Natalia Yurchenko

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Natalia Yurchenko
Наталья Юрченко
Full nameRussian: Наталья Владимировна Юрченко
Country represented Soviet Union
Former countries representedRussia
Born (1965-01-26) 26 January 1965 (age 59)
Norilsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
HometownRussia
Height155 cm (5 ft 1 in)
DisciplineArtistic gymnastics
LevelSenior Elite Gymnast
Years on national team1978–86 (URS)
Eponymous skillsYurchenko, Yurchenko loop
Medal record
Representing  Soviet Union
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1983 Budapest Team
Gold medal – first place 1983 Budapest All-Around
Gold medal – first place 1985 Montreal Team
World Cup Final
Gold medal – first place 1982 Zagreb All-Around
Gold medal – first place 1982 Zagreb Vault
Gold medal – first place 1982 Zagreb Balance Beam
Silver medal – second place 1982 Zagreb Uneven Bars
Friendship Games
Gold medal – first place 1984 Olomouc Team
Gold medal – first place 1984 Olomouc Vault
Silver medal – second place 1984 Olomouc Uneven Bars

Natalia Vladimirovna Yurchenko (Russian: Наталья Владимировна Юрченко) (born 26 January 1965) is a retired Soviet artistic gymnast, who won the women's all-around gold medal at the 1983 World Championships. Renowned for her innovative and daring gymnastics, she is best known as the originator of the Yurchenko vault family, which is a round-off back handspring entry onto the vault, and then performing a series of twists and flips off.

Personal life[edit]

Yurchenko was born on 26 January 1965 in Norilsk, Russian SFSR. In 1999, she immigrated to the United States. She lives in Chicago with her husband, Igor Sklyarov.

Career[edit]

Yurchenko was coached by Vladislav Rastorotsky at the Dinamo sports society in Rostov on Don. Her first international competition was the 1978 Junior Friendship Tournament, where she placed 5th all-around and won gold medals in the team competition and on bars. In the same year she debuted in the senior Riga International meet, earning the bronze on the floor.

Four years later, she won the all-around title at the USSR Championships, USSR Cup, at the prestigious Moscow News tournament and the World Cup. In 1983, she won almost all gold medals (except for the floor exercise) at the University Games and the USSR Championships. She also became the all-around World Champion, achieving two perfect 10s in the process. She qualified to all the event finals, but withdrew from the uneven bars, balance beam and floor exercise finals after an injury during the vault final, leaving with two world championship titles.

At the Friendship Games in Olomouc, Yurchenko returned from injury, battled with Olga Mostepanova and managed to win the gold medal on vault and team competition. In 1985, she once again won almost all events at the University Games (except vault and balance beam), and contributed to the team's gold medal at the World Championships.

Yurchenko was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of the USSR. She retired from gymnastics in 1986, but made an appearance at the 1991 World Professional Championships in Fairfax, Virginia.

Eponymous skills[edit]

The Yurchenko vault is named after her in the Code of Points. The Yurchenko family is now a group of vaults based on the entry she used in her original Yurchenko vault (a round-off onto the table, followed by a back tuck). The Yurchenko loop is another skill she originated, but it no longer appears in the Code of Points.[1]

Apparatus Name Description Difficulty[a]
Vault Yurchenko Round-off flic-flac on - tucked salto backward off 3.0
  1. ^ Valid for the 2022-2024 Code of Points

Post-competitive career[edit]

Yurchenko coached at LVSA, a gymnastics club in Pennsylvania, for almost nine years, at Parkettes National Gymnastics Training Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and at the Lakeshore Academy of Artistic Gymnastics in Chicago.[2] In June 2015, she opened her own gymnastics academy, C.I.T.Y. Club Gymnastics Academy, in Chicago's South Loop.[3]

Achievements[edit]

Year Event AA Team VT UB BB FX
1982 World Cup 1st 1st 2nd 1st
USSR Cup 1st 1st
USSR Championships 1st 1st 1st 1st
1983
World Championships 1st 1st
USSR Championships 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd
1984 Friendship Games 1st 1st 2nd
1985
World Championships 1st
USSR Championships 3rd

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2022-2024 Code of Points Women's Artistic Gymnastics" (PDF). International Gymnastics Federation. p. 42, 67, 206. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  2. ^ http://lakeshoreacademy.com/ Lakeshore Academy of Artistic Gymnastics
  3. ^ "C.I.T.Y. Club Gymnastics Academy".

External links and sources[edit]

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