Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Representing ![]() | ||
Artistic gymnastics | ||
World Championships | ||
![]() | 1994 Dortmund | Team |
![]() | 1994 Brisbane | Balance Beam |
Goodwill Games | ||
![]() | 1994 St Petersburg | Team |
![]() | 1994 St Petersburg | Balance Beam |
European Championships | ||
![]() | 1994 Stockholm | Team |
![]() | 1994 Stockholm | Uneven Bars |
Oksana Ilyinichna Fabrichnova (born November 24, 1978, in Moscow, Russia) is a former artistic gymnast. In 1993, she finished first in the all-around at the European Cup and fifth in the all-around at the 1993 World Championships. At the 1994 World Team Championships, Fabrichnova won the bronze medal on balance beam and helped Russia win the bronze medal in the team competition. She was an alternate for Russia at the 1996 Summer Olympics. [1]
After retiring from gymnastics, Fabrichnova performed in a circus and then became a doctor. She is married to Dmitry Kolozin, and the couple has one daughter, Irina. [1]
Fabrichnova has one eponymous uneven bars dismount listed in the Code of Points. [2] [3]
Apparatus | Name | Description | Difficulty [a] |
---|---|---|---|
Uneven bars | Fabrichnova | Double-twisting double tuck dismount | F (0.6) |
Year | Event | Team | AA | VT | UB | BB | FX |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1993 | World Championships | 5th | 6th | ||||
1994 | European Championships | 2nd | 7th | 6th | 2nd | 6th | |
World Championships | 3rd | 3rd |
Year | Competition | Location | Apparatus | Rank-Final | Score-Final | Rank-Qualifying | Score-Qualifying |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | World Championships | Dortmund | Team | 3 | 194.546 | 4 | 385.515 |
Brisbane | Balance beam | 3 | 9.712 | 8 | 9.612 | ||
European Championships | Stockholm | Team | 2 | 115.422 | |||
All-around | 7 | 38.711 | |||||
Vault | 6 | 9.712 | |||||
Uneven bars | 2 | 9.837 | |||||
Balance beam | 6 | 9.700 | |||||
1993 | World Championships | Birmingham | All-around | 5 | 38.630 | 26 | 36.880 |
Vault | 13 | 9.618 | |||||
Uneven bars | 84 | 8.000 | |||||
Balance beam | 6 | 9.212 | 3 | 9.812 | |||
Floor exercise | 16 | 9.450 |
Ludmilla Ivanovna Tourischeva is a former Russian gymnast, Ukrainian gymnast coach, all-round Olympic champion and a nine-time Olympic medalist for the Soviet Union.
Liu Xuan is a former Chinese artistic gymnast. She competed in the 1996 and 2000 Summer Olympics and won two Olympic medals, including gold on the balance beam in 2000. She was born in Changsha, Hunan.
Yang Bo is a Chinese gymnast. She is widely regarded as one of the greatest gymnasts ever on the balance beam, for which she created a move known as the "Yang Bo", which is rated as a D element in the Code of Points. Although widely renowned for her work on beam, Yang often had difficulty with consistency which prevented her from medalling at several major competitions. She competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics, placing 25th in the all-around and 7th on the beam. She won the 1990 World Cup Final on Balance Beam and won the bronze medal with her team at the 1989 World Championship.
Elena Gómez Servera is a Spanish former artistic gymnast. Her best event was floor exercise. She is one of the best gymnasts that Spain has had in the history of this sport, being the only one to get a gold medal in a world championship.
Dina Anatolyevna Kochetkova is a Russian gymnast who competed at the 1996 Olympics. An element she pioneered, a full-twisting back handspring on beam, remains in the Code of Points as "the Kochetkova".
Natalia Vladimirovna Yurchenko 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.
Ma Yanhong is a retired Chinese Olympic athlete. She was the first Chinese gymnast, male or female, to win a gold medal at the World Gymnastics Championships and the Olympic Games.
Elizabeth Anna Okino is a retired American gymnast, a member of the famous "Károlyi Six-Pack" who in 1992 helped the United States win its first Olympic team medal in a non-boycotted Olympic Games. She is also the first Black woman of any nationality to win multiple individual World Championship medals in gymnastics.
Iryna Krasnianska, born on November 19, 1987, in Vologda, USSR is a World Champion Ukrainian gymnast from Cherkasy, Ukraine. She started gymnastics in 1992. Iryna is the daughter of Nina, an engineer and Vasili, a doctor. Krasnianska was a 2004 Olympian. Krasnianska is primarily known as an uneven bars and balance beam specialist.
Stefanie Biskupek-Kräker is a German former gymnast who competed for East Germany at the 1976 and 1980 Olympic Games. Over her career she won four Olympic medals and six world championship medals.
Ludmila Ezhova Grebenkova is a Russian former competitive gymnast. She won bronze in the team event at the 2004 Summer Olympics and four medals at the World Championships.
Cristina Elena Grigoraş is a retired Romanian artistic gymnast. She is a two-time Olympic medalist with the team. Individually, she won four medals at the 1981 European Championships. She is best known for a skill on the balance beam named after her: forward salto tucked with ½ twist (180°) take off from both legs.
Lyubov Viktorovna Burda is a retired Soviet artistic gymnast.
Tatiana Olegovna Nabieva is a retired Russian artistic gymnast who has won four World Championship medals. She is known for the F-rated uneven bars skill named after her.
Angel Wong Hiu Ying is a Hong Kong gymnast. She competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics.
Ana Filipa da Silva Martins is a retired Portuguese artistic gymnast who competed at the 2016, 2020, and 2024 Olympic Games. She won a bronze medal at the 2015 Summer Universiade on the balance beam. She is the first Portuguese gymnast to win a World Cup gold medal.
Kelly Garrison-Funderburk, formerly known as Kelly Garrison-Steves, is a retired American artistic gymnast. An elite gymnast for eight years, she represented the United States at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. In addition to her Olympic experience, she participated in the 1983, 1985 and 1987 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. She was a two-time winner of the Honda Sports Award.
Yeo Seo-jeong is a South Korean artistic gymnast. She is the 2020 Olympic bronze medalist, the 2023 World bronze medalist, the 2018 Asian Games champion, and the 2022 Asian champion on vault. She is the first South Korean female gymnast to win an Olympic medal and also the first to win a World Championships medal.
Krystyna Sankova is a retired Ukrainian artistic gymnast.
Ting Hua-tien is a Taiwanese artistic gymnast. She is the 2019 Asian champion and the 2022 Asian Games bronze medalist on the balance beam. She competed at the 2020 Olympic Games, making her the first Taiwanese female gymnast to compete at an Olympic Games since 1968. Additionally she represented Chinese Taipei at the 2024 Summer Olympics.