Skip to main content

Why did Alexandrov leave Russia?

Alexander Alexandrov, courtesy of Sports Express


Alexander Alexandrov is not the first coach to leave Russia, and will not be the last.  Not too long ago, it was confirmed that over 320 coaches had already left the country to work overseas. There has been a subtle changing of the guard in Russian gymnastics coaching as a new generation of coaches has stepped up to replace the former Svengalis who shaped the sport during the 70s, 80s and much of the 90s.

Take a look at the list of coaches on the RGF website.  Very few of the 'old guard' Soviet Russian coaches survive.  Chief coach Andrei Rodionenko is one of remaining few, but his personal style has always been cool, managerial, and rather distant, somewhat atypical of his peers.  The new generation of coaches are generally set in his image.  We are saying a long goodbye to the charismatic paternalism, the sartorial individualism of the Soviet personal coaches.  In its place we have the cool professionalism and the smart, if gaudy, uniforms of the Russian management team as exemplified by the charming Evgeny Grebyonkin. 

Thinking about it, Alexander Alexandrov stuck out like a sore thumb under this regime.  The extrovert, fiery character, the spontaneous and direct interviews, the inspirational rhetoric and frank examination of his gymnasts' characters, all seemed somewhat at odds with the more reserved and controlled self-presentation of Andrei Rodionenko, so often invisible on the competition podium and in public life hidden behind the larger-than-life character of his wife.  Rodionenko's conservative approach is probably a matter of necessity given the realities of managing a sport so reliant on government moneys.  Today, this requires predictable outcomes and results in a sport that is anything but predictable.  But a conservative, predictable approach was not what made Soviet gymnastics great, nor did it take the Russian women to a team gold at the World Championships in 2010.  Winning gold means nothing less than complete commitment and a fearless passion to pursue what many will consider impossible.  Alexandrov brought these qualities to the Russian WAG team.  There are increasingly few of his ilk left in the sport.

Of course, we will probably never really know the full story behind Alexandrov's departure from Moscow; all we can do is gather evidence and consider viewpoints from those who might be in the know.  Elena Vaitsekhovskaya, whose interview with Alexandrov from last September was one of the best articles on this subject, has now published a short piece in Sports Express entitled : Why Did Alexandrov Leave Russia?  I cannot reach Lupita by email, so what follows is a partial summary based on my understanding of a rather difficult Google translate.  Those sections which appear word for word are indicated by inverted commas.

I cannot paint a picture of Alexandrov 'exclusively in pastel colours'.  Coaches at that level often have a difficult character, can be very self-centred.  As three-time Olympic champion Alexander Karelin said, it's not a priority to be nice if you want to win.
She suspects that Alexandrov was brought to the team in 2009 because it was essential to gain results, at whatever cost.  The irony is - now the team have those results, the people who put him in that position want a piece of the glory, and are jealous of the 'upstart', the newcomer who was so indifferent to the opinions of others, and occasionally rude.  After the Games in London, it was no secret that the Rodionenkos wanted to get rid of Alexandrov.
There had been speculation during the European Championships that the relationship between Mustafina and Alexandrov had broken down, but the extent of the speculation had been exagerated.  Fargat Mustafin had mentioned to her that he would not be completely surprised if his daughter wanted to finish with gymnastics.  She had overheard a conversation between Aliya and a young coach, discussing Aliya's need to travel to Penza to spend several days with her partner, around his birthday.
If Aliya competed in any other sport, it would be perfectly OK for her to take the post-Olympic year off, in order to recover.  But gymnastics does not allow for such luxury.  Alexandrov knew he could not demand the same energy from Mustafina in this post-Olympic year, and perhaps he lost a little interest, which might explain the distance that had developed between the two of them.  
But even if Mustafina finishes, her career is far from a tragedy - having recovered from a career-threatening injury to win an Olympic gold medal, having been World Champion, having won four Olympic medals.  And 'by the way', the gymnast still considers Alexandrov to be her main coach.

