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Béla Károlyi

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Béla Károlyi
Béla Károlyi, gymnastics coach at the Visa Championships held in the American Airlines Center, Dallas on August 15th, 2009.
Born (1942-09-13) September 13, 1942 (age 81)
Alma materRomania College of Physical Education [1]
Occupationgymnastic coach
Known forRomanian centralized gymnastics training system and coach to world champions
SpouseMárta Károlyi

Béla Károlyi (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈbeːlɒ ˈkaːroji]; born September 13, 1942) is a Romanian gymnastics coach of Hungarian ethnicity.

He was born in what was then Kolozsvár, Hungary [3], a region later restored to Romanian administration and name of Cluj-Napoca, Romania.[3][4]

Károlyi and his wife, Márta, also of Hungarian origin, emigrated to the United States in 1981 and both have dual citizenships for Romania and the United States. The Károlyis have coached both Romanian and United States Olympic teams to medal-winning success.

Among the gymnasts Béla and Márta Károlyi have trained are Nadia Comăneci, Mary Lou Retton, Betty Okino, Kerri Strug, Teodora Ungureanu, Kim Zmeskal, Kristie Phillips and Dominique Moceanu. In total, Károlyi has coached nine Olympic champions, fifteen world champions, sixteen European medalists and six U.S. national champions.

Early coaching career

Béla Károlyi was originally a national junior boxing champion and a member of the Romanian hammer throwing team. His wife Márta was involved in gymnastics.[5]

After competing in the 1956 Olympics in the hammer throw, he enrolled at the Romania College of Physical Education, studying and practicing gymnastics after having had trouble with a mandatory skills test in the sport.[1]

In his senior year at the college, he coached the women's gymnastics team, whose star was Márta Eross. They married in 1963, then moved to a small town in the coal-mining region where Bela had grown up.[1]

In their elementary school, they started a gymnastics class. They were later invited to create a national school for gymnastics.[1]

Károlyi pioneered the Romanian centralized gymnastics training system in Romania in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He worked as a coach at the boarding school in Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej (now renamed Oneşti), training young girls especially chosen for their athletic potential. One of the first students at the school was six-year-old Nadia Comăneci, who lived near the town and commuted from home.[6]

Károlyi debuted as an international coach in 1974. He had to persuade the Romanian gymnastics federation to have Comăneci and his other athletes named to the 1975 European Championships and the 1976 Olympic team, as the Federation favored athletes from the competing Dinamo club in Bucharest.[6] At the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, he was Head Coach of the Romanian squad, and most of the members of the team were Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej athletes. The team took the silver medal and Comăneci was one of the outstanding performers of the Games, scoring the first-ever perfect 10 in Olympic competition. Altogether the Romanians won seven medals in Montreal: three gold, two silver and two bronze.

Following Comăneci's astounding success in Montreal, Károlyi's importance as a coach was recognized. He was named Head Coach of the Romanian team at the 1980 Olympics. Károlyi came under fire from Romanian officials due to his score protests at several international meets, including the 1980 Olympics.[6] After the Olympics, Károlyi again clashed with Romanian Federation officials, and tension escalated. During a 1981 gymnastics tour, Béla, Márta, and Romanian team choreographer Géza Pozsár defected and sought political asylum in the United States. They settled in Oklahoma.[6][7][8]

1980s

In 1981, a group of businessmen invited Károlyi to join a gymnastics business venture. He decided to invest in the business and the Károlyis relocated to Houston. The gym ran into financial problems, and Károlyi ended up buying the gym.[7]

Károlyi's status as "Nadia's coach" quickly attracted gymnasts to his club. Only three years after his defection, Károlyi was back at the 1984 Olympics as the individual coach of all-around champion Mary Lou Retton and uneven bars gold medalist Julianne McNamara.[7] Károlyi's clout in America grew after 1984, and by the time of the 1988 Olympics, he was influential enough to be made head coach of the women's Olympic gymnastics team. When Károlyi's status as the 1988 Olympic coach was jeopardized by the fact that he had not yet fulfilled the five-year residency requirement to become a U.S. citizen, two U.S. senators sponsored a special bill to waive the waiting period and grant him early citizenship.[8] Károlyi was also the personal coach of three athletes on the squad: balance beam bronze medalist Phoebe Mills, the only female U.S. gymnast to medal in Seoul; Chelle Stack and Brandy Johnson.[7]

After the 1988 Olympics, Károlyi's sphere of influence continued to grow, as did the number of elites training in his gym. At one meet in 1990, a journalist dubbed six top Károlyi gymnasts the "Karolyi six-pack."[9] Although the members of the six-pack would change, the name stuck and increased Károlyi's prominence in the sport.

1990s

At the 1991 World Championships, four of the six athletes on the U.S. women's team—Kim Zmeskal, Betty Okino, Hilary Grivich and Kerri Strug—were trained by Károlyi; the other two, Shannon Miller and Michelle Campi, were trained by ex-Károlyi club coaches. The situation was almost repeated at the 1992 Olympics, where Károlyi was head coach and five members of the seven-gymnast squad (six competitors; one alternate) were either trained by him or one of his protégés.

