Isi updates ...

News about pole vault competitions that occur outside the US and international pole vaulters.
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BruceFlorman
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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby BruceFlorman » Wed Nov 26, 2008 12:46 am

BruceFlorman wrote:Okay you're probably gettin' tired of them, but I expect this'll be the last of the post-Gala stories. ;)

Okay, so I lied... sue me.

This isn't the most complementary article, but I'll take the good with the bad. I think maybe there's a missing word near the end of the first sentence though.
In the Times (of London) Rick Broadbent wrote:November 25, 2008

Yelena Isinbayeva in pole position for beauty and talent

Rick Broadbent, Monaco

The ugly truth for Yelena Isinbayeva is that too many of her competitors have plain faces and talent. She is the self-styled beauty of athletics, a Volgograd vixen who says that she is happy if her rivals call her a harpy or a b**** while she bestrides centre stage as the sport's ultimate drama queen. The politically correct should look away now.

“Every girl on the track has a duty to be nice-looking and womanly,” she said. “I remember a very famous athlete said that we had to be athletes or women. I don't agree. Why do we have to be an athlete and have a man's body and be ugly? Why can we only be beautiful outside sport?”

Some of her rivals, she says, subscribe to that view, the inference being that they are ugly. It is unsurprising, then, that she does not get along with her main competitors, her Olympic gold not going down well with Jenn Stuczynski and Svetlana Feofanova, the rump of the pole-vault podium. Stuczynski, the American, spoke about “kicking some Russian butt” before the Olympic Games in Beijing in the summer. “She must know her place,” Isinbayeva countered.

This might all be knockabout stuff were it not for the fact Isinbayeva is arguably the most famous female athlete in the world. She has set 24 pole-vault world records, the most recent coming in the Olympic final in August, has not lost a leading championship for five years and was named female athlete of the year in Monaco on Sunday. Her fame has landed invitations to meet Vladimir Putin, the Russian Prime Minister, and to the inauguration of Dmitri Medvedev, the President. It is strange, then, to hear her saying that she is searching for her mission and is racked with fears for the future.

“If I didn't do the pole vault then I'm nobody,” she said in a hotel room on Casino Square. “I'm a simple girl from the street and nobody would pay attention. Previous athletes have achieved more and we forget about them, but the next generation will remember my era. I make money and an image. When I went to the Sydney Olympics [in 2000] I felt like an ugly duckling, like a stick insect. I was out of place. Now I try to be beautiful. On the track we are the centre of attention. If we are ugly then nobody will be interested. They wouldn't listen to the result, they would just say: 'Uggh, she is so horrible.'”

For a woman who can clear 5.05 metres, Isinbayeva sounds as if she has a low opinion of her sport's intrinsic worth. However, she loves the pole vault, calling it “aesthetic”, and believes that looks are a passport to a wider audience. And how that audience matters. “I'm like an actress,” she said. “I'm alone before the world. When I go to the track, in my mind this is my show. I think everyone comes to see me.

“I'm a bit afraid for the future because I know I will not have the same feelings. I won't be able to be on a podium, I won't be able to hear the Russian anthem. I know it will be very soon. I won't be able to feel happy and afraid at the same time. I think life will be boring compared to this life.”

She then spoke of a famous Russian admiral who had money and fame and family and lovers, but lost it all and died impoverished in a park. “My life is beautiful and everyone loves me, but who knows what will happen in the future?” Isinbayeva said. “Maybe everyone will forget about me, too.”

She is 26 and plans to retire after, and possibly at, the 2012 Olympics in London. She thinks that her mission is connecting people because she can speak to presidents and plumbers - her father is the latter - and has helped to finance an orphanage at home. Despite the girlish talk and promise to decorate her poles with flowers next season, Isinbayeva is indomitable. She said that she gets frustrated waiting for others to clear the lower heights so that she can make her grand entrance. “I lie down and wait,” she said. “I cover myself with a towel so the cameramen do not get in my face. I think about nice things. Not jumps. I want them to clear the heights because if they fail they get another two goes and it drags on.”

Her gymnastics background and athleticism, coupled with the input of the former coach of Sergei Bubka, the men's pole-vaulting legend, ensure that she remains head and shoulders above the rest; in Beijing the winning margin was almost a foot. Isinbayeva is a national icon and bristles at the notion of Russia as a country with a doping problem. “Our athletics federation and the Government are doing everything they can, but the people say, 'Oh Russians, they are blah blah blah,'” she said. “I think it is because we are so strong that they want to destroy us. I think it is a political thing.”

