Gabriela Szabo - Doc8c45a
Gabriela Szabo - Doc8c45a
Gabriela Szabo - Doc8c45a
Stats
Birthdate: 11/14/75 (Bistrita, Romania)
Height: 5-2 1/2
Coach: Zsolt Gyongyossy
Current Residence: Bucharest, Romania
Szabo's resume includes a silver medal in the 1,500m at the 1996 Olympics, gold in the
5,000m at the 1997 World Championships, gold at 1,500m and 3,000m at the 1999
World Indoor Championships, gold in the 5,000m at the 1999 World Outdoor
Championships, and most recently, gold in the 5,000m and bronze in the 1,500m at the
2000 Olympic Games. In 1999, she was named Athlete of the Year by the IAAF, Track &
Field News and Athletics International. She currently holds two world indoor records:
2,000m (5:30.53) and 5,000m (14:47.35). In 1999, Szabo swept all the 3,000m races in
the seven-meet Golden League series, earning half of the $1 million jackpot awarded to
athletes who remain undefeated through the series. She and Danish 800m runner,
Wilson Kipketer each earned $500,000, and by the end of the year, Szabo had become
the first female athlete to win more than $1 million in prize money in one year.
Szabo has become so well-known in Romania that she finds it difficult to train at home.
Instead, she has spent much of her time training on a farm near Potchefstroom, South
Africa. While there, she can avoid media attention and train in relative seclusion, with
only her husband/coach, her physiotherapist and cook nearby. She told reporters, "I
sleep up to 16 hours a day. I wake up at 7:00 a.m., eat two slices of bread and go back
to sleep again for another hour and a half. Then I go out and run 20-22 kilometers, eat
comething and go back to sleep again. In the evening, I run the rest of the distance, to
total up to 35 kilometers a day."
On October 2, 1999, Szabo, 24, and her coach, Gyongyossy, 37, were married in
Bucharest. They didn't make their much-rumored romance public until shortly before the
wedding. Eventually, Szabo would like to devote more time to her family and less time to
training, "After four or five years, I would like to take time off and have a baby. After that I
will decide what to do with my career," Szabo said in 2000.
At the Olympic Games in Sydney, CS Rapid won the Olympiad Gold with Gabriela
Szabo
On a giant arena, filled with spectators, the feminine 5000 meters trial was announced.
Among the athletes lined at the start we could clearly distinguish the Romanian Gabriela
Szabo in red and yellow equipment. When the pistol went out, every runner was
searching for the perfect spot. That spot was for Gabi, somewhere in front. The
Yugoslavian Olivera Jevtic was leading the squad and after the first few laps it seemed
she was running the show. After a few hundred meters the three Ethiopians qualified in
the finals were grouped at the front.
Eight laps before the final run the Yugoslavian forfeited. At the last lap where the true
battle for the medal took place, Gabi and the Irish Sonia O'Sullivan, ahead taller than the
other runners, launched the battle for the Olympic title. Gabi was leading the squad. The
Irish tried to make use of her advantage but the Romanian increased her pace and won
by 23 hundredths of a second. 14:40.79 was the new Olympic record. The first title on
the Olympic games of Romanian athleticism after a twelve-year break. And the only title
that Gabriela was missing. Emotions overtook her and for the first time she let her tears
loose.
Declared athlete of the world last season, Gabi Szabo honoured her calling card and
secured the only title she was missing. The little blonde, weighing only 42 kg also owns
two more titles for World Champion for the same distance, won in 1997 and 1999, a
World Title and a European Title for 3000 meters and last year she won the Golden
League Circuit. After the extraordinary final of the 5000 meters course, she made a first
statement: "I feel fantastic. It was tough but I had the speed to stay ahead." Afterwards
she ran the honour tour clad in a tricolour flag that the swimmer Beatrice Caslaru
offered.