en-academic.com

Natalia Shaposhnikova

  • ️Sat Jun 24 1961
Natalia Shaposhnikova
Full name Natalia Vitalyevna Shaposhnikova
Country represented  Soviet Union
Born June 24, 1961 (age 50)
Discipline Women's artistic gymnastics

Medal record

Olympic Games
Gold 1980 Moscow Team competition
Gold 1980 Moscow Vault
Bronze 1980 Moscow Balance beam
Bronze 1980 Moscow Floor exercise
World Championships
Gold 1978 Strasbourg Team competition
Silver 1979 Ft. Worth Team competition
Bronze 1978 Strasbourg All-around
European Championships
Gold 1979 Copenhagen Balance beam
Silver 1979 Copenhagen Floor exercise
Bronze 1979 Copenhagen All-around
Bronze 1979 Copenhagen Vault

Natalia Vitalyevna Shaposhnikova (Russian: Наталья Витальевна Шапошникова), (born June 24, 1961), married name Natalia Sout, was a Soviet gymnast, two-time Olympic Champion, Honoured Master of Sports of the USSR. She was born in Rostov on Don, Russian SFSR. She was known for her risky and original skills along with her expressive choreography, especially on beam and floor.

Shaposhnikova trained in Dynamo, Rostov on Don. Her trainer was the Honoured Trainer of the USSR Vladislav Rastorotsky, who had also trained her famous compatriots Ludmilla Tourischeva and Natalia Yurchenko. Shaposhnikova was one of the world's strongest gymnasts in the late 1970s and early 1980s, especially in the Vault Event. She was well known for her difficulty and originality especially her one armed hand stand balances on beam, among this difficulty was one of the first triple twists in her 1979 European Championships floor routine and her Olympic games opening passage on floor, round-off 1.5 twisting layout immediately into a round off backhand spring double pike back. At the 1980 summer Olympic games in Moscow she contributed greatly to her teams gold medal and took home an individual gold medal in the vault apparatus. She also took home a bronze medal on both floor and beam and came .05 from a silver in the all around.

Shaposhnikova invented a complex low-to-high bar transition element on the uneven bars; the skill is named after her in the Code of Points. The skill, sometimes referred to colloquially as the "Shaposh," is still widely performed today, it is credited as a D value element under the new Code of Points. During the 1990s, other gymnasts began to developed variations of the Shaposhnikova, these include Americans Kristen Maloney who had a toe-on swing before the transition to the high bar, and Amy Chow who performed a stalder circle entry before making the transition. Another variation on the skill is by three-time World All-around champion Svetlana Khorkina who would include a half turn during the transition between the bars.

After retiring from the sport, Shaposhnikova and her husband Pavel Sout currently coach at Gymnastika[Gymnastika] [1] in West Paterson, New Jersey. According to the Gymnastika website, Pavel was a Gold Medalist at the 1981 World Championships. As a member of the Soviet Mens Team, he participated in many national and international competitions. Pavel was the head coach of the 1st place Soviet National Team at the 1991 World University Games. He was educated at the Sports College in Russia and the Moscow Sports Academy. Pavel is the Head Coach of the Girls Program at Gymnastika.

Achievements (non-Olympic)

Year Event AA Team VT UB BB FX
1976 USSR Championships 3rd 2nd
1977 World Cup 3rd 1st
USSR Cup 1st
USSR Championships 3rd 1st 2nd 2nd
1978 World Championships 3rd 1st
World Cup 3rd 1st 2nd 2nd
1979 World Championships 2nd
European Championships 3rd 3rd 1st 2nd
USSR Cup 1st
USSR Championships 1st 3rd 1st 2nd
1980 USSR Cup 2nd

References

External links

v · Olympic Champions in Artistic Gymnastics – Women's Vault

1952: Ekaterina Kalinchuk   |   1956: Larisa Latynina   |   1960: Margarita Nikolaeva   |   1964: Věra Čáslavská   |   1968: Věra Čáslavská   |   1972: Karin Büttner-Janz   |   1976: Nellie Kim   |   1980: Natalia Shaposhnikova   |   1984: Ecaterina Szabo   |   1988: Svetlana Boginskaya   |   1992: Lavinia Miloşovici / Henrietta Ónodi   |   1996: Simona Amânar   |   2000: Elena Zamolodchikova   |   2004: Monica Roşu   |   2008: Hong Un-Jong

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

This article contains information from the website http://www.gymnast.ru/, incorporated into the Wikipedia with permission from its author E.V.Avsenev.