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If the world
remembers nothing else about
Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci, it
will be this: 10. A perfect score.
It was the first the world had seen
in gymnastics, and she received
seven of them at the 1976 Summer
Olympics. Nadia was accepted into
the new Gymnastics High School,
where she spent four hours a day in
the gym and five in the classroom.
At age 8, she competed in the 1970
Romanian National Championships, and
in 1971 and 1972 she won all-around
titles for her age group. She won
first place in her first
international competition in 1971 in
Yugoslavia...>>>
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She arrived at the
1976 Olympics suffering from
sciatica, which made strong
movements of her legs painful. She
was 4'11" tall, barely 86 pounds.
She had no hopes of taking home the
gold. But then she hit the uneven
bars, scoring a perfect 10 -- a
world first. She would score six
more before the end of the Olympics
and became an international media
darling in the process.
She left Montreal
with seven perfect 10s, three gold
medals (uneven bars, balance beam,
all-around), one silver medal (team)
and one bronze (floor exercise).
Four years later in Moscow, she
grabbed two gold medals (balance
beam and floor exercise) and two
silver medals (all-around and team).
Nadia's last major
competition was the World University
Games in Bucharest in 1981. She
retired in 1984, just weeks before
the Los Angeles Olympics. Later she
became an international judge, and
coach to the Romanian national team.
In 1989 she defected to the United
States via Hungary and began a
career as a model.
>>>
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