Tag: gymnastics

  • October 3, 2023 UPDATE

    October 3, 2023 UPDATE

    NOBEL – Researchers Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne LHuillier are the winners of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics. They were awarded for “experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter”, according to a press release by the Nobel Committee. In 2022, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to researchers Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger for revolutionary discoveries in the field of quantum mechanics.




    EXERCISE – The Valahia 2023 exercise is taking place as of Tuesday at the Cernavodă Nuclear Power Plant (south-eastern Romania). The exercise, which simulates a nuclear accident, is organized by the National Commission for the Control of Nuclear Activities and benefits the support of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna and the Norwegian Radiation Protection Authority. By simulating a nuclear accident at the Cernavodă power plant, the emergency intervention capacities of all actors involved will be tested, as well as the assistance received from international partners. Valahia 2023 aims to improve nuclear security and safety in Romania, increase resilience to disaster and prepare to respond to nuclear and radiologic events. The exercise is funded through the Norwegian financial mechanism.




    KYIV – The Romanian Foreign Minister, Luminita Odobescu, emphasized in Kyiv, the importance of continuing the European Unions multidimensional support for Ukraine, which was invaded by Russian troops, including through the creation of a military fund within the European Peace Facility. She expressed her strong dissaproval of Russias attacks on the civil infrastructure in Ukraine, in the close vicinity of Romania, and emphasized the need for a long-term strategic regional approach, in which the Republic of Moldova would be included. Luminiţa Odobescu participated, on Monday, in the informal meeting of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the EU member states – the Council of Foreign Affairs (CAE), organized in Kyiv.




    DRUGS – The Interior Ministry has drawn up special measures to combat drug trafficking in schools, Minister Cătălin Predoiu said Tuesday, in Parliament. He was invited to the Government Hour, at the request of the opposition party USR, to present the actions taken to combat the consumption of high-risk substances. Predoiu also said that the fight against drug and human trafficking and organized crime is a priority of his mandate, and that, during the last three months, 44 organized groups were dismantled and hundreds of kilograms of prohibited substances were confiscated. USR MPs, however, were unsatisfied with the answers received, arguing there are drugs in schools and no large network is being destroyed. They also told Minister Predoiu that he had corrupt people under his command. The Liberal minister responded to these accusations by saying that USR uses the drama caused by drug use for their election agenda.




    GYMNASTICS — The Romanian womens gymnastics team qualified for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, after coming out 8th in the qualifications of the 52nd edition of the World Championships in Antwerp (Belgium). Romania thus returns to the Olympic Games after a 12-year break, its last participation being in London in 2012. As many as 12 gymnastics teams will take part in the 2024 Olympics. The US, Britain and Canada already had their participation secured. Romania now has 60 athletes qualified for next year’s Olympic Games. (EE)



  • Sports Weekend

    Sports Weekend

    The city of Durban, in South
    Africa will this weekend play venue for the World Table Tennis Championships a
    competition where Romania will be represented by its 17th seeded Bernadette
    Szőcs, and 27th – seeded Elizabeta Samara, as well as by Andreea
    Dragoman and Adina Diaconu. They will participate in the women’s competition
    while Ovidiu Ionescu, Eduard Ionescu and Marius Movileanu will be representing
    Romania in the men’s contest. In the women’s doubles, the pair made up by
    Bernadette Szőcs and Sofia Polcanova of Austria is fourth-seeded, whereas Dragoman
    and Samara are seeded 14th. The 9th-seeded mixed pair Bernadette
    Szőcs – Ovidiu Ionescu also stands chances to a good performance in Durban.




    And now the latest from basketball.
    On Saturday, the city of Cluj-Napoca will be hosting the third game in the
    finals of Romania’s Championships. Local side U-BT will be up against CSM Oradea,
    which won the first two home games, 79-73 and 93-83. The finals is played on
    the-best-out-of-seven system and the fourth game is due on Monday.


    The European Championships in
    Rhythmic Gymnastics is presently being hosted by Baku, in Azerbaijan. In the
    women’s competition Romania is being represented by Annaliese Dragan and
    Andreea Verdes in the individual contest as well as by Alenia Biringer, Catrina
    Buniov, Anisia Dragan, Dalia Marin, Claudia Mitan and Antonia Stanescu. The
    individual finals and qualifiers are due on Friday while the last finals are
    due on Sunday.




    This weekend will see the 9th
    leg of the Romanian football Superleague with the most important game in
    Ovidiu, southeastern Romania, pitching local side Farul against FCSB. Farul tops
    the table a point head of FCSB. On Sunday, CFR Cluj plays Sepsi Sfantu Gheorghe
    on the latter’s home turf, while on Monday Rapid on their own turf in Bucharest
    plays Universitatea Craiova.




    Friday will see four games, when Hermannstadt
    takes on Universitatea Cluj, Chindia Târgovişte plays FC Voluntari, FC Argeş Petrolul
    Ploieşti and UTA takes on FC U Craiova. FC Botoşani plays Mioveni on Saturday.