That shows a partisan myopia, given that the Russian federation is cynically trying to backdate doping bans on seven athletes to free them to compete at next year's World Championships, but Isinbayeva's pride is evident in all she says. It should not matter how she looks, but this is a sport that has been disfigured by doping, and style over substance abuse has its role. Beauty may be only skin deep, but, as Dorothy Parker also said, ugly goes clean to the bone.

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Tue Dec 09, 2008 6:05 pm

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Last edited by slvr1969 on Wed Feb 11, 2009 12:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby BruceFlorman » Wed Dec 10, 2008 9:42 pm

From AllSport.ru on Monday:
12:55 08.12.2008 – Athletics
IAAF President Lamine Diak to watch Yelena Isinbaeva in the "Pole Vault Start" tournament in Donetsk
President of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), Lamine Diak plans to visit the traditional "Pole Vault Stars" tournament on February 14th, in Donetsk, where for four years in a row Russia’s double Olympic champion Yelena Isinbaeva has set world records. The details were explained to the agency of sport information "All Sport" by the publisher of the international athletics bulletin EME NEWS, Alphons Juck.

“The upcoming tournament in Donetsk will be the 20th anniversary,” recounted Alphons Juck. “Therefore the competition’s organizer, the first vice-president of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) Sergey Bubka, is putting together a solid group of competitors. In addition to the best contemporary vaulter, Yelena Isinbaeva, there will also be America’s Jennifer Stuczynski, Poland’s Anna Rogowska and Monika Pyrek, and Russia’s Yulia Golubchikova and Tatiana Polnova. Among the men we expect a repeat of the Olympic Games duel between the 2008 champion in Beijing, Australia’s Steve Hooker and silver medalist, Russia’s Yevgeny Lukyanenko. IAAF president Lamine Diak plans to personally attend the tournament.”

Alphons Juck also added that over the entire history of the "Pole Vault Stars" in Donetsk, Sergey Bubka himself set three world indoor records here (6.05, 6.11 and 6.15) and Yelena Isinbaeva six (4.81, 4.83, 4.87, 4.91, 4.93 and 4.95).

I'd like to hear it from Jenn or Coach Suhr that she'll be going to Donetsk, but this is an encouraging sign. :yes:

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Wed Dec 24, 2008 4:47 pm

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Isi's indoor season training & competiton schedule

Unread postby BruceFlorman » Thu Jan 01, 2009 4:16 pm

I've been traveling for the holidays and haven't been keeping up with the news like I should. :o So these articles from AllSport.ru are a couple of weeks old by now...
17:31 15.12.2008 – Athletics
Vitaly Petrov: Isinbaeva is training seriously
Double Olympic champion and 24-time world record breaker in the women’s pole vault, Russia’s Yelena Isinbaeva, is continuing her preparations for the winter season, which opens on 14 February at the "Pole Vault Stars" tournament in Donetsk. Vitaly Petrov, the personal coach of Yelena Isinbaeva, reported this to the Agency of Sports Information "All Sport".

“We began preparations for the winter season late, but so far, so good,” said Vitaly Petrov. “We’re only concentrating on general physical training, doing various exercises – which is to say, we’re laying the base. We’re not yet jumping with a pole. It’s still very early. I am satisfied with Lena. You can see that she is taking her training seriously. Plus she’s doing recovery work - not only massage, but mud baths and so on. The main thing is that she continues to do everything in the same spirit.”

Vitaly Petrov also spoke about Yelena Isinbaeva’s further training plans. “Now we’re training at the base in Formia. We’ll be here until the end of December and then move to Aosta, which is in northern Italy. We’ll hold a final 40-day training camp and then go to the first start - the "Pole Vault Stars" tournament on 14 February in Donetsk,” Vitaly Petrov explained.
Do the U.S. gals use mud baths as part of their training regimen? :dazed:

10:28 16.12.2008 – Athletics
Yelena Isinbaeva’s winter season will last 12 days
Double Olympic champion, and 24-time world record breaker in the women’s pole vault, Russia’s Yelena Isinbaeva, will appear at only three tournaments (15 February in Donetsk, 21 February in Birmingham and 26 February in Prague) in the upcoming winter season, and will skip the European Indoor Championships in Turino. So stated Yelena Isinbaeva’s personal coach Vitaly Petrov to the Agency of Sports Information "All Sport".

