GREAT FENCING CHAMPIONS
Axelrod, Albert - (1921 -) UNITED STATES
Born in New York City. Albert Axelrod is America=s most enduring fencing champion. Ranked #1 in the United States in 1955,
1958, 1960 and 1970, and #2 nine times, his bronze medal in Individual Foil competition at the 1960 Olympic Games was only
the fourth Olympic fencing medal ever won by an American. Axelrod was a member of five consecutive U.S. Olympic Teams--1952
through 1968--and was ranked in the U.S. Top Ten for 22 years--1942-1970--missing three of those years in military service.
He was also a member of four United States World Championship teams and four U.S. Pan American Games teams, winning three
Team gold and one silver medals, and four silver medals in Individual Foil.
Cohen Richard – ENGLAND
Five times Britain's saber champion, Richard Cohen was selected on four occasions to represent his country at the Olympic
Games. He fought many great champions of the 1970s and 1980s, and as recently as 1997 he won the European championship for
veterans.
D’Oriola, Christian – (1929-) FRANCE
D’Oriola won his first championship in 1942, a local under-fifteen event. At time he trained three times a week for
two hours at a time, a routine that hardly changed throughout his career. He had Olympic victory in 1952 he won the world
title in 1953 and 1954. By 1955 he had come in first six times and second once in his seven world championships - still a
record. With the advent of the electric foil he adapted his style to compensate for the new weapon and during the Melbourne
Games in 1956 he won all of his bouts with just seven hits against him. He had won in Melbourne, he said Aonly to prove that
an able fencer could master the inartistic game@, adding that Athe electric foil is decadent fencing.@ D’Oriola was
noted for his extraordinary long and low lunge.
Garay, Janos - (1889 - 1945) HUNGARY
Janos Garay was World Sabre Champion in 1925, and won three Olympic medals for Hungary. Garay earned his first Olympic
honors at the 1924 Games in Paris, where he won a silver medal in Team Sabre and a bronze in Individual Sabre. Four years
later, he earned a gold medal in Team Sabre at the 1928 Olympics. In 1925, and again in 1930, Garay won the European Individual
Sabre Championship. Garay perished in the Mauthausen concentration camp in 1945, near the end of World War II.
Gaudin, Lucien - (1886 - 1934) FRANCE
Master and greatest ever practitioner of the French school of fencing. Known for unequaled poise, grace and skill. Fenced
Aldo Nadi in a much publicized 20 point bout which lasted over 1h20 min and won. While the margin was 11 to 20 Nadi was unhappy
with the judging and it was agreed by some experts at the time that, at least, the margin was a lot closer. At the age of
41 Gaudin won back to back Olympic gold in both Epee and Foil.
Gerde, Oszkar - (1883 - 1944) HUNGARY
Oszkar Gerde won gold medals in Team Sabre in both the 1908 and 1912 Olympic Games. He later became a judge at international
fencing competitions. Dr. Gerde perished in the concentration camp at Mauthausen, Austria.
Gerevich, Aladar – (1910 -?) HUNGARY
Aladar Gerevich is the only athlete in any sport to win the same Olympic event six times. Indeed, he is the only athlete
to earn gold medals in six different Olympics. Gerevich made his first Olympic appearance at the 1932 Los Angeles Games when
he was 22 years old, earning his first gold medal as a member of Hungary's sabre team. Gerevich returned to the 1948 Olympics
stronger than ever. Not only did he win another gold medal in the team sabre, he earned the gold medal in the individual sabre.
At the 1952 Helsinki Games, Gerevich won gold in team sabre He made his final Olympic appearance at the 1960 Rome Games -
at the age of 50 - earning yet another gold medal in the team sabre.
Gerevich, Pal – (1948 -) HUNGARY
He was part of the silver winning Hungarian Sabre team of '72 and '80.
Golubitsky, Sergi - (1969 -) UKRAINE
Sergei Golubitsky, was born in Kiev, Ukraine. He began fencing at the age of 9 and today is arguably the best men's foil
fencer in history. He has won more consecutive World Championships than anyone in history, has a record 19 World Cup tournament
victories, countless silver and bonze World Cup tournament finishes, and is the 5 time World Cup Champion (season #1 points
leader). For several seasons he trained world cup level senior and junior fencers in The Netherlands. Today, Sergei lives
and trains in Conegliano, Italy. Career Highlights: 2000 Olympics: 5th Place (Australia), 1999 World Champion (Korea), World
Cup Champion (end of season points leader), Super Masters: Gold Medal (Italy), 1998 World Champion (Switzerland), 1997 World
Champion (South Africa), Universiade: Silver Medal (Italy), European Championships: Silver Medal (Poland), Awarded with Order
of the President of the Ukraine, 1996 Olympics: 6th Place (USA), 1995 World Championships: Bronze Medal (Netherlands), European
Champion (Hungary), 1994 World Cup Champion (end of season points leader), 1993 Universiade: Gold Medal (USA), World Championships:
Silver Medal (Germany), World Cup Champion (end of season points leader), 1992 Olympics: Silver Medal (Spain), World Cup Champion
(end of season points leader), 1991 Cup of the Ukraine: Gold Medal, Cup of the USSR: Gold Medal, 1990 World Championships:
Bronze Medal by Team (France), European Cup: Gold Medal (France), 1989 World Champion by Team (USA), 1985 Cup of the Ukraine:
Gold Medal.
