Ion Drîmbă

Ion Drîmbă
Personal information
Full name Ioan Alexandru Drîmbă[1]
Born (1942-03-18)18 March 1942
Timișoara, Romania
Died 2006
Brazil
Height 172 cm (5 ft 8 in)[2]
Weight 59 kg (130 lb)
Sport
Sport Fencing
Event(s) foil, sabre
Club Steaua Bucureşti[2]
Coached by Andrei Altman[3]

Ionel Alexandru "Ion" Drîmbă (also Drâmbă, March 18, 1942 – 2006) was a Romanian fencer. he competed at the 1960, 1964 and 1968 Olympics and won the first ever Olympic gold medal in fencing for Romania in 1968.[2]

Biography

Drîmbă with Ileana Gyulai

Drîmbă was born in 1942 in Timișoara, in a working-class family. His father worked at the post office.[4] He took up fencing aged 8 at the local club "Flacăra roșie" following his elder brother[5] and quickly showed talent: he competed with seniors from the age of 13 both in foil and sabre and joined the national foil team at age 16. In 1959, he won the junior national championships in both weapons.[5]

Drîmbă transferred to CSA Steaua București in 1960, when he was 18. He did not however join the Romanian Army, of which Steaua is the sports club, but worked as a civilian employee.[4] That same year, he won the national championship in foil[6] and won a silver medal in foil and reached the semi-finals in sabre at the Junior European Championships in Luxembourg.[6] He took part in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome but did not earn any medal.[4] He won a silver medal at the Junior World Championships in 1963. During this period he got to know foil fencer and fellow Stelist Ileana Gyulai, who would become his wife.[4]

Drîmbă became team world champion in 1967 along with Ștefan Ardeleanu, Iuliu Falb, Tănase Mureșanu and Mihai Țiu. For this performance he was named "honored sports master" (Romanian: Maestru emerit al sportului). A year later he earned the first gold medal of Romanian fencing at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City with nineteen victories and two defeats.[7] He also became European champion in 1968 and 1969. He was named the best foilist in the world by the International Sports Press Association (AIPS). The Romanian Government however failed to deliver the promised car and gave out only half the monetary reward it had initially announced.[6]

Dissatisfied with the way he and the other high-performance athletes were treated in Romania, Drîmbă defected in 1970 to Germany during his stay in Paris for the Challenge Martini, a Fencing World Cup competition: he escaped an official dinner and found refuge at the West-German embassy.[6] His name was subsequently deleted from official Romanian sports records. Drîmbă worked for about two years as a coach in Ulm under a contract with the German Fencing Federation.[8] He trained amongst other German champions Matthias Behr and Alexander Pusch.[5] He then left for the United States and settled down first in Tucson, Arizona, where he taught Fencing at Pima Community College. He met and married Cinda Gibson, with the hope of gaining citizenship, and they had a son, Jeffrey. They were divorced, and he then moved to San Francisco, where he opened his own fencing school.[4] He also coached in Venezuela before opening another school, this time in Brazil. He remarried and had four children.[6]

In 1996 he decided to return to Romania, where his name had been reinstated in historical records after the Revolution, in the hope that his coaching experience abroad would be rewarded. He received the grade of officer in the Order For Merit,[5] but he did not get any job offer. He also had to retire his candidacy to the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee.[9] Disappointed, he went back to Brazil, where he died in 2006.[2]

Awards

References

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  1. 1 2 "Decretul nr. 1042/1968 privind conferirea ordinului şi medaliei Meritul Sportiv unor sportivi, antrenori şi medici sportivi" (in Romanian). Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Ion Drîmbă". sports-reference.com.
  3. 1 2 Ionel Dramba. Romanian Olympic Committee
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Clement Peter (1 August 2014). "Ionel Drîmbă, floreta noastră de aur!" (in Romanian). sportclasic.ro.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Nicu, Alexe, ed. (2002), "Federația Română de Scrimă", Educației Fizice și Sportului din România (pdf) (in Romanian), 1, Bucharest: Aramis, p. 1040
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Ionuț Tătaru (2 June 2012). "Ionel Drâmbă, primul campion olimpic al scrimei românești". Antena 3 (in Romanian).
  7. "1968 Summer Olympics – Mexico City, Mexico Fencing" databaseOlympics.com (Retrieved on June 19, 2008)
  8. "Fechtsport" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  9. "Drîmbă sare la beregata lui Tiriac" (in Romanian). Ziarul de Iași. 13 January 2001. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
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