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Anna Dementyeva

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Anna Yurievna Dementyeva
Personal information
Full nameAnna Yurievna Dementyeva
Country represented Russia
Born (1994-12-28) December 28, 1994 (age 29)
Samara, Russia
HometownSamara, Russia
Height144 cm (4 ft 9 in)
Weight35 kg (77 lb)
DisciplineWomen's artistic gymnastics
ClubCSKA Moscow
Head coach(es)Elena Zigano
Assistant coach(es)Mikhail Sarushkin
ChoreographerOlga Burova
Medal record
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2010 Rotterdam Team
European Championships
Gold medal – first place 2011 Berlin All-Around
Gold medal – first place 2011 Berlin Balance Beam
World Cup
Gold medal – first place 2011 Moscow Balance Beam
Gold medal – first place 2011 Moscow Floor Exercise
Silver medal – second place 2010 Stuttgart Floor Exercise
Silver medal – second place 2011 Moscow Uneven Bars
Bronze medal – third place 2010 Stuttgart Uneven Bars
Bronze medal – third place 2010 Stuttgart Balance Beam
Bronze medal – third place 2011 Paris Balance Beam
Bronze medal – third place 2011 Paris Floor Exercise
Japan Cup
Gold medal – first place 2010 Tokyo Team
Silver medal – second place 2009 Chiba Team

Anna Yurievna Dementyeva (Russian: Анна Юрьевна Дементьева) born on the 28 December 1994 in Samara, Russia is a Russian artistic gymnast. She is the 2011 European all-around and beam champion, and a world gold medalist with the team.

Junior career

Dementyeva competed at the 2008 Junior European Championships in Clermont-Ferrand, France, winning the gold medal with the Russian team.

Senior career

2009

At the Japan Cup in July 2009, Dementyeva contributed to the team silver by competing on floor (scored 12.850).[1] In August she competed at the Russian Cup where she won bronze in the all-around (overall score 55.133), and silver on beam (14.300) and on floor (14.625). She also placed fourth on uneven bars (13.900) and fifth on vault (13.475).[2]

2010

Demenyeva in Waalwijk 2010

In August, at the Russian Cup, she won gold on beam (15.375) and bronze on vault (13.463), and placed eighth all-around and fourth on floor.[3] In October, Dementyeva was the youngest gymnast competing at the 2010 World Gymnastics Championships. Here, she made a significant contribution to Russia's team gold medal winning performance by competing on uneven bars (13.366), beam (14.400), and on floor (14.533). She also made the beam final, placing sixth with a score of 13.966. Later that year she had a good showing at the DTB Cup in Stuttgart where she won silver on floor, and bronze on beam and uneven bars.[4] Her final 2010 competition was the Toyota Cup, where she won silver on uneven bars and placed fifth on floor. She also placed seventh on beam after suffering two falls.

2011

In February, Dementyeva became Russian all-around national champion.[5] She performed consistently well in all four disciplines, scoring 15.100 on floor (the highest mark on that even among her teammates), 14.650 on the uneven bars, 14.350 on the beam, and 13.950 on the vault, resulting in an overall score of 58.050.[6] Next, Dementyeva competed at the Bercy World Cup (French International) where she won bronze medal on beam and on floor.[7]

In April, Dementyeva went to Berlin for the European Championships where she won gold in the all-around with a score of 57.475.[8] The favourite going into the all-around event was Dementyeva's teammate Aliya Mustafina, but Mustafina injured her left knee on the vault during the first rotation and had to withdraw. In winning the competition, Dementyeva obtained the highest score on beam (15.150), the second highest on floor (14.475 - behind Diana Chelaru), and the third on uneven bars (14.250), and scored 13.600 on vault. These scores gave her an overall of 57.475 (0.775 ahead of second placed Elisabeth Seitz). In the event finals Dementyeva went on to win a second gold medal on beam (with a score of 15.350). She also placed fourth on the uneven bars and seventh in the floor exercise. Coach Alexander Alexandrov said of Dementyeva's win in the European all-around, "There isn't a bigger workaholic on the team; she trains the hardest. Maybe she still doesn't have the most difficult routines, but she is an example for the whole team. Nobody equals her when it comes to hard work. Thanks to this, she managed to become European champion. It's nice when athletes achieve everything thanks to their hard work."[9] At the Moscow World Cup event in May, Dementyeva was in dominant form, winning gold medals in the floor exercise and on the beam. She also won silver on the uneven bars.[10] In July, coach Alexandrov confirmed that the focus was now firmly on upgrading Dementyeva's routines to make her more competitive at the 2011 World Championships and the 2012 Summer Olympics.[11] Alexandrov stated: "Let’s wait and see. I did not know she could win Europeans. And she got on beam and got the highest score right off and was a point ahead of everyone on one event. She needs to improve her vault and if she does then she can be competitive. She has a good beam routine, even though you can always fall on beam, but for the all-around she has a very high difficulty score. And we are still trying to add difficulty to her programme".

Dementyeva next competed at the 2011 Russia Cup in Yekaterinburg between the 17th-21st August 2011. She won the all-around competition with a score of 59.800 (Vault 14.700, uneven bars 14.975, beam 15.300, floor 14.825), with Viktoria Komova (returning from injury) finishing second.[12] As Blythe Lawrence pointed out in Universal Sports, Dementyeva brought out some upgrades to her routines during the competition: "In spite of Russian coach Aleksander Aleksandrov's assertion that Dementyeva is not an all-around threat outside of Europe, the baby of last year's World Team looked pretty darn good in her home country. Dementyeva showed off an upgraded double-twisting Yurchenko on vault and channeled a jazz age screen siren in her new floor routine when she wasn't landing some truly challenging tumbling, including a full in double tuck final pass."[13] Dementyeva went on to win silver medals on the vault and on the beam during the event finals of the competition, and also finished fourth on the uneven bars and sixth in the floor event[14].

References

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