Greco, Agesilo – ITALY
A 1887 graduate of the Scuola Magistrale in Rome. His fencing style was based upon dueling technique. He was said to be
gifted with marvelous power and originality in tactical approach. In 1903 he faced the great French champion Lucien Merignac
in Buenos Aries before an audience of over four thousand.
Greco, Aurelio - (1879 - 1954) ITALY
He debuted at the young age of 15 at the "Sala Umberto" of Rome at a lesson on the art of fencing. At the International
Tournament of Bergamo in 1897, he won First Prize in the Artistic Classification, First Prize in the Foil contest and the
"Special Prince of Naples Prize". He won over 180 contestants in the amateur category. At the International Master=s and Amateur=s
Tournament of Ancona in 1900, he won First Prize in the Artistic Classification, First Prize in the Foil contest, Second Prize
in the Saber and the final First Prize of the Academy. In this contest he was competing with 250 contestants from all over
the world. He earned his Master of Fencing diploma at the Royal National Academy of Naples in 1902. Only 2 months after finishing
his formal education at the age of 21, he participated in Turin at the professional games, and out of 320 foreign and Italian
contestants, he "won" the First prize in Foil, the First Prize in Saber and the Special First Prize given by Princess Letizia
di Savoia-Bonaparte, without ever once being touched. He ranked Number One in the Artistic Classification and First Prize
in Foil at the National Championships held in Vercelli, Italy in 1902, out of 108 contestants participating. He also represented
Italian fencing in Paris, France in 1902. In 1906, he participated at the Grand International Tournament at the World=s Fair
in Milan. He won First Prize in the Foil, in the Artistic Competition and the Final First Academy Prize out of a group of
320 foreign and Italian contestants. He was at the National Exposition in Catania, where out of 150 contestants, he won first
Prize in the Foil, First Prize in Saber and First Prize in the Artistic Classification. And now, let=s move on to the year
1922. In this year he withdrew from the glare of public admiration to dedicate himself - with his artistic spirit and peace-loving
ways - to teaching school. In that same year he was challenged - in the press - by Master Carletti of Rome to a courtesy game
of fencing, presided over by Master Carlo Pessina, one of the founders of the National Fencing Academy. The verdict saw him
put his adversary to shame. After a long debate in the press he had to fight a duel against the very able Candido Sassone:
this latter was wounded on the seventh assault. The match was called "the duel of the century" (1922). He published "The Sword
and its Application" in Rome in 1907: a treatise on the TERRENO sword. The treatise was awarded a Gold Medal at the International
Exposition of Social Hygiene, held in Rome in 1912.
Harmenberg, Johan - (1954 -) SWEDEN
Born in Stockholm. Johan Harmenberg won eight Individual and/or Team Epee gold medals in Olympic, World Championship, and
World Cup competitions. He won his World Championship titles in Individual Epee and Team Epee events at the 1977 competitions.
He also won a bronze medal in Team Epee at the 1979 World Championships. Harmenberg captured three Individual Epee World Cup
championships within four years--1977, 1979, and 1980. He also won Team honors in 1977 and 1980. At the Moscow Olympics in
1980, the Swedish Epee master won a gold medal in Individual Epee.
Kabos, Endre - (1906 - 1944) HUNGARY
World Individual Sabre Champion in 1933, 1934 and 1936 (Hungary won the Team Sabre titles in each of those years), Endre
Kabos also won four Olympic medals, three of them gold. He earned his first Olympic gold medal in Team Sabre at the 1932 Games,
as well as a bronze in Individual Sabre. At the Berlin Games in 1936, he won a pair of gold medals, one each in Individual
and Team Sabre. Endre won either or both the European Individual and Team Sabre championship six times between 1931 and 1935,
and was runner-up once. Following brief internment in a forced labor camp, Kabos was killed on the Margit Bridge during a
World War II. He was driving across the bridge (between Buda and Pest) with an explosive-laden truck when a pipe bomb exploded.
Karpati, Rudolf - (1921 - 1999) HUNGARY
Six-time Olympic champion and seven-time world champion fencer from Hungary. He was an Olympic champion in 1948, 1952,
1956, 1960 as part of a team, and individually in 1956 and 1960. His world championships were in 1953, 1954, 1955, 1957, 1958,
as part of the team and individual world champion in 1954 and 1959. He was a professional musicologist and wrote a lecture
series on the relationship between music and fencing footwork.
