Yelena Shushunova

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox gymnast

Yelena Lvovna Shushunova (Template:Langx; sometimes spelled Elena Shushunova; 23 May 1969 – 16 August 2018) was a Soviet Russian gymnast.[1][2][3] Shushunova was one of five women (alongside Larisa Latynina, Věra Čáslavská, Ludmilla Tourischeva and Lilia Podkopayeva) who have won all-around titles at all major competitions: Olympics, World Championships and European/Continental Championships[4] and one of eleven women who medaled on every event at World Championships. Shushunova was renowned for pioneering complex skills as well as her explosive and dynamic tumbling and high consistency.[5]

Junior career

Shushunova was born and grew up in Leningrad and began gymnastics when she was approximately six or seven years old.[4][6] She began competing as a junior gymnast in 1981.[3] In 1982, she won gold medals at the 1982 Moscow News (now known as Moscow Stars of the World) and the Junior European Championships. In 1983, she won the USSR Cup, which she won every year until 1988 with the exception of 1984.[3]

Senior career

Shushunova was named as a member of the Soviet national gymnastics team in 1984, but was unable to compete at the 1984 Summer Olympics as the Soviet Union boycotted the Olympics.[7] Instead, she competed at the 1984 Friendship Games in Olomouc, Czechoslovakia, where she finished third all around and helped the USSR to a gold in the team event.[4]

The following year Shushunova made her breakthrough by winning the all-around title at the European Championships.[7] She also won three gold medals in the event finals on vault, floor exercise, and uneven bars (which she shared with East German Olympian Maxi Gnauck). At the World Championships she won five medals including the all-around title, which she shared with compatriot Oksana Omelianchik. She took first on vault, third on beam, and second on floor. In her floor exercise she tumbled a double layout, and side Arabian 1 and 3/4 salto, both rare skills for women at that time; in fact, women are no longer allowed to compete saltos which end in a roll. Here she displayed her signature skill, a straddle jump to prone support, a rare and innovative move for the 1980s.[7]

Shushunova's dominance in women's gymnastics continued at the 1986 World Cup in Beijing. There she won the all-around, vault, uneven bars, and floor exercise titles. In this competition she displayed an increased level of difficulty on two apparatus, showing a Rulfova flic (full twisting Korbut flic) on balance beam and a tucked full in double salto dismount on the uneven bars.[4] At the 1986 Goodwill Games she led the Soviet team to a gold medal, but then fell twice in the all-around finals to finish second to teammate Vera Kolesnikova. She rallied in the event finals to take, once again, the vault, bars, and floor golds and the beam silver.[7]

In 1987, Shushunova lost the European title to Romanian Daniela Silivaș due to a fall on a double layout dismount from the uneven bars.[8] At the European Championships she earned a bronze in the all-around and a gold on vault.[4] She continued to show increased difficulty on all apparatus by competing a double layout dismount on the uneven bars, a layout Thomas salto on floor, and a full in dismount on beam. Later that year her team lost the World Championships team title, placing second to the Romanian team. Shushunova also lost the world title to Romanian Aurelia Dobre, finishing in second place.[7] In the event finals she retained her vault title with her textbook Yurchenko full and Yurchenko 1.5, beating Romanian Eugenia Golea. She also earned a bronze medal on the uneven bars.[7] Shushunova also earned silver on balance beam and tied with Daniela Silivas for gold on floor exercise.

1988 Olympics

In 1988, Shushunova competed at the Summer Olympics in Seoul. She scored three perfect scores of 10 in optional events and won the individual all-around and team event titles. She also won silver on balance beam and bronze on uneven bars. Shushunova fell on a double twisting Yurchenko on vault and failed to medal. She also failed to medal on floor exercise due to stumbling out of the landing of her opening full-in double back and falling out of her arabian 1 3/4 salto.[5][7]

Later life

Shushunova retired from competition two months after the 1988 Olympics and later returned to her home city of Saint Petersburg, where she worked for the city's sports committee.[6] She helped organise the gymnastics events of the 1994 Goodwill Games and 1998 European Championships, both of which were held in Saint Petersburg.[4]

In 2004, she was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[9] In the following year, she was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[7]

Eponymous skills

Shushunova has two eponymous skills named after her in the Code of Points.[10]

Apparatus Name Description DifficultyTemplate:Efn Notes
Uneven bars Shushunova Swing forward with half turn – further half turn to counter straddle in flight over high bar E (0.5) [11][12]
Balance beam/floor Shushunova Jump with stretched hips to planche (minimum 40 degree angle) C (0.3)/A (0.1) [11]

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Death

Shushunova died from complications of pneumonia on 16 August 2018. She was 49.[13]

Competitive history

Year Event Team AA VT UB BB FX
Junior
1980 Junior USSR Championships Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2 Template:Bronze3
Junior USSR Cup 6
1981 Kosice International 6 5 Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2
Riga International 4 Template:Gold1
Ostrava International Template:Bronze3
1982
Junior European Championships 15 Template:Gold1
Moscow News Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1
Senior
1983 Chunichi Cup Template:Silver2
East Bloc Spartikade Template:Bronze3
Tokyo Cup Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2
USSR Championships Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2 4 Template:Gold1
USSR Cup Template:Gold1
USSR Spartikade Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2
1984 Chunichi Cup Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
Moscow News Template:Silver2 Template:Silver2 Template:Silver2
Tokyo Cup Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
USSR Junior Championships Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Gold1
USSR Championships 6
USSR Cup Template:Bronze3
Friendship Games Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 8
1985
European Championships Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Gold1
Moscow News Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2 Template:Silver2
USSR Championships Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
USSR Cup Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
World Championships Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2
1986 Goodwill Games Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1
USSR Cup Template:Gold1
World Cup Final Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Gold1
1987
European Championships Template:Bronze3 Template:Gold1 4
Summer Universiade Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
USSR Championships Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2
USSR Cup Template:Gold1 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2
World Championships Template:Silver2 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1
1988 French International Template:Gold1
Moscow News Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 6
USSR Championships Template:Silver2 Template:Silver2 Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1
USSR Cup Template:Gold1
Olympic Games Template:Gold1 Template:Gold1 8 Template:Bronze3 Template:Silver2 7
1991 World Professional Championships Template:Bronze3 Template:Bronze3 Template:Gold1

[14]

See also

References

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External links

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