    (bill)

  • Sports Weekend

    Sports Weekend

    The city of Durban, in South
    Africa will this weekend play venue for the World Table Tennis Championships a
    competition where Romania will be represented by its 17th seeded Bernadette
    Szőcs, and 27th – seeded Elizabeta Samara, as well as by Andreea
    Dragoman and Adina Diaconu. They will participate in the women’s competition
    while Ovidiu Ionescu, Eduard Ionescu and Marius Movileanu will be representing
    Romania in the men’s contest. In the women’s doubles, the pair made up by
    Bernadette Szőcs and Sofia Polcanova of Austria is fourth-seeded, whereas Dragoman
    and Samara are seeded 14th. The 9th-seeded mixed pair Bernadette
    Szőcs – Ovidiu Ionescu also stands chances to a good performance in Durban.




    And now the latest from basketball.
    On Saturday, the city of Cluj-Napoca will be hosting the third game in the
    finals of Romania’s Championships. Local side U-BT will be up against CSM Oradea,
    which won the first two home games, 79-73 and 93-83. The finals is played on
    the-best-out-of-seven system and the fourth game is due on Monday.


    The European Championships in
    Rhythmic Gymnastics is presently being hosted by Baku, in Azerbaijan. In the
    women’s competition Romania is being represented by Annaliese Dragan and
    Andreea Verdes in the individual contest as well as by Alenia Biringer, Catrina
    Buniov, Anisia Dragan, Dalia Marin, Claudia Mitan and Antonia Stanescu. The
    individual finals and qualifiers are due on Friday while the last finals are
    due on Sunday.




    This weekend will see the 9th
    leg of the Romanian football Superleague with the most important game in
    Ovidiu, southeastern Romania, pitching local side Farul against FCSB. Farul tops
    the table a point head of FCSB. On Sunday, CFR Cluj plays Sepsi Sfantu Gheorghe
    on the latter’s home turf, while on Monday Rapid on their own turf in Bucharest
    plays Universitatea Craiova.




    Friday will see four games, when Hermannstadt
    takes on Universitatea Cluj, Chindia Târgovişte plays FC Voluntari, FC Argeş Petrolul
    Ploieşti and UTA takes on FC U Craiova. FC Botoşani plays Mioveni on Saturday.


    (bill)

  • April 12, 2023 UPDATE

    April 12, 2023 UPDATE

    Ordinance – The public expenditure reform bill should be ready next week, the Romanian Finance Minister Adrian Câciu announced. Until then, the Government members will present solutions to reduce expenses in their areas of responsibility. The Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă asked them not to plan salary cuts or give up investments. He also said that he wanted to improve the collection of taxes, not to increase taxes. All in all, the cuts should amount to 20 billion lei – approximately 4 billion Euros – by the end of the year. On Wednesday, the Romanian government approved an emergency decree that provides for simplification and digitalization measures for the management of European funds for the 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy. Also on Wednesday, the program through which the Romanian state financially supports the refugees from Ukraine was modified: from now on they will receive an amount of money per person, for four consecutive months. After this period, they will be able to benefit from unemployment or enter the employment program, but before that, they must register with the employment offices. Those who host the refugees will no longer receive money for accommodation and food, as was the case until now.



    Aid – The Romanian government will grant a first installment of the financial aid intended to compensate for the losses caused by the conflict in Ukraine to cattle breeders and the dairy market. More than 21 million Euros will be granted starting on May 15, with a second tranche, worth 22 million Euros, to be disbursed in the second semester. Following Tuesday evening’s consultations between the government team led by the Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă and the representatives of dairy processors and big store chains, a price reduction for milk was agreed upon for the next six months. Also to support the consumption of milk produced in Romania, the Government wants to expand the “Hot Lunch in Schools” Program starting next year. Thus, pupils will receive milk every day at school, not just three times a week, as happens at present.



    Visit – The European Commission has identified 15 companies, from 11 countries, where the production capacity in the defense industry could be increased, and Romania is one of these countries, said the European Commissioner for Internal Market, Thierry Breton. On Wednesday, he visited two factories in Romanias defense industry. Breton previously met in Bucharest with the Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă, and, following talks, he stated that Romania would be able to play an even more important role in the defense industry, in the context of the war in neighboring Ukraine. Breton highlighted the fact that Romania increased the budget allocated to defense from 2% to 2.5% of the GDP, giving Romania as an example to follow. The discussions with Nicolae Ciucă also focused on cyber security, the European commissioner saying that the field should be competitive.



    Gymnastics — Romania’s mens team ranked 11th, on Tuesday, at the European Championships in Artistic Gymnastics in Antalya (Turkey), thus qualifying for the World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium. The Romanian athletes needed to be ranked among the first 13 teams to obtain qualification for the World Cup, a competition that will decide the teams that will participate in the 2024 Olympics. Italy won the gold medals, the silver went to Turkey, and Great Britain got the bronze.