Kevey, Janos - (1907 - ?) HUNGARY
ARichter@ was his family name at birth. In the early 1930's he studied law and fencing. He was universities champion in
both foil and sabre. In Darmstadt he won sabre team gold. Later he served as a coach for the Budapest Military Academy and
survived a duel. In 1940 he won the Hungarian epee championship. During the Second World War he served in the German military
and was eventually imprisoned. During this time he reflected upon his sabre technique and decided upon a new method based
on the idea of simple movements organized around the fleche. In February of 1952 he took a squad to Moscow to demonstrate
his training methods. He was a dominating figure with white hair.
Kovacs, Pal - (1936 - ) HUNGARY
Born in Transylvania Winner of 7 Olympic Medals! Member of the Hungarian Sabre team that won gold at Berlin, London, Helsinki,
Melbourne and Rome. He also won individual gold in '52, bronze in '48. He was World Sabre champion in 1937 and 1953. He later
became president of the Hungarian Fencing Federation.
Mangiarotti, Eduardo - (1919 - ) ITALY
Over an international career lasting twenty years he won six Olympic and thirteen world-championship golds. Then there
were his thirteen silvers and seven bronzes. His thirty-nine medal tally makes him the most successful fencer in world history.
Mangiarotti ws trained by his father Giuseppi who had studied under Italo Santelli. His weapons were Epee and Foil.
Mangiarotti, Giuseppe – ITALY
Epee Master who founded a fencing school which dominated international competition for nearly four decades. Studied under
Italo Santelli in Hungary. Father of Eduardo Mangiarotti.
Mayer, Helene – (1910 – 1953) GERMANY
Helene Mayer was only 13 when she won the German foil championship in 1924. At the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam, Mayer
took the gold medal in the fencing event, winning 18 bouts and losing only two. In the same year, she also won the Italian
national championship and by 1930 had been victorious six times in the German championships. World foil champion in 1929,
1931 and 1937, Helene Mayer came to Los Angeles in 1932 to compete in the Olympics (where she finished fifth in the individual
foil). Learning that she had been expelled from her hometown Offenbach Fencing Club because of her Jewish blood, Mayer decided
to stay in the United States. She enrolled at USC in 1933, earning a certificate in social work. Helene Mayer returned briefly
to Germany 1936, to compete for her country in the Olympic Games at Berlin. She won a silver medal. After the ceremonies were
over, she returned to the United States where she became an American citizen and won the US foil championships eight times
in all - in 1934 - 5, 1937 - 9, 1941 - 2 and 1946. Mayer returned to the United States, and in 1937, she won the world championship
in Paris, defeating Schacherer-Elek.Mayer returned to Germany in 1952 but died soon after of cancer.
Midler, Mark - (1931 -) RUSSIA
Born in Moscow a winner of two Olympic gold medals, Mark Midler also captured World Championship titles in the Foil event
four consecutive years, l959-1962. Midler joined the Soviet Union National Fencing Team in l954, and was named captain for
the l960 Olympic Games. Captain Midler=s team won a gold medal in Team Foil at those Rome Olympics. Four years later, at the
Tokyo Games--again as captain--his Soviet team won their second consecutive Team Foil gold medal.
Mouyal, Armand - (1925 - 1988) FRANCE
Born in Paris, Armand Mouyal won the World Individual Epee Championship in 1957. At the 1956 Olympic Games, he won a bronze
medal in Team Epee. Mouyal, a French police officer, was ranked 5th in the World in 1955, and 8th in
1956. He also won several European championships.
Nadi, Aldo - (1899 - 1965) ITALY
Son of Maestro Beppe Nadi and brother to Nedo Nadi, also an Olympic fencing champion. Aldo Nadi was known as perhaps the
greatest swordsman of all time, and is still considered so by many fencers. After a hugely successful European fencing career
Nadi became a teacher of the art. He was the undefeated European champion for 12 years in a row and won a silver medal in
the Olympics (his brother Nido won 5 gold medals in the same competition). He fought an actual duel with rapiers. His father
fought against another highly experienced fencing master in a very famous "duel to the death". This was a true fencing family
that spawned a number of famous fencing masters over several generations. He trained several national champions, including
Janice Lee Romary who competed in four Olympics and carried our flag in the 1984 Olympics. Aldo was the ultimate perfectionist
and a disciplinarian. Movements had to be absolutely perfect in order to get any form of compliment. In 1935 he moved to America
and opened his own school in New York, then later moved to Los Angeles where he tried his hand at the movie business with
some success. Like many of the greats, Nadi fenced and taught right until the day he died.