Károlyi mostly acted as a personal coach for his athletes Dominique Moceanu and Kerri Strug at the 1996 Olympics, but still managed to draw the spotlight. After Strug was injured during the U.S. team's final rotation on vault, Károlyi carried her to the podium to accept her gold medal. The moment was photographed and widely distributed, and became what was arguably among the most enduring memories of the 1996 Olympics.[10]

Károlyi retired from coaching after the 1996 Olympics. He and Márta still have a ranch and gymnastics camp in New Waverly, Texas.[7] The following year, in 1997, Béla Károlyi was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[11]

1999–2000

Following the success of the "Magnificent Seven" at the 1996 Olympics, USA Gymnastics experienced a lull. A new age limit kept some of their top gymnasts out of the World Championships in 1997. While American gymnasts did medal in international competitions such as the Goodwill Games and the Pacific Alliance, they were largely unsuccessful in most major meets. In both 1997 and 1999, the American team left the World Championships without a single medal.

After the 1999 World Championships, USA Gymnastics attempted to revamp their program by hiring Károlyi to serve as National Team Coordinator. Károlyi required that all national team members attend frequent grueling camps at his Huntsville, Texas gymnastics ranch, north of Houston, and selection procedures for international meets became more arbitrary. Coaches resented what they felt was Károlyi's intrusion onto their domain; athletes were under a considerable amount of stress. At the 2000 Olympics, where the U.S. team placed fourth and once again came away without a single medal, the tension had escalated to the point where gymnasts were openly speaking out against Károlyi.[12][13][14] (On April 28, 2010, the International Olympic Committee stripped China of their team medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympics after it was discovered one of their gymnasts was underage and the 2000 U.S. Team was awarded the bronze medal.)

In 2001, the National Team Coordinator position was handed over to Károlyi's wife, Marta. While Marta has retained some aspects of Béla's program, such as the training camp system, she has reduced the frequency of the camps. Her approach appears to be different, and generally more acceptable to both coaches and gymnasts. It has also yielded impressive competitive results: between 2001 and 2007, American women won a combined total of 34 medals in World Championship and Olympic competition, including two team titles, the 2004 Olympic and 2008 Olympic all-around, eight individual event World Championships titles, and the 2005 and 2007 World Championships all-around.

Later career

Károlyi's wife, Marta, remains the National Team Coordinator for USA Gymnastics. During the 2008 Summer Olympics, Béla Károlyi appeared as a guest commentator for NBC News. During the games, he said that the 2008 Chinese women's gymnastics team cheated by using athletes who did not meet the minimum age requirements.[15] He and his wife stated that "They are using half-people. One of the biggest frustrations is, what arrogance. These people think we are stupid."[16] Károlyi does disagree with the age limit, however, and has stated that the solution would be for the IOC to abolish it completely, stating that if a gymnast is good enough to earn a spot on the team at the Olympics or world championships, that athlete deserves to go.[13] Károlyi has praised the Chinese for their competitiveness and skills during the competitions, and says that his issue is not with the athletes, but with the fact that they may be being used. "They do good gymnastics and are a good service for the sport," he said. "They have the ultimate effective training program. That’s why I am more upset that they are cheating. They don’t need cheating. They would be just as good with a lineup of eligible athletes."[15]

Károlyi also claimed that the vault of Cheng Fei of China was a major judging error and a "rip off".[16]

Controversy

Several of Károlyi's athletes from the six-pack era were critical of his training methods. Some of his former athletes, including Kristie Phillips, Dominique Moceanu, and Erica Stokes, have stated publicly that Károlyi was verbally and psychologically abusive during workouts. Károlyi's constant critical remarks about weight and body type were said to drive some gymnasts to develop eating disorders and low self-esteem.[17] Some gymnasts, such as Phillips, Moceanu, and 1988 Olympian Chelle Stack, have noted that they were also compelled to continue training and competing even when coping with serious injuries such as broken bones.[17] In one interview, Moceanu, who was one of Károlyi's final protégés, noted: "I'm sure Bela saw injuries, but if you were injured, Bela didn't want to see it...You had to deal with it. I was intimidated. He looked down on me. He was 6-feet something, and I was 4-foot nothing."[18]

Károlyi was also said to strictly monitor his gymnasts' food intake: Moceanu, for instance, stated that at meets away from home, gymnasts were limited to consuming as few as 900 calories a day.[19] Even Károlyi's supporters have admitted that at certain competitions, his gymnasts ate so sparingly that members of the men's gymnastics team smuggled food to them in their hotel rooms.[17]

