Vladimir Artemov
Olympic Games | ||
---|---|---|
1988 Seoul | All-around | |
1988 Seoul | Parallel bars | |
1988 Seoul | Horizontal bar | |
1988 Seoul | Team | |
1988 Seoul | Floor exercise | |
World Championships | ||
1983 Budapest | Parallel bars | |
1985 Montreal | Team | |
1987 Rotterdam | Team | |
1987 Rotterdam | Parallel bars | |
1989 Stuttgart | Team | |
1989 Stuttgart | Parallel bars | |
1983 Budapest | Team | |
1985 Montreal | All-around | |
1987 Rotterdam | Floor exercise | |
1989 Stuttgart | Floor exercise | |
1989 Stuttgart | Horizontal bar | |
1987 Rotterdam | All-around | |
1989 Stuttgart | Vault |
Vladimir Nikolaevich Artemov (Russian: Владимир Николаевич Артемов, born 7 December 1964) is a former Russian artistic gymnast, Olympic champion and world champion who competed for the Soviet Union. He is considered to be one of the greatest parallel bars workers of all time.
He was born in Vladimir.
Artemov competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul where he received gold medals in horizontal bar, parallel bars, all-around individual and team combined exercises.[1]
World championships
Artemov won a gold medal in parallel bars at the 1983 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Budapest, and again at the 1987 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Rotterdam. He has received five silver medals and two bronze medals at the World Gymnastics Championships. He participated on the Soviet teams which won the team final in 1985, 1987 and 1989, and finished second in 1983.
Awards
Artemov was listed among the USSR top ten athletes of the year in 1988.
After the Olympics
Artemov immigrated to the United States from the failing Soviet Union in 1990, settling in Pennsylvania. However, he has mistakenly been identified as the father of current US gymnast Alexander (Sasha) Artemev. The two men are not related. Artemov currently lives in San Antonio, Texas, where he runs a gym with his wife Natalia.[2]
See also
References
- ^ "1988 Summer Olympics – Seoul, South Korea – Gymnastics" Archived 2008-05-31 at the Wayback Machine databaseOlympics.com Retrieved on March 29, 2008.
- ^ Jere Longman (March 7, 1991). "Bitterness Intrudes On His Best Of Times". Retrieved January 27, 2015.
External links
- Vladimir Artemov at the International Gymnastics Federation
- Vladimir Artemov at the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame
- Vladimir Artemov at Olympics.com
- Vladimir Artemov at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
- 1900: Gustave Sandras (FRA)
- 1904: Julius Lenhart (AUT)
- 1908: Alberto Braglia (ITA)
- 1912: Alberto Braglia (ITA)
- 1920: Giorgio Zampori (ITA)
- 1924: Leon Štukelj (YUG)
- 1928: Georges Miez (SUI)
- 1932: Romeo Neri (ITA)
- 1936: Alfred Schwarzmann (GER)
- 1948: Veikko Huhtanen (FIN)
- 1952: Viktor Chukarin (URS)
- 1956: Viktor Chukarin (URS)
- 1960: Boris Shakhlin (URS)
- 1964: Yukio Endō (JPN)
- 1968: Sawao Katō (JPN)
- 1972: Sawao Katō (JPN)
- 1976: Nikolai Andrianov (URS)
- 1980: Alexander Dityatin (URS)
- 1984: Kōji Gushiken (JPN)
- 1988: Vladimir Artemov (URS)
- 1992: Vitaly Scherbo (EUN)
- 1996: Li Xiaoshuang (CHN)
- 2000: Alexei Nemov (RUS)
- 2004: Paul Hamm (USA)
- 2008: Yang Wei (CHN)
- 2012: Kōhei Uchimura (JPN)
- 2016: Kōhei Uchimura (JPN)
- 2020: Daiki Hashimoto (JPN)