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== Retirement and life after the Olympics ==
== Retirement and life after the Olympics ==
She graduated from the [[Grodno]] Pedagogical Institute in 1977, and retired from gymnastics competition thereafter. She married Leonid Bortkevich, who was a member of a popular Belarusian folk band, [[Pesniary]]. The couple had a son, Richard, in 1979. In 1991, she emigrated to the United States. Korbut and Bortkevich divorced in 2000. She married Alex Voinich in 2000, and they divorced in 2007. Korbut now lives in Scottsdale, AZ
She graduated from the [[Grodno]] Pedagogical Institute in 1977, and retired from gymnastics competition thereafter. She married Leonid Bortkevich, who was a member of a popular Belarusian folk band, [[Pesniary]]. The couple had a son, Richard, in 1979. In 1991, she emigrated to the United States. Korbut and Bortkevich divorced in 2000. Korbut now lives in Scottsdale, AZ.

In 2002 Korbut was charged with shoplifting, for which she paid a fine and completed a diversion program in lieu of prosecution.<ref name="Olga Korbut Arrested for Shoplifting">[http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,623747,00.html Olga Korbut Arrested for Shoplifting.]</ref> She was also investigated after $30,000 in counterfeit money was found in an abandoned house that she once owned, and whose last occupant was her son.<ref name="30 Years of Hard Falls for Olga Korbut">[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE2D6123CF933A25751C0A9649C8B63&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/S/Shoplifting 30 Years of Hard Falls for Olga Korbut].</ref>


== The legacy ==
== The legacy ==

Revision as of 02:10, 14 January 2010

Olga Korbut
Country represented Soviet Union
DisciplineWomen's artistic gymnastics
Eponymous skillsKorbut Flip

Olga Valentinovna Korbut ([Вольга Валянцінаўна Корбут, Volha Valancinaŭna Korbut] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help); Russian: Ольга Валентиновна Корбут) (b. May 16, 1955 in Hrodna), also known as the Sparrow from Minsk, is a Belarusian, Soviet-born gymnast who won four gold medals and two silver medals at the Summer Olympics, in which she competed in 1972 and 1976 for the USSR team.

Early life

Korbut, who started training at age 8, entered a Belarusian sports school headed by coach Renald Knysh at age 11. There, Korbut's first trainer was Elena Volchetskaya (an Olympian), but she was moved to Knysh's group a year later. With him, she learned a difficult backward somersault on the balance beam.

She ended fifth at her first competition in the 1969 USSR championships. The next year, she won a gold medal in the vault. Due to illness and injury, she was unable to compete in many of the tournaments prior to the 1972 Olympics.

The Olympics

Olga Korbut during 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich on 1996 Azerbaijani stamp.

At the 1972 Olympics, her acrobatics and open display of emotion—notably, she wiped tears from her face after a disastrous uneven bars routine—in contrast to the stereotypically cold eastern bloc athlete, captivated the Munich audiences. There she became one of the first persons ever to do a backward somersault on the balance beam in competition. She was also the first to do standing backward somersault on bars, and a back somersault to swingdown (Korbut Flip) on beam. Her bars move is no longer seen in high level gymnastics, but the tuck back and Korbut Flip are still very popular (2003 world beam champion Fan Ye performed both in her routine). This excellence in technical skills overthrew the sport's traditional emphasis on artistry.

During the Olympics, Korbut was one of the favourites for the all-around after her dynamic performance in the team competition; however, she missed her mount on bars three times and the title went to her teammate Ludmilla Tourischeva. Notwithstanding, Korbut won three gold medals for the balance beam, floor exercise and team. She also earned a silver medal in the uneven bars. Korbut's first attempt at her uneven bars routine was marred by several mistakes which all but ended her chances of winning a gold medal in the all around. The next day Korbut repeated the same routine in the event finals, although this time successfully. After the boards displayed a score of 9.8, the audience began to whistle, jeer, stamp their feet, and shout vulgar remarks at the judges in disapproval, believing her score to be too low. However, the judges refused to change her score. A similar display of audience disapproval occurred thirty-two years later at the 2004 Athens Olympics, this time involving Russian gymnast Alexei Nemov's score; however, after 15 minutes of audience protest his score was slightly adjusted.

Korbut is most famous for her uneven bars and balance beam routines. Her Olympic achievement earned her ABC's Wide World of Sports title: Athlete of the Year. In 1973, she won the Russian and World Student (i.e., University) Games, and a silver medal in the all-around at the European Championships.

The Soviet coaches and officials had designated Olga as the woman who could beat the Romanian prodigy, Nadia Comaneci, in the 1976 Summer Olympics at Montreal, but Olga was injured and her performances in the games were under-par. She was overshadowed not only by Comaneci, but also by her own teammate Nellie Kim. She did collect a team gold medal, and an individual silver medal for the balance beam.

Retirement and life after the Olympics

She graduated from the Grodno Pedagogical Institute in 1977, and retired from gymnastics competition thereafter. She married Leonid Bortkevich, who was a member of a popular Belarusian folk band, Pesniary. The couple had a son, Richard, in 1979. In 1991, she emigrated to the United States. Korbut and Bortkevich divorced in 2000. Korbut now lives in Scottsdale, AZ.

The legacy

Korbut is a highly decorated athlete with four Olympic gold medals to her credit, but it is not this feat for which she is most remembered. The media whirl which surrounded her 1972 Olympic debut caused a surge of young girls to join their local gymnastic clubs, and a sport which had seldom been noticed previously now made headlines. In addition to greatly publicizing gymnastics worldwide, she also contributed to a marked change in the tenor of the sport itself. Prior to 1972, the athletes were generally older and the focus was on elegance rather than acrobatics. In the decade after Korbut's Olympic debut, the emphasis was reversed.

In 1988 Korbut was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[1]

References

  1. ^ "OLGA KORBUT". International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 12, 2007.

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