Skip to main content

Happy Birthday, Svetlana Khorkina!!


Her name is synonymous with the best gymnastics, the most extraordinary attitude.  Glamour and charisma were matched with an earthy ability to excel herself in the heat of competition.  A fierce personal ambition was balanced by her loyal friendship and - occasionally ferocious - support of those closest to her.  Svetlana Khorkina, the leading gymnast of her generation, turns 35 today (19 January). 

Khorkina's formative years were spent working in the Soviet system of gymnastics with the only coach she ever had in her life, Boris Pilkin.  They remained inseparable throughout her career.  Pilkin's genius was in finding a completely original approach to gymnastics that suited Sveta's style, personality and physique perfectly.  He took great care of her health and never forced her to progress too quickly.  His gentle personality made him the ideal foil to Svetlana's sometimes hot-tempered reactions, and it could be intriguing to watch the interactions between this mild-faced man and his fiery, temperamental charge.  Pilkin's philosophy was, 'gymnasts are the flowers, coaches are the roots'.  He lived his principles and never strove to steal the limelight. 

Later in life, the elderly Pilkin could not always be at his gymnast's side, as health concerns rendered it in advisable for him to travel to international competitions.  But Svetlana always remembered him first in any thanks she made after her many victories.  When Pilkin died in 2010, the day after the Russian women's team won its first team gold medal at the World Championships, Svetlana said, quite simply, 'I thank God that he gave me Pilkin'.

Her career spanned both the Gorbachov and Yeltsin eras, and she provided leadership and a role model for the sport at an uncertain time for both her home country and the international gymnastics community.  Ironically, had the Soviet Union prevailed, the great Russian might not have had the chance to persist for so long in her career such were the competitive exigences of that mega state.  The fragmentation of the Soviet team, however, meant that Russia had to develop its home talent and retain its champions.  Khorkina became what was then a relatively unusual phenomenon, a woman gymnast competing well into her twenties.  

When she retired in 2004 she left a gap that has still to be filled.  There is no great performer in gymnastics any more.  The technical and artistic flair of the best of Khorkina's work more than matched her charisma and made her unique.  Once seen, never forgotten, Khorkina became familiar to more than just the gymnastics afficianado.

Khorkina competed at three Olympic Games - 1996, 2000 and 2004.  She won medals in all three, including two golds - both on uneven bars - in 1996 and 2000.   She won silver all around in 2004, and might have won gold in the fiercely contested, but ultimately fluffed, all around final of the 2000 Olympics.  She won a total of nine World Championships gold medals, three of them in the all around and a remarkable five on uneven bars.  

She rewrote the uneven bars book of style and skill, as the first gymnast truly to exploit the opportunities for intricate and daring flight from low to high, and high to low bar.  Svetlana was an innovator on the vault, too, taking the gold medal on the apparatus in 2001, the year after an equipment fault on the apparatus had robbed her of her chances in the Olympic all around final.   She ruled in Europe for ten years from 1994 to 2004, taking a total of thirteen gold medals, including three in the all around.  At Olympic, World and European level she won an amazing 47 medals in all, winning awards on all four pieces of apparatus.  Her name appears in the Code of Points as the innovator of new moves on every piece.

Khorkina could be unpredictable, occasionally inconsistent, certainly capricious, but was furthermore assiduous, determined and long-lived.  She never let a defeat get her down for longer than a day and would always come back, shining new and ready to fight again.  She and her close team mate, Elena Produnova, were simply thrilling on floor in the team final of the Sydney 2000 Olympics, as they attempted to wrestle back the lead from the Romanians.  In the end, the judges left them .2 short of the lead, and silver was a bitter disappointment.  But Sveta wept for joy when she won the gold in the uneven bars, just a few days later,  theatrically kissing the apparatus that for so long had been her own private eyrie.  

Today, Khorkina remains close to Russian gymnastics as Vice President of the RGF.  She often appears at press and ceremonial events.  But she says she doesn't like the sport as much any more, citing 'too many bent legs' and a lack of artistry.  She has one son, Svyatoslav, born in July 2005, and lives in a Russia.  In December 2007 she was elected to the State Duma as a member of the political party 'United Russia', and in 2010 she became a member of the Patriarchal Council for Culture (the Orthodox Church).  