“We announced the decision to miss the European Championships a long time ago,” recalled Vitaly Petrov. “Lena won’t appear in any official tournaments this winter. Her calendar is already made up, and only three tournaments appear in it – 15 February "Pole Vault Stars" in Donetsk, then 21 February in Birmingham and Prague on 26 February. It works out that her entire winter season will be done in 12 days. (smiling) This is fine for the winter as we want to recover and, most importantly, lay the foundation for the summer. Furthermore, we began training later than normal and are starting, as they say, from the very beginning. The psychological and physical load now on Lena is significant. But you know, champions are able to break records without special training. (laughing) But please, take my words as a joke.”

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Sat Jan 03, 2009 1:37 am

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:16 am

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby BruceFlorman » Mon Jan 05, 2009 7:48 pm

slvr1969 wrote:http://english.sport-express.ru/summary/1_3478/
ISINBAEVA: IMPOSSIBLE IS POSSIBLE!
Sport Express met with the world record-holder Elena Isinbaeva prior to the IAAF World Athletic Gala in Monte Carlo.


Here's my translation of the long version of this interview. Sorry it took so long, but I've been traveling for the holidays and just got home yesterday.

Yelena Isinbaeva: “The impossible is possible!”

At the end of December it’s expected to sum up the year, telling of its heroes and noteworthy events. As such, it would not do to go without an interview with the double Olympic champion, multiple (and most importantly - current) world record holder for the women’s pole vault and possibly the most famous Rossiyanka on the planet! The special correspondent for "SE" met with Yelena Isinbaeva on her “home field”, in Monte Carlo, on the eve of the gala evening arranged by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). On this evening she was recognized as the best female athlete of 2008. Found a surprise!

* * *

- You’ve come a long way from the invisible girl on the Volgograd streetcar to the double Olympic champion, who comes to meet with journalists in Monte Carlo, one can say, on foot - in the sense that this is very close to your home. Do you yourself realize that from Cinderella you’ve became a princess?


- In the end, probably not. I still feel like a normal girl from the Volgograd streetcar, who simply had to switch to a car, since travel by streetcar has become rather difficult. It seems to me that I’ve not changed on the inside, but people’s attitude towards me changed, you know what I’m saying? Yes, the circle of people who I hang out with is different, but I still try to keep my feet on the ground and maintain contact with everyone I hung out with in the past.

- That is, for example, with your classmates?

- Ohhh, very little. I must confess, I don’t especially communicate with them. Because of the sport, of course. So I haven’t preserved any strong school friendships.

- Here, incidentally, is a related question. Real friendships between people are usually formed in school or university. Because of the sport, you, in essence, were deprived of both. With whom are you friends?

- Basically this is just the nature of the sports environment. Marina Kuptsova, who you certainly know, the former high jumper, is a friend. We’ve been friends since 1998. Marina is the type of person who will never disappoint you and will always help. I have many friends, and I will, no doubt, acquire more in the future. But Marina is a friend for life.

- Please describe for our un-envious readers, what it’s like to reside in Monte Carlo?

- (Laughing loudly) It’s very nice. Here I can calmly stroll the streets, and yet still associate with people who are out of reach for others. Yes even with Prince Albert! He is an absolutely normal person, albeit very important and influential. My resident card allows me to stay in the Schengen countries indefinitely. There are no problems with visas. It’s a trifle, of course, but it’s nice. Yes, all in all, life is totally different from ours in Russia. Almost never is anything excessive, everything is watched by cameras – every building is guarded 24 hours a day. On the other hand, it’s a bit dull, especially in winter. There are few people on the streets; everything is closed; everything “dies”.

- You’ve lived a long time in Monte Carlo?

- Since 2005.

- In general, many believe that you live in Italy…

- This isn’t so. I work in Formia. I spend a month there in winter, and a couple of months in the summer.

- Is living in Monte Carlo expensive?

- Somewhat expensive, of course, but if I still haven’t moved out, then I can afford it. But quietly, modestly.

- Do you gamble in the casino?

- No-no-no.

- But you’ve been in the Monte Carlo Casino building?

- Yes, I once took a guided tour. It’s really beautiful there. Elegant!

- Do you have a favorite place?

- I like to visit the area of the embankment. To sit somewhere far from the public beaches. To look at the sea and think about things.

- So, for example, I could meet you at some cafe in the city?

- Of course you could! Moreover in any of them. Here the standard of living is so high, that the owners of cafes and restaurants simply can’t cook badly. For them this is a matter of status. If food isn’t palatable, people will choose somewhere else.

- You’re certainly in Monte Carlo during the days when the whole city goes crazy due to "Formula 1"?

