Valeriy Brumel
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Valeriy Nikolayevich Brumel (Template:Langx; 14 April 1942 – 26 January 2003)<ref name="GRE">Great Russian Encyclopedia (2006), Moscow: Bol'shaya Rossiyskaya Enciklopediya Publisher, vol. 4, p. 243</ref> was a Soviet-Russian high jumper. The 1964 Olympic champion and multiple world record holder, he is regarded as one of the greatest athletes ever to compete in the high jump. His international career was ended by a motorcycle crash in 1965.<ref name=sr/>
Early life and educationEdit
Brumel was born in a far eastern Siberian village to a family of geologists exploring the region.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> They later moved to Luhansk and taught at a local university.
Athletic careerEdit
Brumel took up the high jump at age 12 in Lugansk, coached by P. S. Shtein. Aged 16 he cleared Template:Convert using the then dominant straight-leg straddle technique. He improved his skills under the coaching of V. M. Dyachkov in Moscow. In 1960 he broke the USSR record, Template:Convert, and was selected to the Olympic team. At the 1960 Summer Olympics, he cleared the same height as the winner Robert Shavlakadze, but made more attempts and thus was awarded a silver medal.<ref name="GRE"/>
In 1961–1963 he broke his own world record in the high jump six times, improving it from Template:Convert to Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He also won the high jump at the 1961 and 1963 Universiade, 1962 European Championships, the 1964 Summer Olympics and the USSR Championships of 1961–1963.<ref name=sr/><ref name=bio/>
After going undefeated during the 1965 season, Brumel suffered a multiple fracture in his right foot in a motorcycle crash, and faced an amputation. He was operated on successfully by professor Gavriil Ilizarov with a new leg-lengthening procedure using his external fixator. Yet even after 29 surgeries, he could not fully recover. He retired in 1970 after jumping Template:Convert at local competitions.<ref name=sr/><ref name=bio/>
Retirement from athleticsEdit
In retirement Brumel turned to acting and writing. He starred in the film Sport, Sport, Sport (1970) and wrote the script for Pravo na pryzhok (The right on a jump, 1973). He also wrote numerous novels and plays, including the novel Don't Change Yourself (1979), which was translated into seven languages, and the libretto to Rauf Hajiyev's operetta Golden Caravel (Золотая каравелла).<ref name=sr/><ref name=bio/>
Personal lifeEdit
Brumel had two brothers, Oleg (1944–2005) and Igor, a Russian politician born in 1952 in Rostov.<ref>Брумель Игорь Николаевич, депутат Совета депутатов Замоскворечья. zamos.ru</ref> Brumel was married three times. His first wife, Marina, was a gymnastics instructor.<ref>United Press International. 31 October 1963</ref> She left him with a son in 1965, when Brumel was recovering from his motorcycle crash. In 1973 Brumel married Yelena Petushkova, an equestrian and 1972 Olympic champion in dressage. The couple divorced 18 months later, citing irreconcilable differences. They had a daughter, Vlada Petushkova, born in 1974, who was raised by her mother.<ref>Valiev, Boris (3 March 2007) «Конь – на скаку и птица – влет... По чьей вине?». Сопротивляясь страшной болезни, Елена Петушкова до последних дней мечтала вернуться к работе. sovsport.ru</ref> In 1992 Brumel married Svetlana Belousova, who later founded and managed the Valeriy Brumel Fund. They had a son Viktor.<ref name=bio>Брумель Валерий Николаевич. Биографическая справка. rsport.ru. 14 May 2012</ref><ref>Geguchadze, Aleksandr (15 June 2007) Высота Валерия Брумеля. rg.ru</ref>
- Valeriy Brumel with wife 1963.jpg
Brumel with his first wife in 1963
- Valeriy Brumel 3.jpg
Brumel jumping at a meet
- Valeriy Brumel 2.jpg
Brumel after his leg injury
- Valeriy Brumel 1968.jpg
Brumel in 1968 and Ilizarov apparatus that restored his crushed leg
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Valeri Brumel. IMDb
- High Jump legend Brumel, dies after long illness. IAAF. 26 January 2003. Retrieved on 14 January 2011.
- IAAF Mourns Loss of Legendary High Jumper. IAAF. 28 January 2003. Retrieved on 14 January 2011.
- Frank Litsky, Valery Brumel Is Dead at 60; Russian Set High-Jump Marks. NYT 28 January 2003. Retrieved on 26 January 2014.
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