    Motion — In Bucharest, Save Romania Union – USR and ‘Forţa Dreptei’ – Force of the Right party (both opposition) tabled a simple motion to the Chamber of Deputies against the Agriculture Minister, Petre Daea. The signatories claim that he is the weakest agriculture minister in the last 30 years, registering failure after failure and endangering both Romanias economy and development, as well as the countrys food security. They accuse him of willingly destroying Romanian agriculture. This is what people can see in the markets where the prices are the highest in the last 30 years, said the leader of the USR deputies, Ionuţ Moşteanu, who announced the initiative. The motion will be voted on next Wednesday.



    NATO – The Romanian Defense Minister Angel Tîlvăr and the Chief of the General Staff General Daniel Petrescu, met on Wednesday with the Chair of the NATO Military Committee, Admiral Robert Bauer. He is visiting Romania from April 11 to 14. According to a press release from the Romanian Defense Ministry, talks will focus on the security situation in the Black Sea region, the dynamics of the implementation of allied measures to deter and defend the Euro-Atlantic area, NATO operations and missions, as well as major training events this year. (LS)

  • Radio Romania International Sports Club

    Radio Romania International Sports Club

    Romanian gymnastics
    seems to have been marred by the gymnasts’ constant lacklustre performance in
    recent years. The national team no longer qualified to the Olympic games, while the
    medal tally in world and European competitions has been unavoidably low. For instance,
    in the 2022 edition of the World Gymnastics Championships in Liverpool, the
    Romanian gymnasts walked home with no medal. Romanian delegation’s best result
    back then was Gabriel Burtanete’s coming in 4th in the vault final. Gabriel
    needed only two tenths of a point to step onto a step of the podium. In the all-round
    event final, Gabriel Burtanete came in 23rd. In the women’s version
    of the championships, the only Romanian gymnast to have advanced to the final
    was Ana Maria Barbosu, who in the all-round event came in 20th.


    The 2023 competition season, however, had a
    more auspicious start. In the FIG Apparatus World Cup held in Qatar’s
    Doha, the Romanian Sabrina Voinea won two gold medals, in the beam and floor
    events. Sabrina was granted 13.766 points in the beam final, outclassing the runner-up
    gymnast Ana Lascevska of Ukraine by more than four tenths of a point. In the
    floor event, Sabrina’s win was
    even clearer. Sabrina was granted 13.600 points, that if seven tenths of a point
    more than silver medalist, Japan’s Chiaki Hatakeda.


    It was the first international seniors’ competition
    for 15-year-old Sabrina; her performance is all the more impressive, given
    she is still very young. Sabrina will now need to confirm her stunning debut
    performance in an international competition at the coming European Gymnastics Championships,
    to be held in Turkyie’s Antalya between April 11 and 16. Sabrina’s trainer is
    her mother Camelia Voinea, a former gymnast and a silver medalist in the Olympic
    Games in Seoul, in 1988, in the nations’ competition. (EN)

  • Radio Romania International Sports Club

    Radio Romania International Sports Club

    Romanian gymnastics
    seems to have been marred by the gymnasts’ constant lacklustre performance in
    recent years. The national team no longer qualified to the Olympic games, while the
    medal tally in world and European competitions has been unavoidably low. For instance,
    in the 2022 edition of the World Gymnastics Championships in Liverpool, the
    Romanian gymnasts walked home with no medal. Romanian delegation’s best result
    back then was Gabriel Burtanete’s coming in 4th in the vault final. Gabriel
    needed only two tenths of a point to step onto a step of the podium. In the all-round
    event final, Gabriel Burtanete came in 23rd. In the women’s version
    of the championships, the only Romanian gymnast to have advanced to the final
    was Ana Maria Barbosu, who in the all-round event came in 20th.


    The 2023 competition season, however, had a
    more auspicious start. In the FIG Apparatus World Cup held in Qatar’s
    Doha, the Romanian Sabrina Voinea won two gold medals, in the beam and floor
    events. Sabrina was granted 13.766 points in the beam final, outclassing the runner-up
    gymnast Ana Lascevska of Ukraine by more than four tenths of a point. In the
    floor event, Sabrina’s win was
    even clearer. Sabrina was granted 13.600 points, that if seven tenths of a point
    more than silver medalist, Japan’s Chiaki Hatakeda.


