Inna Deriglazova

Inna Deriglazova

Personal information
Full name Inna Vasilyevna Deriglazova
Born (1990-03-10) 10 March 1990
Kurchatov, Kursk Oblast
Weapon(s) Foil
Hand right-handed
Height 1.74 metres (5.7 ft)
Weight 62 kilograms (137 lb)
National coach(es) Stefano Cerioni
Club CSKA
Head coach(es) Ildar Mavlyutov
FIE Ranking current raking

Inna Vasilyevna Deriglazova (Russian: Инна Васильевна Дериглазова, born 10 March 1990) is a Russian foil fencer, team World champion in 2011, European champion and Olympic team silver in 2012.

Career

Deriglazova began fencing at the age of 8 in hometown Kurchatov.[1] When her potential became apparent she underwent serious training under Ildar Mavlyutov. Despite her diminutive frame as a child, she got used to fence athletes much older.[1] She won a bronze medal in the 2006 Cadet World Championships in Taebaek city, followed a year later by a gold medal in the individual and team events of the Cadet World Championships at Novi Sad. The same year, she took the bronze medal in the Junior World Championships at Prague. She became Junior World Champion in Amsterdam in 2008.

Shortly after her world title, Deriglazova got married and gave birth to a daughter, Diana. She stopped training just a week before delivery and went back to the piste two weeks afterwards.[1] Two months after giving birth, she earned the silver medal in the Russian national championship.[1] A year after, in 2010, she took the gold in the individual and team event of the Junior World Championships in Baku.[1] The same year, she joined the senior national team and took a bronze medal in the individual and team events of the senior European Championships in Leipzig.[1]

Deriglazova climbed her first World Cup podium in 2011 with a silver medal in Tauberbischofsheim. She was stopped by Korea's Nam Hyun-hee in the table of 16 of the 2011 World Championships in Catania. In the team event, Russia defeated France in the quarter-finals, then Korea to meet the Italian "Dream Team". Russia lost by a single hit and were doomed to a silver medal. At the 2012 European Championships she defeated reigning Olympic silver medallist Arianna Errigo in the semi-finals and prevailed over team-mate Kamilla Gafurzianova to earn her first senior individual title.[2] For her Olympic début at London 2012, she was defeated 8–15 in the second round of the individual event by France's Ysaora Thibus.[3] In the team event Russia got the best of Japan, then of South Korea. They met No.1 rivals Italy in the final. Deriglazova opened the match against five-time Olympic champion Valentina Vezzali and was defeated 2–5. Her team-mates could not contain Italy either and Russia were eventually defeated 31–45.[4]

Deriglazova was left extremely frustrated by her Olympic experience and resolved to train harder under the new direction of Stefano Cerioni, former coach of the Italian foil teams.[5] During the 2012–13 season she won her first World Cup title at Budapest, followed by three other victories in Saint-Petersbourg, Tauberbischofsheim and Seoul. Her ambitions for the 2013 European Championships in Zagreb were however cut short in the first round of the individual event by World No.88 Anastasiya Moskovska. In the team event, Russia were defeated by France in the semi-finals, then by Hungary in the match for the bronze medal, and came away with no medal. Deriglazova bounced back by taking the gold medal at the 2013 Summer Universiade after defeating team-mate Larisa Korobeynikova in the final.[6] At the World Championships in Budapest Deriglazova made her way to the semi-finals, where she was defeated 15–11 by Arianna Errigo and took the bronze medal. In the team event, Russia were defeated by France in the semi-finals, but prevailed over South Korea to earn the bronze medal. Deriglazova finished the season World No.2 behind Errigo.

In the 2013–14 season Deriglazova won the Turin World Cup and placed second in Shanghai. At the 2014 European Championships in Strasbourg she was stopped in the second round by team-mate Julia Biryukova. In the team event, Russia cruised to the final where they met Italy, which had stayed unvanquished all season. Russia unexpectedly took an early lead. Deriglazova entered the piste for the last relay on 40–38, which quickly became 44–38 against Olympic champion Elisa Di Francisca. The Italian then struck seven hits in a row, winning by a single hit in the last seconds of the bout.[7] The World Championships at home in Kazan proved equally disappointing as Deriglazova ceded 15–8 against Ukraine's Olha Leleiko in the second round of the individual event. In the team event, Russia met Italy again in the final and were defeated again on 39–45.[8]

References

External links

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