- Oh, yes! It’s an awesome feeling. Once I was invited to the "Grand Prix" with the Toyota company. I met with the drivers – with the younger Schumacher, with Trulli, with the test driver Ricardo. They showed me the hot-rods [“болиды” - literally “fireballs” --BF], how all the complex stuff inside works. These machines are not like on TV. I was told that the drivers are losing two to three kilograms during the race. Oh, this is awful!

Ah, yes, I also went to the Toyota box in the starting area, literally five minutes before the start of the race. Smart people warned me: “Lena, put on your headphones, the engines roar will be severe.” I replied that, on the contrary, I wanted to hear it. (Snorting) I heard it all right! I was there in the box – indoors – still the cars were like thunder! My first thought: I’m deaf. I thought I’d burst my eardrums. But the feeling is still good. The roar of the engines penetrates to your heels!

- Have you already formed acquaintances with some of the Monegasque celebrities?

- I know the Swedish tennis players Johansson and Björkman. I chat with Dinara Safin. Although she isn’t here often. I’m more in touch with a few [T&F] athletes. Wilson Kipketer also lives here. Skier Anja Persson. I can’t call all of them friends, but we sometimes intersect and chat.

- You converse in different languages, and live, in fact, in several countries. How do you perceive yourself, as a citizen of the world?

- I myself don’t really know. The experience is somewhat strange, to be honest. I’m pulled by Russia, but if I stay long, it becomes a bit boring. Like recently, I was at home for almost two months. Like all of the people of my homeland, something was still missing. I’m still drawn there, but it was quite a different life, different people, different relationships between them. Perhaps, in the process of self-identification, I got stuck somewhere in between: I am undoubtedly Russian, but here in Monaco, I am also starting to become comfortable.

- You now live a life where every hour of the day is scheduled in a literal sense. How is this?

- You exaggerate a bit. In fact, I have no free time only on the days when major competitions are held, or there is some commercial project or activity, such as this gala evening. But during the normal process of training, everything is much easier. A morning workout, then an afternoon nap, then an evening training session, and that’s it. A very simple routine.

- How do you intend to live when all of this – the morning workout, the afternoon nap – are no longer?

- I don’t know. This is a very serious problem faced by all athletes. I hope that I'll find an occupation - good people will surely help - which will interest me. After leaving the sport, of course there will be a vacuum in my life that will be difficult to fill.

- You have already decided when you will leave?

- In principle, yes. I dream to become a triple Olympic champion in London, to set a further 10-15 world records. Then retire undefeated. And for my world record to last another hundred years! Like Bubka’s record still stands.

- I gather that the organizers of the 2013 World Championships, which will be held in Moscow, would not be against it, if you were to retire immediately after this tournament.

- (Smiling) Actually, I’ve already spoken about this subject with the president of our athletics federation, Valentin Balakhnichev. It always comes back to age - I'll no longer be young. If I can still jump high until 2013, it would be an honor for me to conclude my career in Moscow - before the eyes of the Russian public.

- And do you plan to compete this winter?

- Yes, I’m already training. I run for half an hour, then stretch, and then run again. Sometimes I go up into the mountains on foot, which can be considered good training.

- Do you know the names of the sportswomen who will succeed you in the women's pole vault?

- I can’t give specific names; I haven’t followed the junior competitions closely, because I’ve been too busy myself. But I know that we have an 18-year-old girl who won the Junior World Championships and jumps 4.40.

- What would you like to do after the end of your career?

- Initially, I think about a family. I want to get married, and have children, and afterwards devote my life - in one capacity or another – to sport. I can share my experience with young people. I hope my advice will prove useful. I plan to become seriously involved in charity, to support children, to imbue in them a love for sport and to understand that sport today is a worthwhile career, and perhaps the easiest way to make ones name in the world.

On the other hand, I’d like to have a business that will produce an income. I want to give the cinema a shot! I still want to work as a photo-model. I like to experiment and to see myself made up first as a good fairy, then as an insidious beast. See how much everything interests me! In general, so far I’m completely uncertain. Permit me to continue pole vaulting for awhile.

- And what sort of movie roles do you envision? Bond Girls?

- Why not? In principle, I like this sort of role, but only if it’s not overdone. When they kill a dozen bad guys with a single bullet, it doesn’t look interesting.

- I keep hearing that you’re starting your own line of perfume. Is this so?

- To be honest, it’s still more of a project than a finished business. I have the desire. Now we’re looking for a suitable perfume maker, who will bring the idea to life.

* * *

- Are you already resigned to the fact that life is a zebra? The white stripe is succeeded by black, which is then succeeded by white again.