Nadi, Nedo – (1894 – 1940) ITALY
He was the most versatile fencer in history, uniquely winning an Olympic title with each of the three weapons at the same
Games. In 1912, when he was only 18 years old, Nadi won the individual foil title and then, in 1920, he produced one of the
greatest of all Olympic performances. First he helped Italy win the team foil title. Then he added the gold medal in the individual
foil by winning 22 matches and losing only two. He won a gold medal in the team épée event in Antwerp. A few days later, Nadi
also earned gold medals in the individual and team sabre for a record five fencing medals at the same Games.
Pawlowski, Jerzy - (1933 - ?) HUNGARY
Polish Olympic fencer was a colonel of Polish intelligence. He approached and offered his services.Pawlowski was arrested
in April 1974 and sentenced to prison for twenty-five years in 1975.10 years later Pawlowski was taken to Berlin and offered
to be exchanged in Frankfurt for the Polish spy Marian Zacharski. Zacharski had been caught and imprisoned in the US.Pawlowski
declined the offer to travel to the US. He was returned to Poland and released then.He began fencing at 16. He took his second
world sabre title in 1965. He would give lessons with a sabre in each hand their blades moving so fast that even experienced
onlookers could not follow the action.
Petschauer, Attila - (l904 - 1943) HUNGARY
Born in Budapest, Attila Petschauer was a winner of three Olympic fencing medals, including two gold medals. The Hungarian
champion won his first Olympic gold medal in Team Sabre, as well as a silver medal in Individual Sabre, at the l928 Games.
At the 1932 Olympics, he again won gold medal honors in Team Sabre. Deported to a Nazi labor camp in the Ukrainian town of
Davidovka, Petschauer was recognized by a camp officer, Lt. Col. Kalman Cseh, who had been an equestrian competitor for Hungary
in the 1928 Olympics. The two had once been friends, but Cseh exhorted camp guards to taunt his one-time comrade. IJSHOF wrestling
honoree Karoly Karpati was an inmate of the same camp and recalls: "The guards shouted: >You, Olympic fencing medal winner...let=s
see how you can climb trees.= It was mid-winter and bitter cold, but they ordered him to undress, then climb a tree. The amused
guards ordered him to crow like a rooster, and sprayed him with water. Frozen from the water, he died shortly after."
Piller, Gyorgy Jekelfalussy - (1899-1960) HUNGARY
Three time sabre world champion in the 1930's. His fencing philosophy was to Ado one thing better than anyone else.@ He
is often considered the greatest sabre fencer of all time.
Santelli, Italo - (1866 - 1945) ITALY
Italo Santelli graduated from the famed Italian Scuola Magistrale. Teachers included Carlo Pessina and Guiseppi Radaelli,
Pessina was also a student of Radaelli. It is widely thought that Santelli was Pessina's favorite student. In 1896 Santelli,
now a full-fledged fencing master, left Italy and moved to Budapest where he had been invited to come and teach. Santelli
improved on the Italian method and revolutioned saber fencing along with Luigi Barbasetti, with Santelli becoming recognized
as the "Father of Modern Saber Fencing". His new method included a more flexible wrist, and more finger play to control the
blade and hits, and it proved more effective than the established Italian method. Hungary welcomed the new method and began
to dominate saber fencing for more than 50 years.
Schmitt, Arnd - (1965 -) GERMANY
Epee, Singles - Masters Champion in 1986, World-Cup Champion in 1986 / 1987, Masters Champion in 1987, Gold medal in Olympic
Games in Seoul in 1988, World-Cup Champion in 1990 / 1991, European Champion in 1996, World Champion in 1999, World-Cup Champion
in 2000 - Team: World Champion in 1985 / 1986, Gold medal in Olympic Games in Barcelona in 1992, World Champion in 1995.
Sheen, Gillian – ENGLAND
Britain's last - and only - fencing gold medallist was Gillian Sheen, who won the women's foil in Melbourne in 1956. Sheen
learned to fence at school. A working dentist even as she went on to win the Empire title in Cardiff in 1958, she retired
from fencing in 1963 and set up home with her four children and a successful practice in New York.
Tuscan, Bela de – HUNGARY
One of the world's greatest sabre fencers. He once performed in an exhibition for Mussolini, who was a fencing enthusiast,
and staged swordplay dancing routines at the London Palladium. He was a top fencer in the Hungarian Military Academy and narrowly
escaped death after being caught in an unsuccessful revolution. He invented an electric weapon in which the electric wires
were threaded through a hollow blade, but it failed to gain the approval of the F.I.E..
Westbrook, Peter - (1952 -) UNITED STATES
His mother bribed him with five dollars to take fencing and his talent and drive gained him a place on the 1976 Olympic
Team. For more than twenty years he dominated sabre fencing in America and six Olympics and won the national title thirteen
times.