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Nadia Comaneci

 
Who2 Biography: Nadia Comaneci, Gymnast

  • Born: 12 November 1961
  • Birthplace: Onesti, Moldava, Romania
  • Best Known As: Perfect-scoring Romanian gymnast of the 1976 Olympics

At the age of 14, Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci became an international sensation after her performance at Montreal's 1976 Olympics. She earned seven perfect scores and five medals, including three golds, and was the first gymnast to ever earn a perfect score in Olympic competition. Comaneci went on to compete in the 1980 Moscow games and brought her lifetime medal total to five golds, three silvers and one bronze. She retired from competition in 1984 and became a judge and the coach of the Romanian national team. In 1989 Comaneci fled Romania and was granted political asylum in the United States. She settled in Norman, Oklahoma and married U.S. gymnast Bart Connor in 1996. Comaneci became a U.S. citizen in 2001.

Her 1976 gold medals were for uneven bars, balance beam and all-around; Her 1980 golds were for balance beam and floor exercise.

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(born Nov. 12, 1961, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, Rom.) Romanian-born gymnast. Comaneci entered her first international competition in 1972 and won three gold medals. In the 1976 Olympic Games, the first in which a perfect score of 10 was ever awarded in an Olympic gymnastic event, she received an astounding seven perfect scores and won the gold medals for the balance beam, uneven parallel bars, and all-around competitions. In the 1980 Olympics she won gold medals for the beam and the floor exercises. She retired from competition in 1984 and defected to the U.S. in 1989.

For more information on Nadia Comaneci, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Nadia Comaneci
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Nadia Comaneci (born 1961) is one of the most-celebrated gymnasts in the history of the sport. At the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, she was the first person in Olympic history to score a perfect 10 in gymnastics. In all, she earned seven perfect scores at the 1976 games.

The future Olympic star was born on November 12, 1961, in Onesti, Romania, to Gheorghe, an auto mechanic, and Stephania Comaneci. By the age of six, she was already hooked on gymnastics. Then she was discovered by famed Romanian gymnastics coach, Bela Karolyi. He and his wife were looking for youngsters for the National Junior Team and he decided she had potential. She began to train two to three hours a day with Karolyi and he was impressed with her work ethnic.

Even great talent and a strong work ethnic did not guarantee results. Comaneci remembered that in early gymnastic competitions, she fell a lot, and that motivated her to keep practicing. In 1969, at the age of seven, she entered her first official competition, the Romanian National Junior Championship. She finished in thirteenth place. The following year, she won the competition. When she turned 12, she went to live and train at a state-run gymnastics training school. She trained with Karolyi eight hours a day, six days a week.

Comaneci continued to get better and she started to win her competitions regularly. At the time, her role model was the dominant woman in gymnastics, Soviet star Olga Korbut. She continued to win competitions and in January of 1975, became eligible for senior level international competitions. She entered the European championships in May of that year and won four gold medals and one silver medal.

The summer Olympic games were approaching, and Comaneci wanted to be ready. As a warm-up, she competed in the American Cup competition in New York City in March of 1976. In the competition, one male and one female gymnast represent each country in the meet. She won the competition. Standing next to her on the winners' stand after they both won silver cups was an 18-year-old American, Bart Conner, who was also heading for the Olympics. A photographer, thinking the blond, handsome American and the tiny dark-haired wisp of a girl would make a nice picture, asked Conner to kiss her. He obliged with a peck on the cheek. Although Conner, now her husband, says he remembers the moment, Comaneci says never thought much about it.

Comaneci arrived at the 1976 Olympic Games, in Montreal, with her reputation firmly established. On the first night of the competition, July 18, she became the first person in Olympic history to earn a perfect score (a 10.00 on the uneven bars) in gymnastics. The following night she continued her streak, earning perfect scores for her performances on the uneven bars and balance beam. A few nights later, she again received perfect scores for her balance beam and uneven bar performances. In all, Comaneci earned seven perfect scores and won gold medals for the all-around competition, the balance beam, and the uneven bars. The Romanians also won the silver medal in the team competition. Comaneci became the darling of the gymnastics world and was on the cover of several magazines. After the Olympic competition, the Comaneci family got a one month vacation and a new car from the Romanian government.