    It was the first international seniors’ competition
    for 15-year-old Sabrina; her performance is all the more impressive, given
    she is still very young. Sabrina will now need to confirm her stunning debut
    performance in an international competition at the coming European Gymnastics Championships,
    to be held in Turkyie’s Antalya between April 11 and 16. Sabrina’s trainer is
    her mother Camelia Voinea, a former gymnast and a silver medalist in the Olympic
    Games in Seoul, in 1988, in the nations’ competition. (EN)

  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    The Romanian Gymnastics Federation
    made an unprecedented announcement last weekend. It said it no
    longer affords to finance the participation of Romanian gymnasts in
    the European and world championships taking place this year, two
    competitions that are very important to the qualification for the
    next Olympic Games to be hosted by Paris in 2014. In a message posted
    on its official Facebook page, the Federation blames the situation on
    the fact that funding from the ministry for sports is 35% lower this
    year compared with last year. In this context, the Federation is
    calling on national and international donations.


    Carmencita
    Constantin, the president of the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, told
    Agerpres news agency that the situation is truly serious: The
    return to the ranks of the world gymnastics elite is not possible if
    athletes cannot take part in the competitions held by the
    International Gymnastics Federation. And at the moment Romania’s
    gymnastics teams are unable to go ahead with their competition
    schedule because of a lack of funds.


    In
    recent years, Romanian gymnastics has, in fact, seen its poorest
    results in history. Romanian gymnastics teams did not even qualify
    for the last two editions of the Olympic Games, and athletes have not
    won a single medal in individual competitions. With the allocation of
    funds by the ministry for sports for 2022 taking into account the
    results obtained in international competitions, gymnastics therefore
    saw its budget cut compared with previous years.


    The
    minister for sports Eduard Novak explained on Facebook that a budget
    adjustment will be made in June, and the Gymnastics Federation will
    receive some additional funding. As for long-term solutions aimed at
    restoring Romanian gymnastics anything resembling its former glory,
    the minister mentioned the National Strategy for Sports, which is in
    the process of being drafted. He says the strategy will seek to
    develop and consolidate a network of regional centres that will
    improve performance standards in this sport, based on studies, human
    resources and experience rather than luck and a handful of
    exceptional talent.


    The
    immediate problem of gymnasts’ participation in this year’s
    competitions still remains, however. Even if the federation somehow
    managed to fund their trips, there is little hope that they would do
    well in these competitions. In the absence of top specialists, who
    prefer to work abroad, Romanian gymnastics is in free fall. The
    current management of the Federation, who were appointed based on
    ambitious promises to consolidate the technical team, have not done
    much to stop this demise and asking for donations won’t make up for
    a lack of strategy for marketing and attracting sponsors. (CM)

  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    The Romanian Gymnastics Federation
    made an unprecedented announcement last weekend. It said it no
    longer affords to finance the participation of Romanian gymnasts in
    the European and world championships taking place this year, two
    competitions that are very important to the qualification for the
    next Olympic Games to be hosted by Paris in 2014. In a message posted
    on its official Facebook page, the Federation blames the situation on
    the fact that funding from the ministry for sports is 35% lower this
    year compared with last year. In this context, the Federation is
    calling on national and international donations.


    Carmencita
    Constantin, the president of the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, told
    Agerpres news agency that the situation is truly serious: The
    return to the ranks of the world gymnastics elite is not possible if
    athletes cannot take part in the competitions held by the
    International Gymnastics Federation. And at the moment Romania’s
    gymnastics teams are unable to go ahead with their competition
    schedule because of a lack of funds.


    In
    recent years, Romanian gymnastics has, in fact, seen its poorest
    results in history. Romanian gymnastics teams did not even qualify
    for the last two editions of the Olympic Games, and athletes have not
    won a single medal in individual competitions. With the allocation of
    funds by the ministry for sports for 2022 taking into account the
    results obtained in international competitions, gymnastics therefore
    saw its budget cut compared with previous years.


    The
    minister for sports Eduard Novak explained on Facebook that a budget
    adjustment will be made in June, and the Gymnastics Federation will
    receive some additional funding. As for long-term solutions aimed at
    restoring Romanian gymnastics anything resembling its former glory,
    the minister mentioned the National Strategy for Sports, which is in
    the process of being drafted. He says the strategy will seek to
    develop and consolidate a network of regional centres that will
    improve performance standards in this sport, based on studies, human
    resources and experience rather than luck and a handful of
    exceptional talent.


    The
    immediate problem of gymnasts’ participation in this year’s
    competitions still remains, however. Even if the federation somehow
    managed to fund their trips, there is little hope that they would do
    well in these competitions. In the absence of top specialists, who
    prefer to work abroad, Romanian gymnastics is in free fall. The
    current management of the Federation, who were appointed based on
    ambitious promises to consolidate the technical team, have not done
    much to stop this demise and asking for donations won’t make up for
    a lack of strategy for marketing and attracting sponsors. (CM)

  • Romania at the Olympic Games

    Romania at the Olympic Games


    For decades,
    Romania was at the top of world gymnastics. Athletes such as the Olympic
    champions Nadia Comăneci, Ecaterina Szabo, Daniela Silivaș, Simona Amânar or
    Cătălina Ponor made for years the headlines in sports news from all over the
    world. In recent years, however, Romanian gymnastics hasn’t got any good
    results. The Romanian teams’ failing to qualify for the Olympic Games in Tokyo
    is the full expression of the catastrophic decline of Romanian gymnastics.


