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Daniela Silivaş

  • ️Tue May 09 1972
Daniela Silivaş
Full name Viorica Daniela Silivaş-Harper
Nickname(s) Dana
Country represented  Romania
Born May 9, 1972 (age 39)
Deva, Romania
Discipline Women's artistic gymnastics
Level Senior International
Years on national team 5 (1985-1989) (senior)
Gym Deva National Training Center
Head coach(es) Adrian Goreac
Eponymous skills Silivaş mount (balance beam) Silivaş (floor)
Retired 1991

Medal record

Olympic Games
Gold 1988 Seoul Uneven Bars
Gold 1988 Seoul Balance Beam
Gold 1988 Seoul Floor
Silver 1988 Seoul Team
Silver 1988 Seoul All-Around
Bronze 1988 Seoul Vault
World Championships
Gold 1989 Stuttgart Uneven Bars
Gold 1989 Stuttgart Balance Beam
Gold 1989 Stuttgart Floor
Gold 1987 Rotterdam Team
Gold 1987 Rotterdam Uneven Bars
Gold 1987 Rotterdam Floor
Gold 1985 Montreal Balance Beam
Silver 1989 Stuttgart Team
Silver 1985 Montreal Team
Bronze 1987 Rotterdam All-Around
European Championships
Gold 1989 Brussels Floor
Gold 1987 Moscow All-Around
Gold 1987 Moscow Uneven Bars
Gold 1987 Moscow Balance Beam
Gold 1987 Moscow Floor
Silver 1989 Brussels All-Around
Silver 1989 Brussels Uneven Bars
Silver 1987 Moscow Vault
Bronze 1989 Brussels Balance Beam
Bronze 1985 Helsinki Floor

Viorica Daniela Silivaş-Harper (Romanian pronunciation: [daniˈela siliˈvaʃ]; born May 9, 1972), best known as Daniela Silivaş, is a Romanian gymnast who is most famous for winning six medals (three gold, two silver, and one bronze) in women's artistic gymnastics at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, Korea. In her five year tenure as a member of the Romanian senior national team, Silivaş earned six individual World Championships titles as well the 1987 European Championships all-around title. She was the only gymnast, male or female, to medal in every single event at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, where she earned 7 perfect 10.0 scores. In 1989, Silivaş's training was hampered by the closure of the Deva National Training Center during the Romanian Revolution and further impeded by a knee injury. She formally retired in 1991 and moved to the United States, where she currently enjoys a career as a gymnastics coach. In 2002 she was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame[1].

Early life and career

Daniela Silivaş was born in Deva, Transylvania, on May 9, 1972. She began gymnastics at age 6 and was coached by the legendary Béla Károlyi for six months before his defection in 1981. Silivaş won her school's championships in 1980, and in 1981 and 1982, was the Romanian Junior National Champion. She continued to compete in various junior meets through 1984, enjoying a particularly strong showing at the 1984 Junior European Championships, where she won the balance beam title, earned silver medals on the uneven bars and floor exercise, and placed 4th in the all-around. The 1984 Junior Friendship Tournament (Druzhba) was another especially successful meet for Silivaş: she won gold medals in the all-around and uneven bars over a strong field that included future Olympic and World champions Svetlana Boguinskaya, Aurelia Dobre and Dagmar Kersten, among others.[2][3]

Senior Career

Age Controversy

However, Silivaş did not linger for long in the junior ranks. In 1985, the Romanian Gymnastics Federation changed her birth year from 1972 to 1970 to make her age eligible for the World Championships in Montreal. The falsification was suspected by some, but was never fully verified until Silivaş herself revealed it in 2002. She stated that she was never consulted about the matter: officials simply gave her a new passport, called her attention to the birth date, and informed her that she was now fifteen.[4][5][6]

1985-1987

Although she was only thirteen at the 1985 Worlds, Silivaş scored a perfect 10 en route to capturing the World balance beam title; defeating the reigning Olympic Champion, her fellow countrywoman, Ecaterina Szabo, in the process. She finished behind reigning co-World Champion Yelena Shushunova in the individual all-around at the 1986 World Cup and quickly established herself as the leader of the Romanian gymnastics team.[6][7] Silivaş's greatest triumph took place at the 1987 European Gymnastics Championships in Moscow, where she won the individual all-around, uneven bars, balance beam and floor exercise titles in addition to taking a silver medal on the vault. At the time, every single dominant nation in women's gymnastics was located in Europe; winning the European title over the deep field of powerful Soviet, East German and Bulgarian gymnasts marked a major victory.[2]