We all want to wish Svetlana a HAPPY BIRTHDAY!  Have a lovely day, Sveta.

See these videos

Svetlana on floor during the team final at the Sydney Olympics - http://youtu.be/w7GZP6G0p2o

2000 Europeans - beam - http://youtu.be/tOw3c4MY8I0

Vault at the 2001 World Championships - http://youtu.be/tucKIpFdWPA

Uneven bars - 1997 World Championships (Svetlana's first AA title) http://youtu.be/PeLNm3XBzqI



With thanks to the Russian Gymnastics Federation for information on Svetlana's career today.

Khorkina's statue at Belgorod State University - thanks to Niko


Niko tells me that there is an entire athletics complex named after her there, too.




Comments

  1. Happy Birthday to the gymnast that made me follow Russian gymnastics!

    ReplyDelete
  2. "too many bent knees," I concur! A wonderful article celebrating the career of a phenomenal gymnast, thanks Queen Elizabeth

    ReplyDelete
  3. My undisputed Bar worker of all times ... Happy Birthday

    ReplyDelete
  4. I remember the first time I saw Svetlana Khorkina at the 1995 World Championship in Sabae. I recently saw that beam routine again and I was even more impressed. It is so original, with a unique mount, acrobatic sequences, and dismount. We have not seen the like since.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Her legs were incredible. "Too many bent knees" - I agree too! Her form was so strong but elegant. She was such a joy to watch.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

What's going on in Russian gymnastics ... May 2026

All the latest people news from Russia!  With thanks to the gymnasts and coaches whose social media posts fuel this article. The teams from Russia are enjoying a recovery break in Antalya, Turkey, this week and last. Elizaveta Us took this selfie with Liudmilla Roschina, Milena Kaiumova, Anna Kalmykova, Viktoria Listunova, Alena Glotova ànd Zlata Osokina. Senior coach of the junior team, World and multiple Olympic Champion Aliya Mustafina is also with the team, and has her daughter with her. Meanwhile, in his home town of Ekaterinberg, David Belyavski is training every day to prepare for his national championships. He expects to compete on parallel bars and pommel, although he admits he doesn't really know ... it depends how his training goes. David is now 34 years old and a dedicated father to his daughter, Alyssa, 8. Alyssa too trains every day, as a tennis player, and has already taken part in her first tournament. David says that he wants her to understand that if she love...

Komova to begin recovery and training this year

  Doctors have given 2012 Olympian Viktoria Komova the all clear to begin light training and make a gradual recovery this year, reports her father, Alexander Komov. Viktoria missed last year's Olympics with severe back pain caused by a stress fracture in her vertebrae.  Komov emphasised that it is still early days, and they don't know if the pain levels will return as the workload increases - only time will tell.  But Viktoria has a clear intention to make her way back into training. Good luck to Vika!  Let's hope to see her competing in good health once more. Source -  http://tass.ru/sport/4028089

'It is a monstrous lie!' Pregnancy doping - Olga Karasyova speaks! (2001)

   Olga with her coach Sofia Muratova in 1971.  You can also see a video of Olga training with Sofia at  http://youtu.be/rDLY5Ctbe38  I wanted to record in English the key points of this 2001 interview with Olga.  Thanks to Maryam Vulis who gave me the link. Date of article - 7th March 2001 Author - Vladimir Golubev Link to Russian language source -  http://viperson.ru/articles/olimpiyskaya-chempionka-razoblachaet-dvoynika Olga invited me to visit her cozy one-bedroom apartment. I see family gymnastic albums, remember her youth, and gradually ask a few questions. - What a voluminous file of documents!  It shows how much time and effort had to be expended to get to court. Correspondence, lawyer requests, decisions, resolutions, agenda ... - Actually, this story began a long time ago.  Once, German broadcaster RTL screened an interview ... with my double!   A certain woman who said that she was Olympic champion in gymnastics, Olga Kovalenk...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more