    The last edition of the
    Olympic Games where Romania got some notable results in gymnastics was the one
    in London, in 2012. The women’s team ranked 3rd in the rankings by country, and
    Catalina Ponor won the silver medal in the floor exercise. The best result was
    the first place won by Sandra Izbaşa in the vault event, a result that brought
    the last Olympic gold medal in the Romanian gymnastics’ record.


    Sandra Izbaşa was born on
    June 18th, 1990, in Bucharest. She started practicing gymnastics at the age of
    4. At 12 she was already part of the national junior team. Her first big
    performance as a senior was in 2006, at Romania’s International Gymnastics Competition
    where she won the all-around individual, floor and vault events. Also in 2006,
    at the European Championships in Volos, she won a gold medal on floor, a silver
    one with the team, and a bronze medal in the beam event.


    There followed many other
    medals won at European and world competitions. It all culminated in the Olympic
    Games in Beijing, in 2008, where Sandra won gold on floor. There followed two
    years poor in notable results. In 2011, however, at the European Championships
    in Berlin, Sandra Izbaşa ranked first in both floor and vault. Also, she
    returned with two gold medals from the European Championships in Brussels, in
    2012: one in the vault event and another one with the team. The success scored
    the same year, at the Olympic Games in London, was the last major result of
    Sandra Izbaşa’s sporting career.

    (M.Ignatescu)






  • Romania at the Olympic Games

    Romania at the Olympic Games


    For decades,
    Romania was at the top of world gymnastics. Athletes such as the Olympic
    champions Nadia Comăneci, Ecaterina Szabo, Daniela Silivaș, Simona Amânar or
    Cătălina Ponor made for years the headlines in sports news from all over the
    world. In recent years, however, Romanian gymnastics hasn’t got any good
    results. The Romanian teams’ failing to qualify for the Olympic Games in Tokyo
    is the full expression of the catastrophic decline of Romanian gymnastics.


    The last edition of the
    Olympic Games where Romania got some notable results in gymnastics was the one
    in London, in 2012. The women’s team ranked 3rd in the rankings by country, and
    Catalina Ponor won the silver medal in the floor exercise. The best result was
    the first place won by Sandra Izbaşa in the vault event, a result that brought
    the last Olympic gold medal in the Romanian gymnastics’ record.


    Sandra Izbaşa was born on
    June 18th, 1990, in Bucharest. She started practicing gymnastics at the age of
    4. At 12 she was already part of the national junior team. Her first big
    performance as a senior was in 2006, at Romania’s International Gymnastics Competition
    where she won the all-around individual, floor and vault events. Also in 2006,
    at the European Championships in Volos, she won a gold medal on floor, a silver
    one with the team, and a bronze medal in the beam event.


    There followed many other
    medals won at European and world competitions. It all culminated in the Olympic
    Games in Beijing, in 2008, where Sandra won gold on floor. There followed two
    years poor in notable results. In 2011, however, at the European Championships
    in Berlin, Sandra Izbaşa ranked first in both floor and vault. Also, she
    returned with two gold medals from the European Championships in Brussels, in
    2012: one in the vault event and another one with the team. The success scored
    the same year, at the Olympic Games in London, was the last major result of
    Sandra Izbaşa’s sporting career.

    (M.Ignatescu)






  • Romania at the Olympic Games

    Romania at the Olympic Games

    The
    history of Romanian gymnastics is dominated by the personality and achievements
    of Nadia Comăneci. However, since that moment on, a lot of tremendously
    talented athletes followed in Nadia’s footsteps, some of them with remarkable
    results. This is the case with Daniela Silivaș, an Olympic champion in 3 events
    in Seoul, 1988.




    She
    was born in 1970, in Deva, and was one of the first gymnasts trained at the
    Deva Olympic Centre opened in 1978. Her first coach was professor Ioan Cărpinișan.
    In 1980, Daniela Silivaș was already the winner of the national school
    championships. In 1982 she won the gold in the all-around, beam, floor and
    vault events of the national junior championship.




    There
    followed a triumphant international debut, with Daniela Silivas winning the
    all-around and floor events of the Junior World Gymnastics Championships in
    Japan. In ’84, at the Junior European Championship in Rimini, Italy, she
    walked home with the gold medal in the beam event and the silver in the uneven
    bars and floor.




    Daniela
    Silivas moved on to become the world leading gymnast of the late ’80s. In the
    World Championships in Montreal in ’85, she won the gold in the beam event,
    while 2 years later, at the European Championships in Moscow, she won the gold
    in the all-around event, beam, floor and uneven bars, and the silver in the
    vault event. That same year, at the World Championship in Rotterdam, she took
    home the gold in the uneven bars and the floor event, and won the world title with
    Romania’s team.