At the 1987 World Championships in Rotterdam, Silivaş helped the Romanian squad win the team title, defeating the nearly invincible world champion Soviet team for the first time since 1979. She was a favorite for the all-around title, but, hampered by low scores carried over from the team optionals, where she had stepped off the balance beam, as well as a shaky uneven bars routine in the all-around, she only managed to win the bronze medal behind teammate Aurelia Dobre and 1985 World Champion Shushunova. In the event finals, Silivaş did win two gold medals, on the uneven bars and the floor.[7]

1988 Olympics

At the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, Silivaş, along with Dobre and Shushunova, was considered a heavy favorite for the all-around title.[8] In the team competition, Romania finished second to the Soviet squad.

The stage was set for the all-around, with a hotly anticipated battle between Silivaş, the technician and dancer; and Shushunova, the powerhouse and tumbler. Both gymnasts turned in especially strong performances. Both Silivaş and Shushunova received perfect 10.0 scores on floor; Shushunova received her second 10.0 on vault; Silivaş received hers on the uneven bars. Silivaş was in the lead entering the final rotation, but a score of 9.950 on the vault dropped her to second place behind Shushunova by only 0.025.[9]

The all-around duel between Silivaş and Shushunova is widely acknowledged to have been one of the finest contests in the history of the sport, not to mention most hotly debated. In particular, Silivaş' score on vault came under scrutiny. Of the six judges on the panel, three marked her first vault as a perfect 10.0; two others gave her 9.9s. The Soviet judge on the panel Nellie Kim, however, only scored Silivaş at a 9.8. On her second vault attempt Silivaş took a hop on her landing; all six judges gave her 9.9s. Silivaş was visibly upset after Shushunova's scores were posted and at the medal ceremony; according to a report in International Gymnast, her comment on the competition was "after my last vault, I thought maybe I should be the champion."[9] However, she did not argue the results publicly. Her former coach, Bela Károlyi, noted, "This kid had the honesty and decency to shut up. She didn’t want to say ‘I’m better’ because she knows Shushunova is the Olympic champion but she couldn’t praise a rival. So she just didn’t say a word. These kids have more decency than all the judges and coaches in the world."[10]

In spite of the controversy, no score protests were ever filed by Silivaş, her coaches or her Federation, and no disciplinary measures were taken against any of the judges. In addition, even though Kim's first mark was considered questionable by many fans, it did not actually figure into Silivaş' final score: in 1988, the highest and lowest marks of the panel were dropped; the final score was the average of the remaining four marks. Also, in spite of her vault score, Silivaş' cumulative overall all-around total was actually higher than that of Shushunova: if the competition had been held under the New Life rule, she would have won.[11]

Silivaş returned in the event finals to win gold medals on the uneven bars, floor and beam, well as bronze in the vault behind Soviet Svetlana Boguinskaya (gold) and teammate Gabriela Potorac (silver). In the process, she became the only gymnast in Seoul to win medals on every single event in all three competitions (team, all-around and event finals). She also equaled Nadia Comăneci's record of seven perfect 10.0 scores in a single Olympic competition.[12]

Post Olympic Games and retirement

Despite being plagued with a serious knee injury in 1989, Silivaş was able to successfully defend her floor exercise title at the European Championships and won three additional medals. In the all-around, she placed second to Svetlana Boguinskaya. Still injured, she went to the Worlds in Stuttgart where she placed 12th in the all-around after falling from the balance beam. Undaunted, she returned in event finals to capture three more gold medals on the bars, beam and floor.[7]After several more competitions in 1989, Silivaş underwent surgery on her knee and intended to return to the gym to train. The Romanian Revolution of 1989 closed the National Training Center at Deva, putting an early end to her career.

Life after gymnastics

Silivaş formally retired from gymnastics in 1991 and moved to the United States, settling in Atlanta, Georgia.[13] In 2002, Silivaş was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame; she still holds the record as the youngest gymnast ever to receive this honor.[14]

Silivaş works full-time as a gymnastics coach in Sandy Springs, Georgia. In May 2003, she married Scott Harper, a sports management graduate living in the Atlanta area. The couple have three children: two sons, Jadan Scott, born April 8, 2004 and Rylan Bryce Harper, born October 2009; and a daughter, Ava Luciana, born November 8, 2005. The Harpers reside in Marietta, Georgia[2][15]

Skills

The hallmarks of Silivaş' gymnastics were her impeccable form and execution, difficulty and expressive dance. Many of the skills she performed in the 1988 Olympics still carry high difficulty ratings in the 2007 Code of Points. Between 1985 and 1988, the highlights of Silivaş' routines included:

Floor Exercise:

  • "Back to back" tumbling: Round-off, back handspring, double twist, punch front, round-off, back handspring, double twist, punch front.
  • Triple twist
  • Double twisting double back somersault "Silivaş"
  • Double back tuck
  • Double tour-double pirouette
  • The "Silivaş" skill, which involved spinning on the ankles

Balance Beam

  • The "Silivaş" mount: shoulder stand-pirouette
  • Back handspring, two layout step-outs
  • Roundoff, two-foot layout
  • Aerial front walkover
  • Double back dismount

Uneven Bars

  • Deltchev
  • Tkatchev
  • Shaposhnikova transition

See also

  • List of multiple Olympic medalists at a single Games

Footnotes

  1. ^ International Gymnastics Hall of Fame Daniela Silivas - Romania
  2. ^ a b c "Whatever happened to Daniela Silivas?". Gymnastics Greats. 2001-2005. http://www.gymn.ca/gymnasticgreats/wag/silivas.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
  3. ^ "Results from 198 Druzhba competition". Gymn-Forum. http://www.gymn-forum.net/Results/Druzhba/Women/1984.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  4. ^ "Daniela Silivas discusses her age". ProSport. 2002-06-30. http://www.worldgymrank.com/IOC04.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  5. ^ "Romanian gymnasts lied about age". CNN/Sports Illustrated. 2002-04-18. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/more/news/2002/04/18/romania_ap/. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  6. ^ a b "Profile at the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame". International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. http://www.ighof.com/honorees/honorees_silivas.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  7. ^ a b c "List of competitive results". Gymn-Forum. http://www.gymn-forum.net/bios/women/silivas.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  8. ^ "The Games, From Archery to Yachting: Gymnastics". New York Times. September 11, 1988. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE0DD1F3AF932A2575AC0A96E948260. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  9. ^ a b "It's History: IG Looks back at the 1988 Olympics". International Gymnast. 1998. Archived from the original on 2007-12-06. http://web.archive.org/web/20071206101713/http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/Field/1388/IG.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  10. ^ Mifflin, Lawrie (September 26, 1988). "Who's the Best? Mum's the Word". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE0DD173AF935A1575AC0A96E948260. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  11. ^ "Scores from 1988 Olympics AA". Gymn-Forum. http://www.gymn-forum.net/results/Olympics/1988_Seoul/1988_women_aa.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.[dead link]
  12. ^ "Twenty-five years of perfection". International Gymnast. 2001-07-18. Archived from the original on 2001-08-28. http://web.archive.org/web/20010828222526/http://www.intlgymnast.com/news/2001/july.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  13. ^ "Daniela Silivaş, 10 years later". Gazeta Sporturilor. 2001. Archived from the original on 2009-08-08. http://web.archive.org/web/20090808133922/http://geocities.com/gimnastica/articles01/silivas.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  14. ^ "Hall of Fame celebration continues". International Gymnast. June 2002. Archived from the original on 2002-07-21. http://web.archive.org/web/20020721103634/http://www.intlgymnast.com/news/2002/june.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  15. ^ "Daniela Silivas". International Gymnast. 2004. Archived from the original on 2004-05-08. http://web.archive.org/web/20040508164158/http://www.intlgymnast.com/events/2004/europeans/champions/silivas.html. Retrieved 2007-12-26.

External links

v · Olympic Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Balance Beam

1952: Nina Bocharova   |   1956: Ágnes Keleti   |   1960: Eva Bosáková   |   1964: Věra Čáslavská   |   1968: Natalia Kuchinskaya   |   1972: Olga Korbut   |   1976: Nadia Comăneci   |   1980: Nadia Comăneci   |   1984: Ecaterina Szabo / Simona Păucă   |   1988: Daniela Silivaş   |   1992: Tatiana Lysenko   |   1996: Shannon Miller   |   2000: Liu Xuan   |   2004: Cătălina Ponor   |   2008: Shawn Johnson

v · Olympic Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Floor Exercise

1952: Ágnes Keleti   |   1956: Ágnes Keleti / Larisa Latynina   |   1960: Larisa Latynina   |   1964: Larisa Latynina   |   1968: Věra Čáslavská / Larisa Petrik   |   1972: Olga Korbut   |   1976: Nellie Kim   |   1980: Nadia Comăneci / Nellie Kim   |   1984: Ecaterina Szabo   |   1988: Daniela Silivaş   |   1992: Lavinia Miloşovici   |   1996: Lilia Podkopayeva   |   2000: Elena Zamolodchikova   |   2004: Cătălina Ponor   |   2008: Sandra Izbaşa

v · d · eWorld Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Team Competition

