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Émilie Le Pennec

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Name
  
Emilie Pennec

Retired
  
2007

Residence
  

Height
  
1.51 m

Role
  
Olympic athlete

Country represented
  
France

Emilie Le Pennec Emilie Le Pennec39s Feet ltlt wikiFeet

Born
  
31 December 1987 (age 36) Paris (
1987-12-31
)

Discipline
  
Level
  
Senior International Elite

Head coach(es)
  
Yves Kieffer & Marjorie Hoels

Olympic medals
  
Gymnastics at the 2004 Summer Olympics - Women\'s Uneven Bars

Emilie le pennec fra ef ub olympic games 2004


Émilie Le Pennec (born 31 December 1987 in La Garenne-Colombes, Hauts-de-Seine) is a retired French artistic gymnast. Le Pennec was the 2004 Olympic Champion on the uneven bars and was the first female French gymnast to win an Olympic medal in women's artistic gymnastics.

Contents

Emilie le pennec


Career

Émilie Le Pennec milie Le Pennec HD Wallpapers HD Pictures Free for Mobile PC

Coached by Yves Kieffer at Pôle France INSEP in Paris, Le Pennec was the French junior national champion in 2002. At her first senior nationals in 2003, she placed fifth, but won a silver medal on her specialty, the uneven bars. She represented France at the 2002 Junior European Championships, where she won a bronze medal in the team event. At the 2003 World Gymnastics Championships, Le Pennec was a member of the 10th-place French team. She also qualified for the all-around and the floor exercise finals, where she finished 11th and seventh, respectively.

Émilie Le Pennec Emilie Le Pennec une consultante en or Gym and News

At the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Le Pennec placed sixth with the French team and 14th in the all-around final. However, she shone in the uneven bars event final, where her challenging routine helped her win a gold medal over a tough field with numerous Olympic and world champions, including Svetlana Khorkina (who took an infamous fall from the apparatus, which she traditionally dominated) and 2002 World Champion Courtney Kupets. Her medal marked the first ever for a French female gymnast.

Émilie Le Pennec httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Le Pennec continued to train and compete after the Olympics. In 2005 she earned two medals at the European Championships: the gold on the uneven bars and a bronze on the floor. She was also qualified to the all-around finals in first place, but lost any chance for a medal when she fell during her balance beam routine. Le Pennec also competed in the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, but mistakes prevented her from medalling.

Émilie Le Pennec Filemilie Le Pennec 2005jpg Wikimedia Commons

One of Le Pennec's competitive uneven bars routine was considered to be one of the most technically difficult in the world. In it, she completed a Def (a Gienger release move with a full twist), an element classified at the top difficulty level, Super-E, in the 2005 Code of Points. Le Pennec also performed a double-twisting double back tuck salto dismount.

Émilie Le Pennec Emilie Le Pennec Fan2gym

Le Pennec missed the 2006 European Championships to concentrate on schoolwork. Later, recuperating from an Achilles' tendon injury and acting on the advice of her doctors, she sat out of the 2006 World Championships.

Émilie Le Pennec Emilie Le Pennec PatrimoineParisBretonorg

On 27 September 2007, she announced via a press release that she had put an end to her career, mainly after failing to retrieve her level after her multiple injuries in 2006–2007, the latest being a talonnade contracted during the Vittel international match in August 2007.

Olympic Bars Routine: Jump to the low bar immediately to the high bar; hop with full turn; Def (Gienger with 1.5 turn); full pirouette into half pirouette down to the low bar; double-twisting double back tuck somersault. (S.V: 10.0)

Later life

During the 2008 Summer Olympics, she worked as a consultant for the French TV Canal+.

After she retired from gymnastics, Le Pennec studied to become a physical therapist. She practices in Paris.

References

Émilie Le Pennec Wikipedia