    1988
    saw the only Olympic Games participation in her career, in Seoul. She won 3
    gold medals on that occasion, in the uneven bars, beam and floor, and 2 silver
    medals, in the all-around and in the team competitions.




    The
    last major competition she took part in was the 1989 World Championship, held
    in Stuttgart. Once again, she won the uneven bars, beam and floor events, and
    added another silver medal in the team competition.




    After
    her retirement from competitions, Daniela Silivaș settled in the US, where she
    is a gymnastics coach.

  • Romania at the Olympic Games

    Romania at the Olympic Games

    The
    history of Romanian gymnastics is dominated by the personality and achievements
    of Nadia Comăneci. However, since that moment on, a lot of tremendously
    talented athletes followed in Nadia’s footsteps, some of them with remarkable
    results. This is the case with Daniela Silivaș, an Olympic champion in 3 events
    in Seoul, 1988.




    She
    was born in 1970, in Deva, and was one of the first gymnasts trained at the
    Deva Olympic Centre opened in 1978. Her first coach was professor Ioan Cărpinișan.
    In 1980, Daniela Silivaș was already the winner of the national school
    championships. In 1982 she won the gold in the all-around, beam, floor and
    vault events of the national junior championship.




    There
    followed a triumphant international debut, with Daniela Silivas winning the
    all-around and floor events of the Junior World Gymnastics Championships in
    Japan. In ’84, at the Junior European Championship in Rimini, Italy, she
    walked home with the gold medal in the beam event and the silver in the uneven
    bars and floor.




    Daniela
    Silivas moved on to become the world leading gymnast of the late ’80s. In the
    World Championships in Montreal in ’85, she won the gold in the beam event,
    while 2 years later, at the European Championships in Moscow, she won the gold
    in the all-around event, beam, floor and uneven bars, and the silver in the
    vault event. That same year, at the World Championship in Rotterdam, she took
    home the gold in the uneven bars and the floor event, and won the world title with
    Romania’s team.




    1988
    saw the only Olympic Games participation in her career, in Seoul. She won 3
    gold medals on that occasion, in the uneven bars, beam and floor, and 2 silver
    medals, in the all-around and in the team competitions.




    The
    last major competition she took part in was the 1989 World Championship, held
    in Stuttgart. Once again, she won the uneven bars, beam and floor events, and
    added another silver medal in the team competition.




    After
    her retirement from competitions, Daniela Silivaș settled in the US, where she
    is a gymnastics coach.

  • Top-notch Romanian athletes at the end of their career

    Top-notch Romanian athletes at the end of their career


    Attention-grabbing
    in 2021 was, among other things, the retirement of several top-flight Romanian athletes.
    Among them, fencer Ana-Maria Popescu, tennis player Horia
    Tecau as well as gymnasts Larisa Iordache and Marian Drăgulescu.


    For the fifth time
    running, in 2021 Ana-Maria Popescu has been designated the world’s best epee
    fencer. According to the final rankings, Ana-Maria Popescu was again at the top
    of the table. In the last confrontation of her career, in early December, Ana Maria
    Popescu came in 2nd at the MK Fencing Academy International Epee
    Cup, a World Cup stage event held in Dubai. Ana-Maria Popescu made her
    retirement public immediately after the contest.


    Lovers of fencing
    know her as Ana-Maria Branza. She was born on November 26, 1984 in Bucharest. Ana
    Maria first compelled recognition when she stepped onto the third step of the
    podium at the World Seniors Championships held in 2002 in Lisbon. Ana-Maria was only 18 back then. All hopes were
    pinned on the then up-and-coming Romanian fencer ahead of the Athens Olympics
    in 2004. However, she unassumingly cane in 16th. Ana-Maria Popescu’s
    stunning comeback occurred at the Beijing Olympics in 2008, when she walked
    away with silver, at that time the Romanian delegation’s best performance at
    the Olympics in China. However, 2016 was the year when Ana-Maria Popescu’s
    career best happened; at the Rio Olympics, the Romanian won gold with the epee
    national team. Ana-Maria Popescu then went on to win silver in the women’s
    singles as part of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.


    Tennis player Horia
    Tecau is Romania’s best men’s doubles tennis player. For the seventh time running,
    in 2021 Tecau advanced to the Champions Tournament, jointly with the German Kevin
    Krawietz. In Turin, Tecau and Krawietz succeeded a win and sustained two
    defeats. Horia Tecau announcement his retirement shortly afterwards. At the previous
    editions of the Champions Tournament, Tecau twice competed alongside Sweden’s Robert
    Lindstedt. Horia Tecau also paired up with the Dutch Jean-Julien Rojer four
    times. Tecau and Rojer emerged as winners of the tournament in 2015.