- Of course it’s a zebra. Although I can’t say that there have been any truly black stripes in my life. My life, how would you explain...? It is very cyclic or something. It seems to most that if I’m jumping high, then I have a white stripe. And if I’m not so high it must be black. But this is certainly not the case. In any event, I’m convinced that every trial is a test from above. If a person is able to endure, never giving up, it means success lies ahead. That’s the case with me, anyway.

Perhaps, in an interview this will just sound like protocol, but I want to give a big thanks to our Athletic Federation and its President Valentin Balakhnichev for the great support they’ve given me. Thanks for the help of the Volgograd ШВСМ, the city and regional administrations, the gymnastic clinic of Volgograd. Thank you everyone for the support and for everything you’ve done for me! But I also want to say thank you to America’s Jenny Stuczynski, who also contributed to my “awakening”. Last summer, when all the journalists began writing headlines that the pole vault had a new star - that she, allegedly, would kick some a** - this really got me going.

- It’s considered that the last two years of your career progressed differently than you would have liked. How is it to go through such a period, in fact, before the eyes of the whole world?

- From a human standpoint – it’s difficult. Victory with a world record is always expected of me. Everyone believes (I won’t deny, it’s pleasant for me) that I’m invincible; that no person has been born who can jump higher than me. But all this has a flip side. My victories without a world record are not considered victories. When the public starts to praise second place from some unknown girl, I get terribly upset. “She took second place! Well done!” the TV announcers report. “By the way, Isinbaeva won but again failed to set a world record.”

On the other hand, I understand that competition is what people want in sports; that possibly they are tired of watching competitions where I appear, knowing beforehand who will win.

- Do you still get excited prior to your starts?

- Yes, of course. In addition to the usual excitement, I have a burning unwillingness to lose. Indeed, any time I’m defeated it becomes a sensation. And I don’t like these sensations.

- So do you think that at any second you could lose?

- No. Because in reality, everything depends on me, and I am doing everything possible and impossible to be first. At the commercial competitions anything can happen, since sometimes you have to compete twice in a week. But with regard to the big important tournaments, then I simply cannot allow my rivals to jump higher than me.

- You know, prior to the Olympics in Beijing, Blanca Vlasic was confident of that too.

- I am sorry that happened to Blanka. I think she was a bit more confident in herself than necessary. I remember how I set the world record in Gateshead in 2003 and arrived at the World Championships in Paris thinking: “Who are all of you?” I’ve already prepared my neck for the gold medal, but I eventually finished the tournament in third. Probably about the same thing happened to Blanka. When she began to turn every event into a show, this hurt her. It’s great when the audience is sure they can expect a show from you. People want to see this. But you must be absolutely calm inside yourself.

- What did you do after your victory in Beijing?

- Two months of rest. I spent a few days meeting with journalists, participated in press conferences and so forth. Then I returned to Russia for two weeks. Then I went on vacation in Egypt, then on to Rimini by water.

- How was your visit to your hometown of Volgograd?

- Oh, everyone was so happy! It’s very pleasant, even more so now that I rarely get to Volgograd. I relaxed with my family, spent a lot of time with my parents. I took a trip to my home stadium, and had a talk with the coaches. They said I’ve grown up. That I’ve become more self-confident.

The emotion during these celebrations, to be honest, was less than four years ago. People have become accustomed to my victories. The overall gist of their speeches was like: We knew all along that you’d become a double Olympic champion, but nevertheless, congratulations. (laughing)

- Your father represents a very rare nationality. He’s a Tabasaran. Could you tell more about these people, about their language, which is considered the second most complex in the world?

- Unfortunately, I don’t know the language. Dad once taught me a couple of sentences, but I’ve long since forgotten them. These are a very hospitable people. They live in the mountains, in small villages. The main feature of their nature is kindness. Although it’s more accurate to say gentleness. Unlike some other Caucasians, who are militant and ooh so hot-tempered!

- When were you last in these places?

- In 2004, after the Olympics in Athens. They arranged a fantastic holiday for me there. I was received by the leadership of Dagestan. We went to the village where my father came from, and all along the roads, children stood with flags. (grin) It felt like I was the President.

- Did they not slaughter a ram for your arrival?

- They did! They did! It was awful! I saw – they dragged a little ram from somewhere. And then slit his throat with a knife right in front of me! I cried: Why’d you do that? But they immediately explained that this is traditional when receiving honored guests. They presented a whole wagon of gifts. It was great. The atmosphere of a Caucasian holiday is very different from, say, a Russian holiday.

- Here, in Monaco, on the IAAF gala evening, no one intends to slaughter a ram.

