Daryl Homer

Daryl Homer
Personal information
Born (1990-07-16) July 16, 1990
Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
Weapon(s) sabre
Hand right-handed
Height 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)
Weight 65 kg (143 lb)
FIE Ranking current ranking

Daryl Homer (born July 16, 1990) is an American sabre fencer who competed in the 2012 Summer Olympics.[1] He is silver medallist at the 2015 World Fencing Championships and five-time gold medallist at the Pan American Fencing Championships.

Personal life

Daryl Homer was born on St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands to Juliette Smith and Daryl Homer. [2] At the age of 5, Homer moved to New York City alongside his mother and younger sister D’Meca to an apartment on Gun Hill Road in the Bronx. While there, Homer attended Public School 21, transferred to Friends Seminary after receiving a scholarship and eventually graduated from St. John’s University with a degree in advertising communications. He now works for advertising and marketing agency Anomaly.[2]

Homer regularly speaks to inner city youth about balancing his career with his athletic passions. He is currently a brand ambassador at Fencing in the Schools, a non-profit aiming to enrich the lives of students in the inner city through fencing. The program focuses on the health benefits, life skills and exposure fencing can give to students in some of our nations most impoverished neighborhoods. The program has trained teachers in Utah, Chicago, Newark, NYC and Vermont.

Career

Homer (R) scores from a flunge at the 2015 World Fencing Championships

Homer started fencing at the age of eleven after happening on a picture of a masked fencer in the dictionary and finding it "very cool".[3] He joined the Peter Westbrook Foundation in NYC, a program is dedicated to exposing inner city youth to fencing started by six-time Olympian and 1984 Olympic bronze medalist Peter Westbrook.[2] Homer chose sabre because Westbrook himself had been a sabrer.[3] Homer was quickly identified as a talented athlete and began working with four-time Olympic coach Yury Gelman immediately. He won a bronze medal at the 2007 Cadet World Fencing Championships and another bronze at the 2009 Junior World Championships in Belfast. That same year he competed in his first senior World Championships in Antalya, finishing 23rd, and took in first NCAA title as a sophomore.

In the 2009–10 season Homer defended successfully his NCAA title. At the 2010 World Championships in Paris he defeated successively France's Boladé Apithy and Nicolas Lopez to reach the table of 16, and finished 12th. The next season he won the gold medal at the 2011 Pan American Championships after prevailing in the final over Canada's Vincent Couturier.

He redshirted the following season to train for the 2012 Summer Olympics, to which he qualified as a member of the top-ranked team of the Americas zone. In the individual event he defeated 15–9 Romania's Tiberiu Dolniceanu in the first round, then had a narrow 15–14 victory of world No.2, Russia's Aleksey Yakimenko. He lost 15–14 in the quarter-finals to another Romanian, Rareș Dumitrescu, and finished sixth.[4] In the team event, the USA lost to Russia in the quarter-finals and finished eighth.[4] He finished the 2011–12 season no.12 in FIE rankings.

Homer maintained this ranking in the next season thanks to three quarter-finals placings in the World Cup and a bronze medal at the 2013 Pan American Championships. He placed 11th at the end of the 2013–14 season. In the 2014–15 season he climbed his first World Cup podium with a bronze medal in the Seoul Grand Prix.[5]

References

  1. "Daryl Homer". 2012 Summer Olympics. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 Maureen Hannan (April 15, 2015). "How to Chase a Gold Medal and Grow a 401K: Olympian Daryl Homer". The Huffington Post.
  3. 1 2 Liz Belilovskaya (July 26, 2012). "Young, Aggressive and Quick With a Point". 2012 London Olympics NYT blog.
  4. 1 2 "Daryl Homer Olympic results". Sports Reference. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  5. "Limbach and Kharlan take sabre gold at South Korea Fencing Grand Prix". Eurosport. April 1, 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.