1934:  Czechoslovakia1938:  Czechoslovakia1950:  Sweden1954:  USSR1958:  USSR1962:  USSR1966:  Czechoslovakia1970:  USSR1974:  USSR1978:  USSR1979:  Romania1981:  USSR1983:  USSR1985:  USSR1987:  Romania1989:  USSR1991:  USSR1994:  Romania1995:  Romania1997:  Romania1999:  Romania2001:  Romania2003:  United States2006:  China2007:  United States2010:  Russia2011:  United States

v · d · eWorld Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women’s Balance Beam

1934: not awarded   |   1938: Vlasta Děkanová   |   1950: Helena Rakoczy   |   1954: Keiko Tanaka   |   1958: Larisa Latynina   |   1962Eva Bosáková   |   1966Natalia Kuchinskaya   |   1970Erika Zuchold   |   1974Ludmilla Tourischeva   |   1978Nadia Comăneci   |   1979: Vera Cerna   |   1981Maxi Gnauck   |   1983Olga Mostepanova   |   1985Daniela Silivaş   |   1987Aurelia Dobre   |   1989Daniela Silivaş   |   1991Svetlana Boginskaya   |   1992Kim Zmeskal   |   1993Lavinia Miloşovici   |   1994Shannon Miller   |   1995Mo Huilan   |   1996Dina Kochetkova   |   1997Gina Gogean   |   1999Ling Jie   |   2001Andreea Răducan   |   2002Ashley Postell   |   2003Fan Ye   |   2005Nastia Liukin   |   2006Iryna Krasnianska   |   2007Nastia Liukin   |   2009: Deng Linlin   |   2010: Ana Porgras   |   2011: Sui Lu

v · d · eWorld Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Floor Exercise

1934: not awarded   |   1938: Matylda Pálfyová   |   1950: Helena Rakoczy   |   1954Tamara Manina   |   1958Eva Bosáková   |   1962: Larisa Latynina   |   1966Natalia Kuchinskaya   |   1970Ludmilla Tourischeva   |   1974Ludmilla Tourischeva   |   1978Nellie Kim   |   1979Emilia Eberle   |   1981Natalia Ilienko   |   1983Ecaterina Szabo   |   1985Oksana Omelianchik   |   1987Yelena Shushunova / Daniela Silivaş   |   1989Svetlana Boginskaya / Daniela Silivaş   |   1991Cristina Bontaş / Oksana Chusovitina   |   1992Kim Zmeskal   |   1993Shannon Miller   |   1994Dina Kochetkova   |   1995Gina Gogean   |   1996Gina Gogean / Kui Yuanyuan   |   1997Gina Gogean   |   1999Andreea Răducan   |   2001Andreea Răducan   |   2002Elena Gómez   |   2003Daiane dos Santos   |   2005Alicia Sacramone   |   2006Cheng Fei   |   2007Shawn Johnson   |   2009: Beth Tweddle   |   2010: Lauren Mitchell   |   2011: Ksenia Afanasyeva

v · d · eWorld Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Uneven Bars

1934: not awarded  · 19381: conflicting data  · 1950: Gretchen Kolar / Anna Petersson  · 1954: Ágnes Keleti  · 1958: Larisa Latynina  · 1962: Irina Pervushina  · 1966: Natalia Kuchinskaya  · 1970: Karin Janz  · 1974: Annelore Zinke  · 1978: Marcia Frederick  · 1979: Maxi Gnauck / Ma Yanhong  · 1981: Maxi Gnauck  · 1983: Maxi Gnauck  · 1985: Gabriele Faehnrich  · 1987: Daniela Silivaş / Dörte Thümmler  · 1989: Fan Di / Daniela Silivaş  · 1991: Kim Gwang-Suk  · 1992: Lavinia Miloşovici  · 1993: Shannon Miller  · 1994: Luo Li  · 1995: Svetlana Khorkina  · 1996: Svetlana Khorkina / Elena Piskun  · 1997: Svetlana Khorkina  · 1999: Svetlana Khorkina  · 2001: Svetlana Khorkina  · 2002: Courtney Kupets  · 2003: Chellsie Memmel / Hollie Vise  · 2005: Nastia Liukin  · 2006: Beth Tweddle  · 2007: Ksenia Semenova  · 2009: He Kexin  · 2010: Beth Tweddle  · 2011: Viktoria Komova

1 Women competed on Parallel Bars, not Uneven Bars, at the 1938 World Championships