leg forward, ball held with the foot. large roll of the ball on both legs. Originality 0.10 (§ 2.6.5.)

After a 21 year long career, she retired from the sport on 23 August 2008. Currently, she is working as a sports commentator for rhythmic gymnastics competitions. Since 2014, she has also been writing Olympia, a children’s collection of stories in which she talks about her sporting life.

Early life and training

Cid in the 'Kiss n Cry Area' at the 2003 European Championships

She started practising rhythmic gymnastics at the age of 7. She first went to Arabatxo club and then to Beti Aurrera club in Vitoria, in which other important gymnasts such as Tania Lamarca and Estíbaliz Martínez were trained. Her coaches there were Aurora Fernández del Valle and Iratxe Aurrekoetxea. One of Almudena’s first sports references, as she named them because she doesn't like to call them idols, was the Russian gymnast Oksana Kóstina.

In May 1994, at the age of 13, she took part in the first international competition, in which she received three medals (one gold medal and two bronze medals). In November of the same year, she was asked by Emilia Boneva to start being part of the Spanish national individual team in Madrid, where she trained an average of 8 hours a day in the gym Gimnasio Moscardó.

At the 1995 Spanish Individual Championships, Almudena took the lead at a national level for the first time. In June 1995 she got the 12th position at the Final European Cup in Telford (England).

Senior career

Since she started her sporting career, she has been awarded many recognitions, apart from the ones obtained at the Olympics Games.

1996

In 1996, she went to her first Olympics Games in Atlanta, where she participated for the individual team, along with her colleague Alba Caride. She achieved the fifth position in the preliminary round and the ninth position in the semi-final. Finally, she got the ninth position in the Olympics final, being the youngest participant in the competition.

2000

Due to her good marks at the European Championship in Zaragoza, she was selected in order to represent Spain at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Again she got the ninth position.

In her home town, Vitoria, she met her former trainer Iratxe, who motivated Almudena’s sporting life. They both moved to Barcelona and started working again together.

2004

In 2004, the Spanish Gymnastics Federation decided that Almudena Cid and Jennifer Colino had to compete against each other in order to choose who would represent Spain at  the 2004 Athens Olympics. The competition was at a very high level - nearly at Olympic level - causing mental and physical weariness and increasing the risk of injury before the Olympics Games.[1] After obtaining the best marks, Almudena went to the 2004 Athens Olympics.

Almudena's worldwide debut in Viena (1995)
Almudena Cid and Jennifer Colino in a championship in Granada (2002)

In these Games she reached her third olympic final, something that any other rhythmic gymnastic had got until then. In the final, that took place on 29 August, she got the eighth position, along with the Olympic diploma.

2008

Once again, Almudena was selected to represent Spain at 2008 Beijing Olympics, her fourth and last Olympics Games.

Almudena doing the so-called Cid Tostado Element
Olympics Games Position Scores/Styles Total Score
1996 Atlanta Olympics 9th Rope 9.700

Clubs 9.683

Ball 9.566

Ribbon 9.566

38.515
2000 Sydney Olympics 9th Rope 9.750

Hoop 9.725

Ball 9.691

Ribbon 9.741

38.907
2004 Athens Olympics 8th Ribbon 23.425

Clubs 24.900

Ball 25.000

Hoop 25.125

98.450
2008 Beijing Olympics 8th Rope: 17.000

Hoop: 17.000

Clubs: 17.150

Ribbon: 16.950

68.100

Retirement

On 23 August 2008, she put an end to her sporting career. It coincided with the very last day of the Olympics finals in Beijing, in which she got the eighth position, along with the Olympic diploma.

Her last exercise was with ribbon, accompanied by an adaptation of “Nessun dorma”, which is an aria by Giacomo Puccini. As a final gesture as a gymnast, she drew the shape of a heart on the mat and she kissed it.

Some years later, Almudena explained in an interview about her retirement and legacy in the field of rhythmic gymnastics:

“It was hard to decide when to retire, but I chose the moment that I wanted [...]. I’ve been trying for 8 years to avoid the idea that I was already too old to practise this sport. At the age of 28, I managed to show the world that I could be on top [...]. If it’s a sport in which judges evaluates also your facial expressions and how you use the apparatus, because people tend to think that rhythmic gymnastics only have to do with flexibility, but the apparatus is also very important. It’s an art and it is something that comes along with maturity [...]. I didn’t really get what it was about, and I therefore wondered: why do rhythmic gymnasts retire so soon? Because it is the society that retires you from it. I fought against all that.”[2]

References

  1. País, Ediciones El (2004-03-15). "Reportaje | La gran batalla". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). Retrieved 2017-05-16.
  2. "Almudena Cid: "He peleado mucho y no quiero seguir peleándome con los mismos"". Mujerhoy. Retrieved 2017-05-16.
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