The times after the 1976 Olympic Games were tough for Comaneci. Her parents divorced and Romanian sports officials separated her from Karolyi and made her train with another coach. Upset by the turn of events, Comaneci swallowed bleach to get attention. The government then allowed her to train with Karolyi once again. In 1979, Comaneci allegedly became involved in with the son of Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. Reflecting the turmoil in Comaneci's personal life, her performance at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, Russia, didn't measure up to her personal standards. Although she did win two gold medals and one silver medal, she fell off the uneven bars, considered her best event.

Back home in Romania, life was becoming difficult for Comaneci. First, her beloved coach, Karolyi, defected to the United States in 1981. His revolt was a protest against the oppressive government of Ceausescu. Comaneci was the first to discover his absence, and although she thought about following him, she felt that she could not leave her family. At the age of 19, she participated in her last major competition. Shortly before attending the 1984 Olympic Games (as a honored guest who traveled with the Romanian delegation) that were held in Los Angeles, California, she officially retired from gymnastics.

Because Romania's government regarded her as a valuable Communist model of domination in sports and because it feared that she might defect to the United States, they no longer allowed her to travel to Western countries. For the next several years, she was literally out of sight to the Western press. In the meantime, officials kept a watchful eye on her whereabouts, read her mail, and even tapped the phone in the eight-room house that had been provided for her and her family. Although her fame gave her an easier life than most of her countrymen, Comaneci more and more thought about defecting.

Finally, in late 1989, the 27-year-old found a way. She met Romanian-born Constantin Panait, a roofer who lived in Florida, and learned that he helped people escape to America. Her mind made up, she told only her brother of her plans. She later said she was afraid her parents would have a heart attack if she told them. With five other Romanians, she made a dangerous six-hour walk through the cold of winter to the Hungarian border, where they were stopped by Hungarian police who immediately recognized Comaneci. At first they asked her to stay in their country, but they did let her go on. The group headed for the Austrian border and the American Embassy. Soon they were on a plane to New York City.

The former Olympic star arrived in the United States overweight and heavily made up. Americans were shocked at her appearance and rumors started to hit the press. They charged that Panait, who was now posing as her manager, was a married man with children and that Comaneci was having an affair with him. She denied any such relationship and claimed that Panait was in fact controlling her life and her money and she felt helpless to escape from this new kind of bondage.

Lucky for Comaneci, the world of gymnastic competitors is a tight community. Some of her old friends, including Conner and former Romanian rugby coach Alexandru Stefu, living in Montreal, began to think that she was in trouble. Stefu lured the elusive Panait, along with Comaneci, to a meeting, where she admitted that he was mistreating her. The next day, Panait disappeared with her money. It was a hard lesson, but she was free at last.

Comaneci went to Montreal to live with Stefu and his family. There she returned to gymnastic form and kept up her budding friendship with Conner, who was living in Norman, Oklahoma. When Stefu died in a snorkeling accident, Comaneci moved to Norman. She lived with Paul Ziert, Conner's coach and a friend of her former coach, Bela Karolyi, and his family. Comaneci and Conner began dating, and together they performed in a number of gymnastic competitions. They also worked at the Bart Conner Gymnastics Academy opened by Conner and Ziert. The academy had 37 coaches and 1,000 students.

Besides teaching and performing, Comaneci signed several product endorsement contracts. In 1994, Conner proposed to her while the couple was in Amsterdam. In April of 1996, they were married in an elaborate wedding in Bucharest, Romania, which Sports Illustrated described as "the gymnastics world's version of a royal wedding." She had introduced him to her family in Romania the year before, the first time she had seen her father in five years. (Her mother had previously visited her in the United States.) The government treated them like royalty (Ceausescu had been killed in an overthrow of the Communist government shortly after Comaneci defected), and they were given the use of the Parliament House for the reception.

Comaneci has made a new life for herself in the United States. She and her husband travel extensively throughout the country for exhibitions and commercial appearances, besides their work at the academy in Norman. She hasn't forgotten the dark times, but she doesn't like to talk about them. She is pleased, however, when people stop and talk about her Olympic performances. People still remember how Comaneci captivated fans, judges, and viewers at the 1976 Olympics, and how she changed the world of gymnastics forever.

