Erika Zuchold

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Medal record
Erika Zuchold
Erika Zuchold
Women's Artistic Gymnastics
Olympic Games
Bronze 1968 Mexico City Team
Silver 1968 Mexico City Vault
Silver 1972 Munich Team
Silver 1972 Munich Vault
Silver 1972 Munich Uneven Bars
World Gymnastics Championships
Silver 1966 Dortmund Individual all-around
Silver 1966 Dortmund Vault
Silver 1970 Ljubljana Team
Silver 1970 Ljubljana Individual all-around
Gold 1970 Ljubljana Vault
Gold 1970 Ljubljana Balance Beam
European Championships
Silver 1967 Amsterdam Vault
Bronze 1969 Landskrona Individual All-Around
Silver 1969 Landskrona Vault
Bronze 1971 Minsk Individual All-Around
Bronze 1971 Minsk Vault
Bronze 1971 Minsk Balance Beam
Bronze 1971 Minsk Floor Exercise

Erica Zuchold (née Barth), born 19 March 1947 in Lucka, East Germany, was an East German gymnast whose competed at the European, World, and Olympic level from the mid 1960s to early 1970s.

She, along with Karin Janz, was one of the two most significant (in terms of medals won at major championships) female German gymnasts of her era, co-leading, with Janz, the East German team to both the Team Bronze at the 1968 Olympics and improving upon that, again with Janz, to win the Team Silver at the 1972 Olympics.

Among her many successes, her highlight came at the 1970 World Championships where she placed 2nd in the Individual All-Around behind the great Soviet Ludmilla Tourischeva and returned to win Gold on both Vault and Balance Beam in event finals, the latter of which being a fairly controversial win over second-place American Cathy Rigby. Also, the period in-between the 1968 and 1972 Olympics saw Zuchold and Tourischeva being the only two gymnasts to win spots on the Individual All-Around podium at every European and World Championships during that time period (1969 Europeans - 1970 Worlds - 1971 Europeans).

Quite notably, Zuchold is credited as being the first woman to compete the flick-flack element on balance beam at a Worlds or Olympics, at the 1966 World Championships, as well as being one of the first two women, along with the great Vera Caslavska at the 1968 Olympics, to compete a front handspring on balance beam.[1]

In her post-gymnastics career, she explored a number of diverse activities and careers, including being a trapeze artist, a curator, an educator, and an abstract painter.

In 2005, Zuchold was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

http://www.erika-zuchold.de/start.html (Official homepage in German and English)