The Borneo Post

‘Snow Queen’ Khorkina no fan of heavy metal

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LONDON/ MOSCOW: It is unlikely that many Olympic gold medallists would complain that the shiny discs of metal they have spent years and years training for are “too heavy” – but then again Svetlana Khorkina was no ordinary champion.

Depending on which part of the world the statuesque Russian was competing in, she was known as “a diva” or “a snow queen” – monikers that Khorkina says were only bestowed on “heroes”.

Time away from the sport has not mellowed the once Playboy centrefold who gave up gymnastics for good following the 2004 Athens Games.

A gold medal l i st on the asymmetric bars in 1996 and 2000 Olympics, Khorkina also became the first woman to claim three world all-around titles.

Her triumphs in 1997, 2001 and 2003 stood as the benchmark in women’s gymnastics until Simone Biles burst on to the world stage in 2013.

The pint- sized American teenager has blown away all the opposition she has faced over the past three years, becoming the first woman to win three consecutiv­e world all-around titles.

Biles’ milestone meant little to Khorkina.

“Twelve years after I finished my sporting career I am the first and only three- time all- around world champion and Biles will always be the second,” Khorkina, now a mother, told Reuters in an email interview in the run-up to the Rio Olympics.

“Basically, I am more interested in how the Russian girls will get on in Rio.” Considerin­g the Russians failed to claim a medal of any colour in the team or all-around competitio­ns at the 2015 world championsh­ips, the chances are that Khorkina will be unable to ignore what Biles does do in Rio.

As Biles attempts to become the first woman since Li lia Podkopayev­a in 1996 to win backtoback world and Olympic all around golds, Khorkina did not mince her words when it came to discussing the one title that got away from her.

“I often felt that I was being given unfair marks and that the judges were not being objective, as they were mixing up sport and politics,” said Khorkina, who had been the favourite for the allaround gold at the 2000 Olympics until an apparatus malfunctio­n left her on her knees.

“To be always first is completely normal for me, as it is for my great country, which certain silly people don’t agree with.” In Sydney, the willowy 1.65-metre gymnast had

Twelve years after I finished my sporting career I am the first and only three-time allaround world champion and (Simeone) Biles will always be the second. Svetlana Khorkina, former Olympic champion

posted the highest all- around total in the preliminar­ies and led her rivals in the final before attempting her vault.

However, after launching into the air to attempt her complex vault – a roundoff half- on to Rudi – she landed painfully on her knees.

Rattled with her poor execution on the vault, the Russian was clearly not herself when she mounted her trademark apparatus – the asymmetric bars – and messed up a routine she could usually perform to perfection even if she was blindfolde­d.

What real ly angered her, however, was something she had spotted minutes earlier – the vault had been set at the wrong height.

It was only a f ter several competitor­s landed awkwardly on their faces, knees or bottoms – with some suffering injuries that prevented any further participat­ion – that of ficials belatedly checked the height of the apparatus and confirmed it was five centimetre­s lower than approved.

A second chance on the apparatus was offered to those who had vaulted at the wrong height but for Khorkina the amnesty came too late as she was already out of the running following her shaky bars routine. The Russian declined to vault again, still fuming that no one had listened to her when she complained about the vault being too low.

As far as Khorkina is concerned, this was just another example of how people conspired to deny her a title she felt was rightfully hers.

“I could have won more gold medals but there are subjective reasons in sport which don’t allow you to get what you deserve,” said the 37-year- old, who posed for a topless photoshoot in a Russian edition of Playboy in 1997.

Twelve years on from her retirement, she can still reel off all the events, be it at the Olympics or the world championsh­ips, at which she felt she had been robbed of gold medals. While her Olympic haul of two golds, four silvers and one bronze did not match her own high expectatio­ns of her worth, she is happy about the legacy she has left in the sport. — Reuters

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