Further Reading

International Gymnast, February 1991; February 1995; June/July 1996.

Life, March 1990.

New York Times, April 5, 1996.

Oklahoma Family, January 1998.

People, December 18, 1989; November 26, 1990; March 27, 1995; July 15, 1996.

Sports Illustrated, December 11, 1989; May 6, 1996.

Texas Chronicle, August 5, 1987.

USA Today, October 18, 1994.

"Nadia Comaneci," http://www.nadiacomaneci.com (May 15, 1998).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Nadia Comaneci
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Comaneci, Nadia (nädyä kōmänēch), 1961-, Romanian-American gymnast. Under the tutelage of coach Bela Karolyi, she rose to prominence in the celebrated Romanian gymnastics program. Comaneci was known for the boldness of her routines and her implacable composure. In the 1976 Olympics, she won five medals-three gold, one silver, and one bronze. She also scored a perfect 10 in two events, a score no one had previously achieved. In the 1980 Olympics, she won two gold and two silver medals. The difficulty of her performances and the high level of her technical execution resulted in a redefinition of the sport and of judges' and viewers' expectations of women's gymnastics. She defected to the United States in 1989; in 1996 she married the American Bart Conner, a 1984 Olympic gold medalist. She and Conner were pioneers in pairs gymnastics. An American citizen since 2001, Comaneci has worked as a coach since retiring from competitive gymnastics.
Quotes By: Nadia Comaneci
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Quotes:

"Hard work has made it easy. That is my secret. That is why I win."

Wikipedia: Nadia Comăneci
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Nadia Comăneci
NadiaComaneci autograf2.jpg
Personal information
Full name: Nadia Elena Comăneci
Country Represented:  Romania
Date of birth: November 12, 1961 (1961-11-12) (age 48)
Place of birth: Oneşti
Discipline: Women's artistic gymnastics
Level: Senior international
Gym: National Training Center
Former coach(es): Béla Károlyi; Marta Károlyi
Choreographer: Geza Pozar
Eponymous skills: Comăneci salto (uneven bars)
Retired: 1981

Nadia Elena Comăneci (Romanian pronunciation: [koməˈnet͡ʃʲ]; born November 12, 1961) is a Romanian gymnast, winner of three Olympic gold medals at the 1976 Summer Olympics, and the first ever gymnast to be awarded a perfect score of 10, in an Olympic gymnastic event. She is also the winner of two gold medals at the 1980 summer Olympics. She is one of the best-known gymnasts in the world and, along with Olga Korbut, is credited with popularizing the sport around the world.[1][2][3]

Contents

Early life

Comăneci was born in Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej (now Oneşti), Romania, as the daughter of Gheorghe and Ştefania-Alexandrina.[4][5] Her pregnant mother was watching a Russian film in which the heroine's name was Nadya, the diminutive version of the Russian name Nadyezhda (which means, literally, "Hope"). She decided that her daughter would be named Nadia, too. Comăneci also has a younger brother named Adrian.[6]

Early gymnastics career

Nadia began gymnastics in kindergarten with a local team called "Flame", with coaches Duncan and Munteanu.[7][8] At age 6 she was chosen to attend Béla Károlyi's experimental gymnastics school after Karolyi spotted her and a friend turning cartwheels in a schoolyard.[9][10][11]

Nadia was training with the Károlyis by the time she was 7 years old, in 1969. She was one of the first students at the gymnastics school established in Oneşti by Béla and his wife, Marta, who would later defect to the United States and become coaches of many prominent American gymnasts. Unlike many of the other students at the Károlyi school, Comăneci was able to commute from home for many years because she lived in the area.[12]

Nadia placed 13th in her first Romanian National Championships in 1969. A year later, in 1970, she began competing as a member of her hometown team and became the youngest gymnast ever to win the Romanian Nationals.[4] In 1971, she participated in her first international competition, a dual junior meet between Romania and Yugoslavia, winning her first all-around title and contributing to the team gold. For the next few years, she competed as a junior in numerous national contests in Romania and additional dual meets with nearby countries such as Hungary, Italy and Poland.[13] At the age of 11, in 1973, she won the all-around gold, as well as the vault and uneven bars titles, at the Junior Friendship Tournament (Druzhba), an important meet for junior gymnasts.[13][14]

