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Mark Rakita

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Sport
  
Fencing


Name
  
Mark Rakita

Mark Rakita wwwjewishsportsnetBioImagesbookAPage080Imag

Born
  
22 July 1938 (age 85) (
1938-07-22
)
Moscow, Russia

Olympic medals
  
Fencing at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's team sabre

Similar People
  
Viktor Sidyak, Vladimir Nazlymov, Jerzy Pawlowski, Tibor Pezsa, Cesare Salvadori

Mark Semenovich Rakita (Russian: Марк Семенович Ракита; born July 22, 1938, in Moscow, USSR) is a famed Russian sabreur and coach from the Soviet era.

Contents

Fencing career

Rakita started fencing when he was 14. He would practice for three to six hours per day. A 1969 graduate of The Daghestan State Pedagogical Institute, Rakita earned the title of Master of the Sport (Fencing) in 1964. He trained at the Armed Forces sports society.

World championships

Rakita was one of the Soviet Union's top sabre fencers in the 1960s. As a member of the Soviet National team, he won the world championship in the team sabre in 1965, 1967, 1969, and 1971.

Rakita was also the world champion in individual sabre in 1967, and finished second in 1970.[2]

Olympics

Rakita participated in three Olympic Games. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he won a gold medal in team sabre and competed in the individual event. At the 1968 Summer Olympics, he won silver in the individual event and won gold in the team event. At the 1972 Summer Olympics, he competed in the team event, and won a silver medal.

World championships

  • 1967 Individual Sabre (Gold)
  • 1967 Team Sabre (Gold)
  • 1971 Individual Sabre (Silver)
  • Coaching career

    Rakita coached the Russian fencing team for 17 years, and four of his students won Olympic medals.

    Hall of Fame

    In 1988 Rakita, who is Jewish, was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.

    Feud with Vladimir Nazlymov

    In an interview in New York, Mark Rakita discussed his long-time feud with former friend/teammate turned nemesis Vladimir Nazlymov, stating, "As far as I'm concerned, he no longer exists!"

    References

    Mark Rakita Wikipedia