- I love to come to the gala evenings, because this is one of the few moments where the athletes can see each other, not in sport clothes, but in beautiful attire. All this fuss, buying dresses – this is very nice, in my opinion. Incidentally, I bought my dress for the evening literally a day ago, here in Monaco. It’s white, with precious stones around the shoulders. Very expensive. (laughing)

- This interview will be released the day before the New Year. Thus we cannot manage without New Year’s questions. What does this holiday mean for you?

- This is a family holiday, and I always spend it with my family. This is the night when I think of my most cherished desires.

- Do you believe in Grandfather Frost?

- I believe in the fulfillment of dreams.

- You will celebrate this New Year also with your family?

- Absolutely. With my parents.

- What would you like to wish our readers?

- I want the readers of "Sport-Express, along with all the rest, to believe in themselves. And in the fact that everything will necessarily come true, if we make the effort. I wish good health to all. Remain true to yourself. Don’t make idols. Remember that every person on earth is an individual. Most importantly, don’t be lazy in the New Year, work hard and believe in yourself. The impossible is possible!

Sergey BUTOV
Monte Carlo – Moscow

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January 2009 interview with Natalia Maryanchik

Unread postby BruceFlorman » Thu Jan 08, 2009 11:54 am

It’s taken me a few days to find the time to finish translating it, but Natalia Maryanchik’s interview posted Sunday on AllSport.ru (and evidently printed in the magazine SportWeek) is a good one. Not entirely PC in places, but entertaining nonetheless. :)

BTW, the title – Know your hearth – is a bit of a pun in Russian. “Hearth” is “shestok” in Russian, and “pole” is “shest”.
Natalia Maryanchik wrote:04.01.2009 - Our publications
Yelena Isinbaeva – on her desire to hold the world record in 100 years, to win the Olympics in London, to marry and have children

Yelena Isinbaeva
Know your hearth



Yelena Isinbaeva, in her 26 years, has become a double Olympic champion, a 24-time world record breaker, and a resident of the most prestigious city in the world - Monte Carlo. Just in 2008 she was recognized as “Woman of the Year” by Glamour magazine and “Female Athlete of the Year” by the International Association of Athletics Federations, the All-Russia Athletics Federation and the Russian Federation of Sports Journalists. Yelena Isinbaeva tells SportWeek the Christmas tale about the transformation of a girl from Volgograd into one of the most recognizable women in the world.


«If all this happened to me precisely, perhaps it is not just so?»

- Sometimes I’m amazed how lucky I am, - Lena was arranged comfortably in an armchair in the foyer of the five star hotel Monaco. – If 10 years ago, somebody told me that I would be the Yelena Isinbaeva that I’ve become, I wouldn’t have believed it. It’s hard to get my head around it: “Is it even possible?!” I’m a simple girl from Volgograd, and were it not for sport, what would I be? Nobody, a girl on the street! No one would give me a second look! So I often ask myself: “To what do I owe all this? What is my mission in the world?” Indeed, if all this happened to me precisely, perhaps it is not just so? Perhaps it means that I have some purpose.

- Lena, it’s very strange that you’re speaking now about luck. Do you really think that all this was achieved only because of luck?
- No, of course not. This success is multiplied by labor.

- And what then do you see as your destiny?
- It seems to me that my mission is to bring people together. I know many - from high-ranking persons to ordinary, simple people on the street. And when I talk with such people, many wonder: “How is it that you can associate with us? Look where we are and where you are...” Through athletics, I know people from many countries, on many continents, whom I would never have met in regular life. And from these connections, I get real pleasure.

- Like many stars, you're doing charity work. In the prior year, you won half of the "Golden League" jackpot, and pledged to establish a charitable foundation in your own name to help the children of Volgograd. How is this going?
- Unfortunately, I don’t have the time now to work seriously in the sphere of philanthropy. Therefore I decided to postpone the establishment of my foundation until later, and so far just help as I can. This year I went to an orphanage in Volgograd. Each child wrote me a note about what they dreamed of. Then I collected all the notes, read them, and bought gifts, like what they wanted. Nothing grand, but I want these children to believe that dreams come true!

- And what do you dream of?
- In sport or in regular life?

- Both in sport and in life.
- In sport, I dream to defend my Olympic title in 2012 in London, and then conclude my career. Everything in its own time. I don’t intend to keep jumping ‘till I’m forty. But until then I want to break a few more world records - 10-15 times - and set the bar high enough that no one will be able to approach it for another 100 years. I want my record to stand forever! Well… but in my life, I don’t dream about anything special. I want to get married, have children, and devote myself entirely to them for the first three years. And then I’ll go back to sport in some capacity, to share my experiences with young athletes. In general, to be useful in a world that has given me everything.


