Anastasiia Gontar
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Native name | Анастасия Владиславовна Гонтарь | |||||||||||||||||
Full name | Anastasiia Vladislavovna Gontar | |||||||||||||||||
Nationality | Russian | |||||||||||||||||
Born | [1] Surgut, KhMAO, Russia[2] | May 11, 2001|||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Swimming | |||||||||||||||||
Classifications | S9 | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
|
Anastasiia Vladislavovna Gontar (Russian: Анастасия Владиславовна Гонтарь; born 11 May 2001) is a Russian para swimmer. She won gold in the 2020 Summer Paralympics.[3]
Early life
[edit]Anastasiia Gontar was born in Surgut. Her mother, a Master of Sports in swimming, brought her to the pool after Anastasiia tried singing and gymnastics.[4] She started swimming at the age of five in the sports school Olimp.[2] When she was 10 years old her parents detected a curvature of her spine, and two years later she was diagnosed with an idiopathic 2nd grade scoliosis. After several months the disease progressed to a 4th, critical grade in which she developed a hump, which she hid wearing clothes two or three sizes larger than her size. The curved spine pressed her right lung and her kidney, which led to breathing difficulties; twenty minutes walking gave her severe back pain.[5]
Gontar's parents tried numerous kinds of therapy for her. They pursued physiotherapy, electrophoresis, manual and laser therapy, hydro massage, putting her in a corset, and even consulted quacks and witch doctors in the hope to heal her. She finally underwent surgery in a children's hospital in Moscow. The doctors corrected her spine, mounting two plates and 18 screws. After years she still feels pain in her neck, head, rump and feet, but she is able to swim, among other activities. Apart from swimming, Gontar regularly attends classical massage, medical gymnastics, acupuncture and vacuum massage sessions.[5]
In 2016 she won six medals at the National Paralympics Championships in Bashkortostan, and a year later she entered the national Paralympic team.[5]
Personal life
[edit]Gontar studies in the medical institute of the Surgut State University, and plans to become a physician. Her first and current coach is Sergey Nikolayevich Gramatikopolo, who was the only one in the sports school who agreed to coach Gontar after surgery. About eighteen months after the surgery, she was sent to the Adaptive Sports Center in Surgut, where she was coached by adaptive sports specialist Natalia Afanevich.[4][5]
References
[edit]- ^ Плавание 1
- ^ a b "Анастасия Гонтарь завоевала золотую медаль Паралимпиады в Токио в плавании на 50 м кролем" [Anastasiia Gontar won gold at the Tokio Paralympics in 50 m freestyle]. ТАСС (in Russian).
- ^ Tindall (now), David; Kemp, Emma; Lemon (earlier), Geoff; Lemon, Geoff (25 August 2021). "Tokyo 2020 Paralympics day one: swimming, cycling, wheelchair rugby and more – as it happened" – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ a b "Непотопляемая. Как жить с тяжелой болезнью и не отступить от олимпийской мечты, знает Анастасия Гонтарь" [Unsinkable. Anastasiia Gontar knows how to live with a serious illness and further her Olympic dream]. ugra-news.ru (in Russian).
- ^ a b c d Galikhanova, Elvira. "Как сургутянка Анастасия Гонтарь победила тяжелую болезнь и стала именитым спортсменом и медиком" [How the Surgutian Anastasiia Gontar killed a serious disease and became a notable athlete and physician]. Новости Сургута — СИА-ПРЕСС – siapress.ru (in Russian).
- 2001 births
- Living people
- Paralympic swimmers for Russia
- Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Paralympics
- Medalists at the 2020 Summer Paralympics
- Paralympic gold medalists for the Russian Paralympic Committee athletes
- Paralympic silver medalists for the Russian Paralympic Committee athletes
- Russian female freestyle swimmers
- S9-classified para swimmers
- Sportspeople from Surgut
- 21st-century Russian sportswomen