Nadia first major international success came at the age of 13, when she nearly swept the 1975 European Championships in Skien, Norway, winning the all-around and gold medals on every event but the floor exercise, in which she placed second. She continued to enjoy success in other meets in 1975, winning the all-around at the "Champions All" competition and placing first in the all-around, vault, beam, and bars at the Romanian National Championships. In the Pre-Olympic test event in Montreal, Comăneci won the all-around and the balance beam golds, as well as silvers in the vault, floor, and bars behind accomplished Soviet gymnast Nellie Kim, who would prove to be one of her greatest rivals over the next five years.[13]

In March 1976, Comăneci competed in the inaugural edition of the American Cup at Madison Square Garden in New York. She received unprecedented scores of 10.0, which signified a perfect routine without any deductions, on vault in both the preliminary and final rounds of competition and won the all-around.[15] Comaneci also received 10s in other meets in 1976, including the prestigious Chunichi Cup competition in Japan, where she posted perfect marks on the vault and uneven bars.[16]

The international community took note of Comăneci: she was named the United Press International's "Female Athlete of the Year" for 1975.[17]

Montreal Olympics

At the age of 14, Comăneci became one of the stars of the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal. During the team portion of the competition, her routine on the uneven bars was scored at a 10.0. It was the first time in modern Olympic gymnastics history that the score had ever been awarded. The scoreboards were not even equipped to display scores of 10.0—so Nadia's perfect marks were reported on the boards as 1.00 instead.[18] Over the course of the Olympics, Comăneci would earn six additional 10s, en route to capturing the all-around, beam, and bars titles and a bronze medal on the floor exercise. The Romanian team also placed second in the team competition.[19]

Comăneci was the first Romanian gymnast to win the all-around title at the Olympics. She also holds the record as the youngest Olympic gymnastics all-around champion ever; with the revised age-eligibility requirements in the sport (gymnasts must now turn 16 in the calendar year to compete in the Olympics; in 1976 gymnasts had to be 14 by the first day of the competition[20]), it is currently not possible to legally break this record.

Comăneci's achievements at the Olympics generated a significant amount of media attention. The theme song from the American soap opera The Young and the Restless became associated with her after cinematographer/feature reporter Robert Riger used it against slow-motion montages of Nadia on the television program ABC's Wide World Of Sports. The song became a top ten single in the fall of 1976, and the composer, Barry De Vorzon, renamed it to "Nadia's Theme" after her.[21] However, Comăneci never actually performed to "Nadia's Theme." Her floor exercise music was a medley of the songs "Yes Sir, That's My Baby" and "Jump in the Line" arranged for piano.[11]

She was the 1976 BBC Sports Personality of the Year in the overseas athletes category[22] and the Associated Press's 1976 "Female Athlete of the Year".[23] She also retained her title as the UPI Female Athlete of the Year.[17] Back home in Romania, Comăneci's success led her to be named a "Hero of Socialist Labor;" she was the youngest Romanian to receive such recognition during the administration of Nicolae Ceauşescu.[7]

1977–1980

Comăneci successfully defended her European all-around title in 1977, but when questions about the scoring were raised, Ceauşescu ordered the Romanian gymnasts to return home. The team followed orders and controversially walked out of the competition during the event finals.[7][24]

Following the 1977 Europeans, the Romanian Gymnastics Federation removed Comăneci from her longtime coaches, the Károlyis, and sent her to Bucharest to train at the 23 August sports complex. The change was not positive for Comăneci. Grappling with both the stress of her parents' divorce and the new training environment, she was extremely unhappy and her gymnastics and overall fitness suffered.[7][25] An overweight and out-of-shape Comăneci showed up at the 1978 World Championships. A fall from the uneven bars resulted in a 4th place finish in the all-around behind Elena Mukhina, Nellie Kim, and Natalia Shaposhnikova, but Comăneci won the beam title.