However, many of Károlyi's most prominent gymnasts have vehemently defended him against these allegations. Nadia Comăneci, in her memoir Letters to a Young Gymnast, remarked that she literally trusted Károlyi with her life. She also stated that in Romania, the gymnasts at Károlyi's school consumed well-balanced diets and, in fact, ate better than most of the other civilians in the country at the time.[6] Olympic medalists and Károlyi gymnasts Mary Lou Retton,[20] Phoebe Mills and Kim Zmeskal, among others, have also praised Károlyi and his training regimen.[17][21]

A number of former Károlyi gymnasts, both supporters and detractors, have admitted that some of the allegations about Károlyi were true, but have also claimed that the ends—medals—justified the means. In Joan Ryan's Little Girls in Pretty Boxes, 1992 Olympian Betty Okino stated, "What Béla did worked. He motivated me by getting me mad." Some have claimed that Károlyi stopped treating gymnasts harshly when he was directly requested to do so by parents.[17] In a column she wrote refuting many of the claims of Little Girls in Pretty Boxes, Okino wrote, "Karolyi structured his training in a way that built your physical and mental strength to such a remarkable level, that even he couldn't tear you down. Bela wanted to know that when push came to shove, his athletes could handle any situation thrown at them."[22]

In the December 8, 2007 edition of the Romanian newspaper Evenimentul Zilei there is an interview with Adrian Goreac [1], the coach of the Romanian National Gymnastics team from 1981 to 1990. He became coach after the Karolyis left, and he talks about the latter's "dictatorial regime" during his time coaching the Romanian gymnastics team.

In November 2008, Emilia Eberle—a former Romanian national team member during the Karolyi coaching era—gave an interview to KCRA-TV claiming that while she was a Romanian national team gymnast, both Bela and Márta Károlyi regularly beat her and her teammates for mistakes they made in practice or competition. "In one word, I can say it was brutal," she told KCRA.[23] Other Romanian team members, including Ecaterina Szabo and Rodica Dunca, as well as Geza Pozsar, the Romanian team choreographer who defected with Karolyi, have made similar charges of physical abuse.[24]

Books

  • Károlyi, Béla and Nancy Ann Richardson. Feel No Fear: The Power, Passion, and Politics of a Life in Gymnastics. ISBN 0-7868-6012-X (hardback), ISBN 0-7868-8020-1 (paperback)

Television

Béla Károlyi was in the episode "At the Edge of the Worlds", in the ABC Family show Make It or Break It. He portrayed Coach Sasha Belov's father.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Latimer, Clay, "Karolyis' Olympics rise is gym dandy: Husband-and-wife team have shaped gymnastics in U.S.", Rocky Mountain News, August 3, 2008
  2. ^ Garcia, Marlen, "Karolyis build haven for American gymnasts", USA Today, February 20, 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Restoration - Northern Transylvania: 1940". Central European University.
  4. ^ Cf. Northern Transylvania and Cluj-Napoca articles for precise history and further citations
  5. ^ Rendell, Matt, "The Perfect Ten", The Observer (UK), Saturday 3 July 2004
  6. ^ a b c d e Comaneci, Nadia. Letters to a Young Gymnast. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-01276-0
  7. ^ a b c d e Béla Karolyi's bio at USA Gymnastics
  8. ^ a b Thomas, Robert McG. Jr and Michael Janofsky. "Citizen Karolyi" The New York Times, March 10, 1987.
  9. ^ "Whatever happened to Amy Scherr?" Gymnastics Greats, July 11, 2000
  10. ^ Weinberg, Rick. "Kerri Strug fights off pain, helps U.S. win gold" ESPN.
  11. ^ "Bela Karolyi". International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 12, 2007.
  12. ^ Mariotti, Jay. "Bela-aching tough to stomach" Chicago Sun-Times, 20 September 2000
  13. ^ Shelton, Gary. "Time to bid Bela goodbye" St. Petersburg Times, 20 September 2000.
  14. ^ Roberts, Selena."U.S. Gymnasts Try to Catch Karolyi's Eye" The New York Times, 19 August 2000.
  15. ^ a b Bela Karolyi incensed about underage rules
  16. ^ a b New York Times Olympic Coverage August 20, 2008
  17. ^ a b c d e Ryan, Joan (1995). Little Girls in Pretty Boxes. Garden City: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-47790-1.
  18. ^ Reid, Scott M. "Gymnasts in pain: Out of balance" O.C. Register December 19, 2004
  19. ^ Reid, Scott M. "Emphasis on thin is a heavy burden" O.C. Register, December 20, 2004
  20. ^ Béla Karolyi 2007 Interview with Mary Lou Retton on Sidewalks Entertainment
  21. ^ Okino, Betty. "Betty Okino's Olympic Report: Bela Karolyi" Sports Hollywood, 2000
  22. ^ Okino, Betty. "The Balanced View: Betty Okino", SportsHollywood.com, 2000.
  23. ^ "Gymnast Says trainer Karolyi beat her up". [UPI]. 2008-11-19. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
  24. ^ Simon Burnton (December 14, 2011). "50 stunning Olympic moments No5: Nadia Comaneci scores a perfect 10". The Guardian.

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