    Horia Tecau was
    born on January 19, 1985 in Brasov. In 2002, pairing up with Florin Mergea, Tecau
    won the Wimbledon men’s doubles juniors’ title. From July 2008, Horia Tecau had
    been placed among the world’s top 100 doubles tennis players. Since November 2009,
    Horia Tecau has been placed among the world’s top 50 tennis players. And that’s all from Sports today. You can also
    access our sports items at rri.ro and on Facebook. Tecau then constantly ascended
    according to the world’s men’s doubles rankings, reaching as far as the
    runner-up position in November 2015. Tecau won 38 men’s doubles ATP tournaments
    and played 24 finals. Pairing up with the Dutch Jean-Julien Rojer, Tecau twice
    won Grand Slam tournaments, in Wimbledon, in 2015 and the US Open, in 2017. In
    2012, Horia Tecau won the mixed doubles version of the Australian Open jointly
    with Bethanie Mattek-Sands of the US. At the Rio Olympics in 2016, pairing up
    with Florin Mergea, Tecau walked away with silver. Horia Tecau has been a full-time
    member of Romania’s Davis Cup team since 2003.


    The best Romanian gymnast
    in recent years, Larisa Iordache put an end to her career in 2021. Larisa was
    born on June 19, 1996, in Bucharest. Her debut in major seniors’ competitions
    occurred in 2012, when in the singles and the teams’ competitions she won gold in
    the floor event and silver in the beam event, as part of the European Championship
    in Brussels. In the nations’ competition in 2012 at the London Olympics, Larisa
    Iordache won bronze. At the European Championship in Moscow in 2013, Larisa won
    gold in the beam event and stepped onto the second step of the podium in the
    all-around, floor and vault events. At the World Championship in Antwerp, also
    in 2013, Larisa Iordache won bronze in the floor event. In 2014, Larisa
    Iordache won gold in the European Championship held in Sofia, in the floor
    event and the nations’ competition. She also won silver in the beam event and
    bronze in the vault event. Then Larisa Iordache won silver in the Nanning World
    Championship in the all-around and floor events. In 2015, Larisa Iordache won
    bronze in the all-around event as part of the World Championship in Glasgow. 2016
    was rather uneventful for Larisa because of an injury. In 2017 she resumed
    participation in competitions and won bronze in the beam event as part of the European
    Championship held in Cluj. Yet Larisa Iordache’s stunning comeback occurred in December
    2020; at the European Championship in Turkey’s Mersin she won gold in the beam
    and floor events and two silver medals in the all-around vault event and,
    respectively, in the nations’ competition. At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 Larisa
    Iordache qualified to the beam final with the fourth-best score. However, Larisa
    was unable to compete in the final because of a health condition.


    One
    of the longest-lasting gymnasts of all time, Marian Dragulescu, was born on December
    18, 1980, in Bucharest Marian Drăgulescu retired from competition in 2021, at
    the age of 41. He has the most impressive record among Romanian men gymnasts. Marian
    won one gold medal and two other bronze medals at the Athens Olympics in 2004. He
    then won eight gold and two silver medals in World championships. In European Championships,
    Marian Dragulescu won 18 medals, of which ten gold, six silver and two bronze
    medals. Dragulescu was designated the Best Athlete of the year in 2005 and 2009.
    There even is a vault exercise bearing Marian Dragulescu’s name. (EN)

  • Romania at the Olympic games

    Romania at the Olympic games


    Romania
    was one of the countries where gymnastics has had a long-standing history. In
    the United Principalities capital city, in 1867, a couple of Saxon merchants
    hailing from Sibiu and Brasov initiated the Bukarester Turnverein Society, the
    Gymnastics Association of Bucharest. The Romanian Central Arms, Gymnastics and
    Target Shooting Society was founded in 1876 by Professors Gheorghe Moceanu and Constantin
    Constantiniu. The latter body played a key role in the promotion of physical
    education and sports. Periodically, the Society organized contests at local and
    national level. In the school curricula, gymnastics was included as a
    discipline also beginning the 19th century. Gymnastics was a compulsory subject
    in quite a few educational institutions countrywide. At competitional level,
    Romanian gymnastics had its representatives for the first time at the 1936
    edition of the Olympic games in Berlin. Ever since, Romanian gymnasts have been
    a regular presence at the Olympics, save for the 1948 edition of the games,
    held in London.


    As an
    absolute first, Romanian gymnasts walked home with medals in 1956, at the
    Olympic games in Melbourne. Back then Elena Leustean won the bronze medal in
    the floor event; also bronze went to the Romanian women’s team, in the nations
    competition. Romanian gymnastics’ blazing trail actually began two decades
    later, with Nadia Comaneci. For the first time ever in the history of artistic
    gymnastics, on July 18, 1976, at the Olympic games in Montreal, Nadia Comaneci
    got a 10, with an uneven parallel bars exercise. Back in the day her
    performance was impressive thanks to its minuteness and force; the exercise is
    still a model for today’s gymnasts. At that time it was the best exercise ever
    to have been performed, reason enough for the referees to admit its perfection.
    It was one of the memorable moments in the history of artistic gymnastics.
    After the Montreal edition of the Olympics, gymnastics enjoyed the widest
    audience for each of the following editions of the Olympic games. According to
    the collective mindset, Nadia is still the greatest gymnast of all time. Nadia
    Comaneci was the role model for hundreds of thousands of little girls all over
    the world, who took up gymnastics at a professional level.


