Maria Gorokhovskaya

Maria Gorokhovskaya (born October 17, 1921 in Yevpatoria) is a Ukrainian (formerly Soviet) gymnast. At the 1952 Summer Olympics, she won seven medals. Competing for Stroityel Kharkov, Gorokhovskaya won her first USSR title on the balance beam in 1948. She came to the Helsinki Olympics as the two-fold national champion. Soviet gymnastics had never competed at major international tournaments before, and it was the first Olympics in which the country participated. The Soviet gymnasts dominated the competition, with Gorokhovskaya leading them. In all four individual apparatus events - the balance beam, floor exercise, the horse vault and the uneven bars - Gorokhovskaya finished second. This performance earned her the gold medal in the all-around competition, finishing ahead of team-mate Nina Bocharova by eight tenths of a point. With seven of the eight Soviet gymnasts finishing in the top ten, it was clear that the team gold medal would go to them. Gorokhovskaya won her seventh medal in the now discontinued team exercise with portable apparatus, where the Soviet team finished second behind Sweden. Gorokhovskaya made one more international appearance as a part of the winning Soviet team at the 1954 World Championships, and retired afterwards. In 1990, she emigrated to Israel. Gorokhovskaya, Maria Gorokhovskaya, Maria Gorokhovskaya, Maria Gorokhovskaya, Maria Gorokhovskaya, Maria

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
leber optic atrophy
cumbria
die
samuel blommaert
marie bashkirtseff
brand article collecting
princess brassova
computer display standard
video graphics array
xga
cga
sama
leverage
sulu archipelago
canonical lr parser
illithid
bolt
dream theater
church of the subgenius
st albans cathedral
j. r. "bob" dobbs
unterseeboot 28
juniata college
mark mothersbaugh
derby (disambiguation)
267 bc
place du tertre
book of the subgenius
gabriel faur
end of the world (religion)
brum
henry farman
baby gramps
john nelson darby
toronto (disambiguation)
tex avery
residue (complex analysis)
hurling
mount pleasant cemetery, toronto
shinty
camogie
antipope benedict x
268 bc
269 bc