«I decided to show that I’m a normal woman, and have a boyfriend»

- Many sportswomen have a child and then return to sport and continue their careers. There are four whole years before the next Olympics in London. Maybe you’ll go this way too?
- It’s difficult to plan such things. (laughing) Right now I want to have a baby after the conclusion of my career. I have only four years, or at most five, left in sport. This is very little! I don’t want to lose my allotted time, although who knows how life will turn out.

- You have never discussed your personal life with journalists. But after your victory in Beijing, on camera, you declared your love, and then presented your suitor - Artem.
- Honestly, I still don’t like discussing my personal life. But at some point I realized that it was time to show everyone that I’m a normal woman, that I also have a boyfriend. Artem and I appeared together at a few competitions, and so I wanted to remove all the questions. But we won’t continue this. We don’t intend to appear together everywhere. If we make plans to marry, no one will know. All that should be only between me and Artem.

- In family, as in sport, you want to be the leader?
- No, I strive for equality. Maybe at the beginning of a relationship such things go on which seem to determine who will be the leader in the family. But now I understand that Artem can teach me many things, but some things I can teach him. I don’t have excess ambitions. When I have children, I’ll be happy to stay at home, and in time become simply a housewife.

– Since the Athens Olympic Games you’ve changed quite a bit - even your very appearance. Earlier you didn’t use make-up before going into the sector.
- I think even if you’re an athlete, you should always remain, first and foremost, a woman. Even when I was 15-16 years old, I heard the statement that either you’re involved with sport, ugly and like a guy, or you’re beautiful but not in sport. I absolutely disagree with this! In the sector we are at the center of attention, and of course, like any girl, I want to look good. I remember in 2000, when I went to my first Olympic Games in Sydney. I went into the sector as usual - in my uniform, with a ponytail. I looked at the other girls - and was stupefied! Everyone was in almost full makeup, and looked just like some kind of tele-diva! I panicked: “I’m such a troll, what am I doing here?!” Then, of course, when the competition started, all that faded into the background, and I calmed down. But probably that’s when I first thought that you can do something with your face, to use makeup to look better in the sector.

- But now you’ve become a real Maria Sharapova of athletics.
- Well, look here: if you’re a horror, even if you produce good results, no one will pay attention! Everyone will say: “Well to look at her, no matter how she jumps, she’s still a horror!” If we’re ugly and like a guy, who would be interested enough to root for us, to interview us, to photograph us? Maybe this is also my mission - to show that you can be a pretty girl and involved in sports simultaneously. But I’m not some sort of glamorous person. I show up in an evening dress a few times a year at most.

- In other words, the glamour and fame don’t prevent you from living a normal life?
- Certainly I live a normal life! I casually buy everyday clothes in conventional stores. Only if I need an evening dress for a special occasion, then of course I go to an expensive boutique. Because I know the clothes there help me look more presentable than I actually am. (laughing) I also don’t visit the beauty salon all that often - about once a month for a manicure and pedicure. I get my hair cut about once a year - I like long hair. Well, with regard to fame, it’s no problem, for example, to stop me on the street to sign an autograph or take a picture. When I get tired, I just stay at home and don’t go anywhere. You can also relax well at home. (laughing)

- Are you glad to be involved with the pole vault in particular? All in all, it’s difficult to maintain one’s femininity, as you say, in the marathon or in the shot put.
- Yes, it seems to me also that the pole vault is a very aesthetic and even glamorous event. It requires the harmonious development of the entire body – both the arms and legs. And yet we have, unlike other athletes, not only ourselves, but the pole! And the pole can be decorated with all sorts of colors, flowers and so on. I’ve already talked to my coach, Vitaly Afanasevich Petrov, and for next year he has placed a special order for me with the pole company. These will be standard poles, but with a multicolored covering - for beauty. Possibly I’ll have them already in the new season.

– A few sportswomen have changed their uniform from shorts to mini-skirts, like tennis players.
- No, I figure, in our sport this is unacceptable. Personally a skirt would interfere with me. You must sprint and feel your body. And something brushing against my legs would irritate me.


«I was taught how to talk and behave with the press»

- You have many different “quirks”. Your love for dolphins, in all their manifestations. The mysterious incantations that you whisper before jumping - the words of which, it would be foolish to even ask. And the blanket in the Olympic sector with which you covered your head. To be honest, all this looks like a well-thought-out performance intended to create an image.
- No, you’re not right. What happens in the sector, I always do entirely from my soul. I never plan anything with my managers in advance. No one other than my coach can advise me what to do and how to behave at the stadium.

