Sunday, July 8, 2012

Remembering Maria Filatova


My first memory of Maria Filatova is a little girl with huge, white ribbons in her hair, so tiny she seemed to have to stand on tiptoe to be able to see over the balance beam.  At 4’ 6” tall, she was the smallest competitor at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, yet she was already part of the Soviet senior team, competing alongside such established stars as Ludmilla Tourischeva, Nelli Kim, Elvira Saadi and Olga Korbut.  The ‘Siberian Sparrow’, trained in Leninsk-Kuznetsk by Innokenty Mametyev since a very early age, celebrated her 15th birthday on the 19th July 1976, the day of the team final.  That night, she slept with her first – not her last - Olympic gold medal beneath her pillow.( Born 19th July 1961 )


For all her cuteness, Maria Filatova was a fearsome gymnast and competitor.  If the crowd were awed by the pyrotechnics of Romanian technician Nadia Comaneci, they were wooed by the charm and antics of showgirl Filatova.  Her slinky, graceful, yet humorous rendition of a schoolgirl femme fatale almost stole the show during podium training.  Her gritty and alluring performances there persuaded the Soviet national coaches to prefer her to Lidia Gorbik during the team competition, and Filatova’s Olympic career had begun.

Remember, in 1976 gymnasts performed to the accompaniment of a single musical instrument – usually a piano.  Maria could not rely on volume or monobeat to give emphasis and expression to her floor routine – it had to come from her movements.  The following video has, sadly, been overdubbed with instrumental music – but you only have to watch Filatova.  Mute the sound, and you can still appreciate the musicality that was a feature of all her performances.

Did you see that? As well as performing a routine that may comfortably have been seen in Paris’s Folies Bergeres, Maria Filatova, barely 15 years old, completed a double tuck somersault. She danced her way out of a twinkling double twisting somersault. Hardly the work of a cheeky schoolgirl. Filatova – a Master of Sport – was at the very top of her chosen profession at the age of 15, performing acrobatic skills of unprecedented difficulty. And not just on floor. Throughout her career, Filatova was amongst the first on the Soviet team to introduce new, super difficult elements to her work, at a time when the sport was taking consistent strides forward in technique and power.

Maria Filatova’s innovations

Vault Tsukuhara with full twist (1976 USSR Nationals EF)
Uneven Bars  From giant circle, cross hands half turn into straddle forward salto to hang on high bar.
Beam Flic-flac layout/two layouts in a row
Beam dismount Flic-flac x 2 (2 feet) – double twist/double back/
double pike
Floor Round off-flic flac – double back/double pike/full
in back out (the first on the Soviet team)

Source : Maria Filatova Kourbatova
Speak to Maria today, and she will tell you that finding her way onto the Soviet team was her greatest achievement. Look at the names of the gymnasts with whom she competed throughout her career – names like Tourischeva, Kim, Korbut, Davydova. Filatova, a young gymnast from a distant part of Russia, broke the mould when she joined the Soviet team, combining the lyrical tradition of the past with the developing acrobatic trend of the future. She came not from one of the established powerhouses of Soviet gymnastics, but from Siberia, an area with a developing reputation for excellence. Alongside her coach, Innokenty Mametyev, whom she still remembers fondly today and with whom she lived as family from the age of 11, she presented a style of gymnastics that was to set a new standard in World gymnastics.

Maria Filatova did not stand still after her meteoric rise to fame at the 1976 Olympics. During the years that followed she won no fewer than ten gold medals in all around competitions. In 1977 she became Soviet national champion, and in 1978 won the World Cup. Four times she won a gold medal as part of the winning Soviet team at World Championships or the Olympics. Her  beam routines  was consistently amongst the best in the world, and still shines for its balance and smoothness. But it was on floor that Filatova shone brightest. Her transformation from the baby diva of 1976 to the graceful artiste of 1980 was marked by a limpid, emotive performance that still stops me in my tracks each time I see it. It must be one of the most memorable, moving routines ever.
Maria Filatova – bibliography
Golubev, V (1978) ‘Champion in Pigtails’ Soviet Life April 1978.
Moscow News (1976) ‘A Gymnastics Gala in Moscow’ Moscow News, No 15, 1976.
Moscow News (1977) ‘Grand Gymnastics Review’ Moscow News, No 15, 1977.
Sovietsky Sport (1979) ‘The Passion of Maria Filatova’ Sovietsky Sport, 6 April 1979

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