After the 1978 Worlds, Comăneci was permitted to return to Deva and to the Károlyis.[26] In 1979, a newly slim and motivated Comăneci won her third consecutive European all-around title, becoming the first gymnast, male or female, to achieve the feat. At the World Championships that December, Comăneci led the field after the compulsory competition but was hospitalized before the optional portion of the team competition for blood poisoning caused by a cut in her wrist from her metal grip buckle. Against doctors' orders, she left the hospital and competed on the beam, where she scored a 9.95. Her performance helped give the Romanians their first team gold medal. After her performance, Comăneci spent several days recovering in All Saints Hospital and underwent a minor surgical procedure for the infected hand, which had developed an abscess.[27][28][29]

Comăneci participated in the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, where she placed second, by a small margin, to Yelena Davydova. She defended her Olympic title in the balance beam and tied with Nellie Kim for the gold medal in the floor exercise. The Romanian team finished second overall.

Comăneci retired from competition in 1981. Her official retirement ceremony took place in Bucharest in 1984 and was attended by the International Olympic Committee Chairman.[18]

Post retirement

Nadia Comăneci with her family

In 1981, Comăneci participated in a gymnastics exhibition tour in the United States.[30] During the tour, her coaches, Béla and Marta Károlyi, along with the Romanian team choreographer Géza Pozsár, defected.[31] Upon her return to Romania, Comăneci's actions were strictly monitored. She was granted leave to attend the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles but was supervised for the entire trip. Aside from that journey, and a few select trips to Moscow and Cuba, Comăneci was forbidden to leave the country for any reason."[18] "Life..." she wrote in her autobiography, "took on a new bleakness."[32]

In Romania, between 1984 and 1989, Comăneci was a member of the Romanian Gymnastics Federation and helped coach the Romanian junior gymnasts. In November 1989, a few weeks before the Revolution, she defected with a group of other young Romanians. Her overland journey took her through Hungary, Austria, and finally, to the United States.[7][19][33] Her initial arrival in the United States generated some negative press, focusing on her penchant for heavy makeup and trashy clothes, the fact that Constantin Panait (a Romanian exile who helped her escape from Romania and was her constant companion) was a married father of 4, and hinted at an eating disorder and an unsavory life left behind in Romania.[34]

Comăneci initially settled in Montreal. With the help of friends, she successfully distanced herself from Panait and the image problems of her initial arrival from Romania. Comăneci spent most of her time touring and promoting lines of gymnastics apparel and aerobic equipment. She also dabbled in modeling, appearing in advertisements for wedding dresses and Jockey underwear.[19]

While she was living in Montreal, Bart Conner, whom she had met for the first time in 1976 at the American Cup, contacted her and invited her to live in Oklahoma. They became engaged in 1994. Together with Conner, she returned to Romania for the first time since her defection (and since the fall of Communism and Ceauşescu's death), and the couple were married in Bucharest on April 27, 1996. The ceremony was broadcast live in Romania, and the reception was held in the former presidential palace.[19][35]

On June 29, 2001, Comăneci became a naturalized citizen of the United States. She has also retained her Romanian passport, making her a dual citizen.[7]

In December 2003, Comăneci's autobiography, Letters To A Young Gymnast, was published. The memoir answers questions that she has received in letters from fans. She has also been the subject of several unofficial biographies, television documentaries and a made-for-television film, Nadia, that was broadcast in the United States shortly before the 1984 Olympics.[36]

Comăneci and Conner welcomed their first child, a baby boy named Dylan Paul Conner, on June 3, 2006 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[37][38]

Recent activities

Comăneci is active in many charities and international organizations. In 1999, she became the first athlete to be invited to speak at the United Nations to launch the Year 2000 International Year of Volunteers. She is currently the Vice-Chair of the Board Of Directors of the International Special Olympics and Vice President of the Board of Directors of the Muscular Dystrophy Association.[19][39] She has also personally funded the construction and operation of the Nadia Comăneci Children's Clinic, a clinic in Bucharest that provides low-cost and free medical and social support to Romanian children.[18]

In 2003, the Romanian government appointed her as an Honorary Consul General of Romania to the United States to deal with bilateral relations between the two nations. She performs this function based out of her Norman, Oklahoma, office.[40]

In the world of gymnastics, Comaneci is the Honorary President of the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, the Honorary President of Romanian Olympic Committee, Ambassador of Sports of Romania and a member of the International Gymnastics Federation Foundation. She and her husband own the Bart Conner Gymnastics Academy, the Perfect 10 Production Company and several sports equipment shops. They are also the editors of International Gymnast magazine. Additionally, Comăneci and Conner have provided television commentary for many gymnastics meets, most recently the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne[19] and the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing[41]. In 2004, her 10.0 Montreal uneven bars routine was featured in a commercial for Adidas which ran during the Athens Olympics.

