Skip to main content

Happy Birthday, Svetlana Khorkina!

Svetlana celebrated her 34th birthday yesterday.

Performing here on beam in 1992, she wears the leotard of the Soviet national team well before she became famous as a Russian diva.

Khorkina had eight skills named after her - two vaults, two beam and one floor element, and three innovations on her particular genius, bars. She shared her career with coach Boris Pilkin (1928-2010) who was the architect of Khorkina's special style of gymnastics, at once powerful and lissom. It was always an intriguing partnership: the fiery blond gymnast, sometimes arrogant, sometimes vulnerable; alongside her elderly, white haired coach, quiet, gentle, a man of few words but whose mind must have been full of gymnastics.





Khorkina went on to win nine gold medals at World Championships, including three all around titles. She competed at three Olympics: 1996, 2000, and 2004, winning gold twice, on uneven bars, in 1996 and 2000. Her best result on beam was gold at the European Championships in Paris in 2000. Notoriously unpredictable, her longevity ensured that her talents were recognised and recorded.

It could be argued that on beam, Khorkina's talent shone brightest - those endless, long lines, the languid nature of movement that disguised the power, the fluidity of the routine. In 1992, in this video, Khorkina was still a junior gymnast moving up the ranks. But her nascent talent is there for all to see.

Comments

  1. Happy Birthday to her. She is my favourite Russian Gymnast. Her attitude is what really showed her to me. Plus I loved seeing her on Uneven bars.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Happy birthday Svetlana Khorkina, Best Wishes and a Happy New Year

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Anna Pavlova interview - YOU ask the questions

Anna with her team mate Maria Nekrasova today.   Maria competed in this spring's Russia Cup and will join Anna on the Azerbaijan national gymnastics team.  Picture courtesy of the Azerbaijan Gymnastics Federation on Facebook. As Anna prepares to compete at this week's Voronin Cup, representing Azerbaijan for the first time, RRG, in collaboration with Anna's authorised website Anna Pavlova Online, would like to invite readers to submit their questions for an interview with Anna.  What have you always wanted to ask one of Russia's best gymnasts of the last decade? Each reader may submit up to three questions.  We will collate and if necessary edit the questions and Anna will answer the ones she finds most interesting.  Please add your questions as comments to this blog, or you may email them to me at rewriterussiagym@btinternet.com.  We hope to publish the final interview on both websites by Christmas. Many of you must dream of having a conversation with Anna...

30 years in elite sport: Oksana Chusovitina

You've been competing internationally for over 30 years. How has gymnastics changed over that time? Is there anything about your sport that has remained the same for decades? First of all, the age has changed. More mature athletes are competing now, which makes me happy. Secondly, the apparatuses. They've become more comfortable and sophisticated. Gymnastics in general has become more challenging, but in my youth, people performed mostly the same elements as they do now. Back then, this was par for the course, but now it surprises many. It's a bit amusing. Has the nature of the training itself changed? For me personally, absolutely. Now, my life isn't just about my athletic career. I'm involved with the Oksana Chusovitina Academy, which was personally opened by the President of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev. It has 155 students, both girls and boys. I used to train three times a day, but now I train once. The entire afternoon is taken up with the academy and organi...

Olga Mostepanova - from beautiful daydream to World Champion

Young Olga in her white leotard and orange hair bows, at her first international competition in Wembley, 1980 I had only been in the Olympiski Stadium, Moscow, for a few moments when it happened: I found myself surrounded by a little army of tiny children, excitedly chattering away in Russian, a language I don't speak.   I strained my ears and heard the names : Aliya, Nastia, Ksenia; I was swept along by this blizzard of pigtails, giggles and pretty eyes; and suddenly I lost myself, and started looking for Olga Mostepanova amongst them.  She might have been there, but (now in her forties) it is more likely that she was hard at work in her own gym, helping a young gymnast learn how to do a walkover on beam. Mostepanova was always like that, even as a child: her gymnastics appeared like a beautiful daydream, but the reality was infinitely more prosaic.  The exquisite plasticity that made her a Champion, the beautiful line for which she is famous, were the product ...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more