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- Olga's immense
- popularity was
- almost a political
- phenomenon: at
- the height of the
- cold war, the
- western world
- suddenly fell
- head-over-heels
- in love with a
- grinning little
- acrobat from
- behind the
- Iron Curtain
- #
- Although Olympic
- gymnastics was
- ostensibly an
- amateur pastime,
- the Soviet system
- required sports
- stars to follow
- professional
- - and punishing -
- training regimes.
- There were also
- persistent rumours
- about the use of
- growth-preventing
- drug-taking
- #
- Olga was unlike
- any previous
- gymnast. Before
- Korbut, even
- dance routines
- were performed
- with the icy
- discipline of a
- military drill.
- Olga had the
- discipline, but
- she transformed
- women's gym-
- nastics into
- something more
- like an art form
- #
- The crowds always
- believed that
- Tourischeva was
- Korbut's closest
- rival. In fact it
- was the other
- way round: Olga
- the artist was
- second-best to
- Tourischeva the
- technician
- #
- A gymnast's
- career is shorter
- than most. Retire-
- ment comes with
- adolescence. Life
- after competition
- was not easy for
- Olga. She had a
- difficult relation-
- ship with the
- Soviet authorities
- and following the
- nuclear accident
- at Chernobyl fled
- to the United
- States. She
- settled in New
- Jersey in 1990
- #
- Where Olga led
- others followed.
- The 1976 Montreal
- Games saw a new
- champion who had
- the personality of
- a Korbut and the
- technicality of a
- Tourischeva. The
- Romanian gymnast
- Nadia Comaneci,
- aged 14, scored a
- string of perfect
- tens, a feat the
- scoreboards were
- not even progra-
- mmed to register
- #
- Today's women
- gymnasts were not
- born when Olga
- astonished the
- world at the
- Munich Games.
- Though the sport
- has advanced to
- the point where
- any decent
- amateur can do
- Olga's moves, she
- is still the
- sporting standard
- against which
- others are judged
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