- Okay, but outside the sector?
- If you mean about interviews, I was actually taught how to speak with, and how to behave with the press. I had two special training sessions. It seems to me that you journalists should be happy when you can ask someone a direct question and get a normal answer. (laughing)

- How did these training sessions go?
- I was put in front of a camera, I would talk about something, and then we would dissect the recording. They’d say: look there, don’t fidget with your hands, and so on.

- In the sector do you feel like an actress?
- Probably, yes. I come into the stadium with the notion that it’s my show! It seems to me that all these people came into the grandstands just to watch me. No, I know in reality it’s not so, but I bring this attitude into the sector. I love the moments when I remain alone, and everyone looks only at me. It’s wonderful! The entire stadium, the contest ended, I’m alone, with just one thing ahead - a record jump... M-m-m... I was so happy to experience those feelings again in Beijing.

- Did the feeling that “this is my show” come from winning, or was it with you from the very beginning?
- No, it seems to me that it came from winning. Earlier, when I was just beginning, it always seemed to me like the sector wasn’t my place. I was uncomfortable losing: “There go the leaders, and I'm but a scratch...” But I progressed, experienced the taste of victory, and this feeling came with it.

- What do you think about, when you often wait hours for your turn to jump?
- I cover up with the blanket in order to avoid watching, and I try to think about something pleasant. Sometimes it's something like: “Well, please jump 4.50! Well, please, please, 4.60!” Because each miss by my rivals means that I have to wait even longer.


«It’s wrong to say: those are doping, but I'm clean»

- You always emphasize, regardless of where you live, that you consider yourself to be Russian exclusively. Have the recent doping scandals involving Russians forced you to reconsider? What do you feel when you hear that Russian athletics is entirely based on doping?
- I’m always very upset by such cases. Our state does a great deal for sport. We, the athletes are trying to represent our country. When I hear “look at Russia, blah-blah-blah...” I get very sad. Why do they say it? In any case, we are strong and this is not such an easy issue to deal with. There are many policies, but I try not to get involved in these cases. Fortunately, I don’t often hear bad things about Russia. Our country is on the right track and I'm proud of it!

- What do you think about the case of the seven Russian athletes who are accused of substituting their test samples?
- Everyone should answer only for themselves. It’s wrong to say: “Oh, out with the dopers, but I'm clean.” I will speak and bear responsibility only for myself, alright? If you ask my opinion about doping, I’ll answer. But on no account will I claim that I’m good and someone else is bad. Nobody has the right to judge.

- Okay. What’s your opinion about doping? Is it possible to win without doping?
- Of course it’s possible. I’m certain of this and prove it by my own example. It seems to me that doping is filth for the sport. To use or not use is a personal choice, but I’d advise you to think ten times before using a prohibited substance. I am 100 percent sure that if it turns out that a woman can not have children or a man is no longer a man, they will curse their life in professional sports. This is not the price for today's victories.

- What would you be, if not an athlete?
- I can’t even imagine. I linked my life to sports right away. Prior to vaulting, I spent another 10 years in gymnastics. I can’t see how you can live without sport!

- You haven’t forgotten about gymnastics now?
- Of course not. I practice regularly. I can do somersaults, handsprings, splits!

- What’s the last book you read?
- Valentin Pikul’s “Three ages of Okini-san”. This is the biography of a seaman who started out as a nobody, then rose higher-higher-higher, to the rank of admiral. And then, when he was on top, stopped paying attention to his family and took a mistress. In general he decided that life was beautiful. As a result, he lost his family and died in poverty, when he knew everything and needed nobody. You know what I mean? Yes, now my life is beautiful; everyone loves me; I have all sorts of different proposals. But who knows what will happen in the future? If a new star appears, all the attention will be shifted to her. Maybe they’ll forget everything about me. I understand this perfectly.

- Are you afraid of the future?
- A little bit. When you’re standing on the pedestal, and the Russian anthem is playing for you... All these emotions before the competition, when you’re afraid and excited and very happy at the same time... I know when I’m finished, I’ll never again experience such strong feelings. I’ll really miss this time. And I’m a little bit afraid that after sport, my life will seem dull to me.

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slvr1969
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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Thu Jan 08, 2009 12:20 pm

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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Wed Jan 14, 2009 4:41 pm

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Favorite Vaulter: Yelena Isinbayeva
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Re: Isi updates ...

Unread postby slvr1969 » Tue Feb 03, 2009 12:19 am

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