On August 10, 2007, Nadia was a "mob" participant on the American version of the game show 1 vs 100, and was not eliminated until the last 20 members of the mob were left. In January 2008, she was one of the contestants in the celebrity edition of Donald Trump's television program The Apprentice.[42]

Awards

Comăneci received the Olympic Order, the highest award given by the International Olympic Committee, in 1984 and 2004. She is the only person to receive this honor twice, and was also the youngest recipient. She has also been inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[43]

Special skills

Comăneci was known for her clean technique, innovative and difficult original skills, and her stoic, cool demeanor in competition. [11][44][45][46]

On the uneven bars, Comaneci performed her own release move, a kip to front salto. The skill is named after her in the women's Code of Points and, as of 2005, was rated as an 'E' element.[44][45]

On balance beam, Comăneci was the first gymnast to successfully perform an aerial walkover and an aerial cartwheel-back handspring flight series. She is also credited as being the first gymnast to perform a double-twist dismount.[11][44][45]

Comăneci's skills on the floor exercise included a double back salto and a double twist.[45]

Pop culture references

  • Nadia is a 1984 made-for-television biopic of Nadia Comăneci.
  • When Joanne Charis states that the girls need to stay and practice their routines in the movie Stick It, Meena responds: "Who died and made you Nadia?"
  • In the ABC hit television show, Lost season 3 episode 11, the character Mikhail Bakunin (named after the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin) has a cat named Nadia, named after Nadia Comăneci, whom he calls "the greatest athlete the world has ever known." He also reveals that they share a birthday. In addition, the station Mikhail works in is called the "Flame", which is also the name of Comăneci's first gymnastics team.
  • In the CBS TV series, Dallas the character Nicholas Pearce (Jack Scalia) states he knows Romania so well since he's a good friend of Nadia Comăneci.
  • Nadia Turner, singer and actress, and American Idol Season 4 Finalist was named after Nadia Comăneci.
  • Swimmer Anita Nall, who won three Olympic medals including a relay gold, was named Nadia as her father was watching television awaiting her birth.[47]
  • In the 1979 Film Love at First Bite, Dracula is evicted from his castle when the Romanian state claims it as a gymnastic training facility. Dracula, played by George Hamilton is informed that they will be coming with "parallel bars, swings and Nadia Comăneci. Don't be here".
  • In the Japanese drama Honey and Clover, Shinobu Morita makes a reference to Comăneci's signature stance during episode two.
  • In the anime Sohryuden, Matsuri Toba makes a reference to Comăneci as she uses her body's flexibility to free herself from ropes. Her quote was, "Fortunately, the thugs didn't know that when I was in grade school, I had aspired to becoming Japan's answer to Comăneci".