Comments

  1. It is strange that Rodionenko-what's his face wants to be cool and distant. It's the exact opposite of how the majority the Russians are, especially in sport. Bellu is known for his cool and diplomatic attitude but in the same time he understands and talks to the gymnast( my mother used to be his student in the 80s and she told me that he has a great knowledge of human behavior and he is a great psychologist), which I'm sorry to tell, Mr R. wasn't so understand his gymnasts. They(RGF) asked for results and Alexandrov gave them the 1st world title in 2010 and their 1st olympic gold medal in 12 years, I don't get it why the Russian coaches complained about this.
    Aliya is truly a good gymnast, but not great( Milosovici, Khorkina, Szabo, Shushunova are great). And let's remember Aliya achieved all her titles under Alexandrov's leadership. I get that Aliya has a challenging charecter(who hasn't ?) and Alexandrov gave her the space she needed, but I guess the old man had enough. That's why their relationship faded away. It is not nice to work with somebody that doesn't want to listen to you, even if it's in their best interest.
    It's truly a great loss for the Russians to lose somebody like Alexandrov because how I see it, only the ones from the old school are able to achieve something nowadays. Like Bellu and Bitang. Before they came beack we were gone, and since our 2012 European title we are back in the game. If it hadn't been for them the Romanian gymnastics would have been dead by now.
    This WC will be Russia's biggest test without Alexandrov, because if our gymnastic disappears I want the Russians to be on top and not the Americans. Because this sport is aleardy going down down down.

    Good luck with bolg Elizabeth. You are doing a wonderful job! :*

    ReplyDelete
  2. I disagree somewhat with the analysis of The Queen. No one has been more bombastic and ego-driven than one Valentina Rodionenko, at whose feet this disgraceful coup lies.

    As Svetlana Boguinskaia stated in her recent interview, this was a matter of sheer jealousy. That motivation is not an example of modern "cool professionalism" but a throwback to Soviet-era pettiness. On might - perhaps - understand demoting Alexandrov from head coach to personal Aliya's coach for the next quad for the sake of team unity, but to then make it impossible for him to coach even her by changing workout schedules and withholding resources from her training, makes clear that this was a vendetta, not a need to shift coaching styles.

    Alexandrov is known as a very technical coach. Valentina is little more than a self-appointed Commissar, with no actual coaching or experience in the sport, but thirsty for power and attention. Which style is truly forward looking, and which backward?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, I do agree with much of what you have to say ... the interview with Boguinskaia gives some hard information that definitely points in this direction and all the evidence points to this.

      I have the feeling though that there will be more discussion in due course.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

We are satisfied - Aliya Mustafina

Photo credit: RGF An Allsport interview today with Aliya Mustafina : http://www.allsportinfo.ru/index.php?id=83075 'I think that we are to be congratulated on this bronze medal, we are more satisfied than frustrated', said Aliya Mustafina. 'We were a new team, all the girls are young, and it's their first time in such a serious competition.  I think today we performed to the best of our ability.  Yes, we have had two falls today - on the uneven bars and balance beam.' 'The young girls failed  psychologically, but  the first time you compete on the senior podium - it's not very easy.  No  one is sad.  I  am very pleased with such a performance.  Everything  was fair enough, maybe not everywhere and in all things, but overall it was quite as expected, both our rivals, and the judging.' 'I began to experience more pain in the ankle - continued Aliya Mustafina. - To do the dismounts I had to muster all my strength and clench my teeth.  The coaches have d

Simone and the others - results and reflections

In the end, it was as predicted : Simone and the others, with Simone's teammate, Alexandra Raisman, providing the back up.  I do not need to point out that, by definition, the Americans are scoring significantly higher marks than the rest of the field.  Congratulations to them! Aliya Mustafina finished in third place.  The 2012 bronze medalist led the competition after vault and uneven bars, but had a very nervous outing on beam that might have taken a less experienced gymnast out of the medals.  A bravura performance on floor brought Aliya back though to confirm her third place all around.  From her senior debut in 2010 to today, Mustafina has continuously set high standards of grace.    It is the first time since 2000 that a gymnast (Amanar) has medalled in the all around at two consecutive Olympics, and  if Aliya can medal on Saturday's uneven bars final, she will once again be Russia's biggest medal winner of the women's gymnastics.  Russia's second gymnast, Sed

Russia defend team silver medal in Rio

It was an emotional performance and an emotional reaction at the end - but Russia is now second in the world in both MAG and WAG! The team did well, exploiting its strengths on bars and vault, and holding its own on beam.  Seda Tutkhalyan really showed her maturity and mettle with an almost perfect showing on beam and a solid, if not faultless, display on floor.  Maria Paseka did her best ever Amanar vault.  Aliya Mustafina ... was Mustafina.  Taking her fifth Olympic medal here, she scored over 60 in the AA.   The best work did come from the 2012 veterans, although Seda on beam and Daria on bars do have that special mark of Russian innovation and skill.  Angelina Melnikova looked perhaps a little overwhelmed at times - though I personally love her emotion - but this was only her first Olympics and I am certain she will be back for more.  Should she have had her personal coach on the floor with her?  It might have given her more assurance.  Is that hamstring still troubling her?  Why d

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more