    45
    years on, Romanian gymnastics has been experiencing a large-scale crisis. We recall
    that ahead of the 2016 edition of the Olympic Games in Rio, no Romanian
    gymnastics team qualified for the women’s or the men’s version of the games.
    Romanian gymnastics’ dismal run is the
    same ahead of the Tokyo Olympics. Only three Romanian gymnasts will compete in
    Japan. Marian Dragulescu will prove his mettle in the men’s vault event.
    Joining him will be Larisa Iordache and Maria Holbura, in the women’s
    all-around event. One of the veterans in the Olympics, 40 year-old Dragulescu is
    most likely to walk away with a medal. Dragulescu’s record is outstanding. In
    the Athens Olympics in 2004, Marian Dragulescu won one silver and two bronze medals. In the World Championships, Dragulescu won eight gold and two silver
    medals. Dragulescu won eighteen medals in European Championships, of which ten
    were gold, six silver and two bronze medals. The only medal that is missing is
    an Olympic gold medal. Marian Dragulescu was designated the best athlete of the
    year in 2005 and 2009. In the vault event, an exercise bears Dragulescu’s name.


    (Translated by Eugen Nasta)



  • Romania at the Olympic games

    Romania at the Olympic games


    Romania
    was one of the countries where gymnastics has had a long-standing history. In
    the United Principalities capital city, in 1867, a couple of Saxon merchants
    hailing from Sibiu and Brasov initiated the Bukarester Turnverein Society, the
    Gymnastics Association of Bucharest. The Romanian Central Arms, Gymnastics and
    Target Shooting Society was founded in 1876 by Professors Gheorghe Moceanu and Constantin
    Constantiniu. The latter body played a key role in the promotion of physical
    education and sports. Periodically, the Society organized contests at local and
    national level. In the school curricula, gymnastics was included as a
    discipline also beginning the 19th century. Gymnastics was a compulsory subject
    in quite a few educational institutions countrywide. At competitional level,
    Romanian gymnastics had its representatives for the first time at the 1936
    edition of the Olympic games in Berlin. Ever since, Romanian gymnasts have been
    a regular presence at the Olympics, save for the 1948 edition of the games,
    held in London.


    As an
    absolute first, Romanian gymnasts walked home with medals in 1956, at the
    Olympic games in Melbourne. Back then Elena Leustean won the bronze medal in
    the floor event; also bronze went to the Romanian women’s team, in the nations
    competition. Romanian gymnastics’ blazing trail actually began two decades
    later, with Nadia Comaneci. For the first time ever in the history of artistic
    gymnastics, on July 18, 1976, at the Olympic games in Montreal, Nadia Comaneci
    got a 10, with an uneven parallel bars exercise. Back in the day her
    performance was impressive thanks to its minuteness and force; the exercise is
    still a model for today’s gymnasts. At that time it was the best exercise ever
    to have been performed, reason enough for the referees to admit its perfection.
    It was one of the memorable moments in the history of artistic gymnastics.
    After the Montreal edition of the Olympics, gymnastics enjoyed the widest
    audience for each of the following editions of the Olympic games. According to
    the collective mindset, Nadia is still the greatest gymnast of all time. Nadia
    Comaneci was the role model for hundreds of thousands of little girls all over
    the world, who took up gymnastics at a professional level.


    45
    years on, Romanian gymnastics has been experiencing a large-scale crisis. We recall
    that ahead of the 2016 edition of the Olympic Games in Rio, no Romanian
    gymnastics team qualified for the women’s or the men’s version of the games.
    Romanian gymnastics’ dismal run is the
    same ahead of the Tokyo Olympics. Only three Romanian gymnasts will compete in
    Japan. Marian Dragulescu will prove his mettle in the men’s vault event.
    Joining him will be Larisa Iordache and Maria Holbura, in the women’s
    all-around event. One of the veterans in the Olympics, 40 year-old Dragulescu is
    most likely to walk away with a medal. Dragulescu’s record is outstanding. In
    the Athens Olympics in 2004, Marian Dragulescu won one silver and two bronze medals. In the World Championships, Dragulescu won eight gold and two silver
    medals. Dragulescu won eighteen medals in European Championships, of which ten
    were gold, six silver and two bronze medals. The only medal that is missing is
    an Olympic gold medal. Marian Dragulescu was designated the best athlete of the
    year in 2005 and 2009. In the vault event, an exercise bears Dragulescu’s name.


    (Translated by Eugen Nasta)