See also

References

  1. ^ The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. (2007). "Gymnastics". infoplease.com. http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0822234.html. Retrieved September 6 2007. 
  2. ^ British Olympic Association (2007). "Gymnastics history British Olympic Association". British Olympic Association. http://www.olympics.org.uk/sporthistory.aspx?gt=S&sp=GA Gymnastics history. Retrieved September 6 2007. 
  3. ^ "Munchkin leads European charge of gymnastics" CBC sports, June 3, 2008
  4. ^ a b "Olympic Champion Nadia Comaneci Young Athlete, August 1978
  5. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 4
  6. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 5
  7. ^ a b c d e f Whatever Happened to Nadia Comaneci? Barbara Fisher and Jennifer Isbister, 2003, Gymnastics Greats.com
  8. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg.
  9. ^ "Olympic Champion Nadia Comaneci Young Athlete, August 1978
  10. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 17-19
  11. ^ a b c d "Nadia Awed Ya Frank Deford, Sports Illustrated, August 2 1976
  12. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 19
  13. ^ a b c List of competitive results Gymn-Forum
  14. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 27-28
  15. ^ "Gymnast Posts Perfect Mark" Robin Herman, New York Times, March 28, 1976
  16. ^ Scores for 1976 Chunichi Cup Gymn-Forum
  17. ^ a b UPI Athletes of the Year
  18. ^ a b c d "Still A Perfect 10" Olympic Review, Paul Ziert, 2005
  19. ^ a b c d e f Legends: Nadia Comaneci International Gymnast magazine
  20. ^ "Within the International Federations" (PDF). Olympic Review, 1980
  21. ^ "Nadia Comaneci: The Perfect 10" International Olympic Committee (IOC) website
  22. ^ List of winners, BBC Sports Personality of the Year (Overseas) BBC press office
  23. ^ Associated Press Athletes of the Year MSN Encarta
  24. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 61-62
  25. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 64-68
  26. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 68 - 72
  27. ^ "Nadia." The Epistle, (All Saints Episcopal Hospital), January 1980
  28. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 87 - 91
  29. ^ Little Girls in Pretty Boxes. Ryan, Joan. 1995, Doubleday. ISBN 0385477902
  30. ^ "Miss Comaneci, 19, Makes Fresh Start". Ira Berkow, New York Times, March 6, 1981
  31. ^ Little Girls in Pretty Boxes. Ryan, Joan. 1995, Doubleday. ISBN 0385477902 pg. 201
  32. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 121
  33. ^ Letters to a Young Gymnast. Comaneci, Nadia. 2004, Basic Books. ISBN 0465012760 pg. 137 - 148
  34. ^ "After Escaping Her Romanian Svengali, Nadia Comaneci Tries to Get Her Life Back on the Beam", People, November 26, 1990 Vol. 34 No. 21
  35. ^ "Nadia Tumbles over Wedding" Cincinnati Post, April 6, 1996
  36. ^ Nadia at the IMDB
  37. ^ "Nadia Comaneci, Bart Conner Welcome Baby Boy" Associated Press, June 6, 2006
  38. ^ "Former Gymnasts Nadia Comaneci and Bart Conner Baptized Their First Child, Dylan Paul" Catalina Iancu, Jurnalul National, August 28 2006
  39. ^ "MDA's Perfect 10s" Muscular Dystrophy Association
  40. ^ Diplomatic List, Office of the Chief of Protocol, U.S. Department of State. Summer 2006. Accessed January 28, 2007.
  41. ^ Roenigk, Alyssa (2008-08-17). "The First Family of Gymnastics". ESPN The Magazine. http://sports.espn.go.com/espnmag/story?id=3540036. Retrieved 2008-08-21. 
  42. ^ "Trump's celebrity 'Apprenti' revealed" Gina Serpe, E! News, November 19 2007
  43. ^ "Nadia Comaneci". International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. http://www.ighof.com/honorees/honorees_nadia.html. Retrieved May 12 2007. 
  44. ^ a b c "SPORTS ACTIVE: NO TURNING BACK - Nadia Comaneci's perfect Olympic 10" George Chesterson, The Independent, April 11, 2004
  45. ^ a b c d "A Great Leap Backward" Anita Verschoth, Sports Illustrated, April 12, 1976
  46. ^ "The Games: Up in the Air" Time, August 2 1976
  47. ^ William A. Henry III (1992-07-27). "Swimming A Bigger Splash". Time magazine. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,976108-1,00.html. Retrieved 2008-01-23. 

External links

Preceded by
Irena Szewińska
United Press International
Athlete of the Year

1975, 1976
Succeeded by
Rosemarie Ackermann
Preceded by
Billie Jean King
Flo Hyman Memorial Award
1998
Succeeded by
Bonnie Blair
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
United States Chris Evert
Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year
1976
Succeeded by
United States Chris Evert


 
 
Learn More
Montreal Olympiad, Part 1 (1977 Sports & Recreation Film)
Games of the XXI Olympiad Montreal 1976 (1977 Sports & Recreation Film)
Nadia (1984 Drama Film)

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Nadia Comaneci biography from Who2.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nadia Comăneci" Read more