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Vlasta Děkanová

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Vlasta Děkanová
Vlasta Děkanová in 1938
Personal information
Country represented Czechoslovakia
Born(1909-09-05)5 September 1909
Prague, Austria-Hungary
Died16 October 1974(1974-10-16) (aged 65)
Prague, Czechoslovakia
HometownPrague
ResidencePrague
DisciplineWomen's artistic gymnastics
Medal record
Representing  Czechoslovakia
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place 1936 Berlin Team
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1934 Budapest Team[1]
Gold medal – first place 1934 Budapest All-around[1]
Gold medal – first place 1938 Prague Team[2]
Gold medal – first place 1938 Prague All-around[2]
Gold medal – first place 1938 Prague Uneven Bars[3]
Gold medal – first place 1938 Prague Balance Beam[3]
Bronze medal – third place 1938 Prague Vault[3]

Vlasta Děkanová (5 September 1909 – 16 October 1974) was a Czechoslovak artistic gymnast. She was the first World All-Around Champion as well as the first repeat World All-Around Champion in women's artistic gymnastics.

Early life

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Děkanová was born in Prague in 1909. Her father was a dedicated member of Sokol and the manager of a gym in the Žižkov district of Prague.[4]

She progressed through the Sokol system, graduating in 1933.[5] She performed locally at the Lucerna Palace. Beginning in 1928, Děkanová started touring and performing in exhibitions internationally in countries including Belgium, France, Netherlands, Poland, and Yugoslavia. In the United States, she performed in exhibitions in Cleveland, New York, and Washington.[4]

Competitive career

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A photograph that would prove quite prophetic, this photograph, from a 1932 issue of Czechoslovakian journal "Věstník Sokolský", showcases 3 of their gymnasts, all of whom either had already become or, in the future, would become World All-Around Champions in the sport. Alois Hudec, right, had already accomplished this in 1931; Dekanova, center, would also in both 1934 and 1938; and Jan Gajdoš, left, in 1938. The caption reads "Our Best" (translated from Czech).

Děkanová made her World Championship competitive debut at the very first 1934 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships for women held June 11 and 12 that year in Budapest, Hungary. Reportedly, cheating in the scoring was uncovered and corrected, allowing the Czechoslovakian team, of which she was a part, to win the team title.[4] There was no individual competition. But when all of the individual totals were added up, Děkanová had the highest overall total.

Four years later, Děkanová competed at the next installment of the 1938 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships where she again was the highest individual finisher among all competitors, successfully defending her placement at the previous World Championships.

According to an official document published by the FIG, Dekanova "won the general competition at the 1934 and 1938 World Championships."[6]

After her successful defense of her 1934 first-place position in 1938, her international competitive reputation was all the more secure. The rationale for her success was articulated in the official proceedings of the 10th Sokol Slet:

"Sister Vlasta Děkanová thus became the first world champion in women’s gymnastics...She deserved to be the best due to her versatility and competitive reliability, gained by diligent and persistent preparation for all significant Sokol and international races in the last ten years.[3]

Děkanová at the 10th Sokol slet in 1938

Another supporting piece of information suggesting Děkanová's consistent excellence is that at a Czechoslovakian selection competition held on 15 May 1938, just weeks before the 1938 Worlds held on June 30 and July 1, Děkanová placed 1st among all 19 individuals.[7]

Heading into the 1936 Berlin Summer Olympics as reigning World All-Around Champion (and eventual successful defender of her world all-around title at the next World Championships in 1938), Dekanova was a favorite to do extremely well and contribute heavily towards her team’s overall score and placement in the team standings. However, her excellent and consistent placement at the standing world championships and other competitions met with a considerable reversal of fortune at these games. Although there was no individual all-around competition for the women, individual standings were, nevertheless, tabulated in the official Olympic report. While placing near the top in the competitive field of 64 total individual contestants on both the uneven bars (8th place) and vault (5th place)[8] apparatuses with scores that were consistently relatively very good on both the compulsory and voluntary exercises, the only one of her six apparatus performances (including both compulsory and voluntary exercises on each apparatus) in the entire competition that was in the top 3 and reflective of her international champion status was her compulsory exercise on vault which was given the 3rd-highest mark for that exercise in the competition. On balance beam, in particular, her reversal of fortune was most revealing as she placed 22nd[8]: 870  with both her compulsory and voluntary exercises being given marks that were each well outside of the top 10. In summary, at the Olympics, Dekanova lost her 1st-place finish, which she successfully defended at the next World Championships, by dropping from 1st to 6th place, and her Czechoslovakian team was unsuccessful in defending their World Team Champions reputation, taking 2nd place to the home German team.[8]: 871 

The reversal of fortune of Dekanova’s previous and further consistent champion status at these games headlines the much more extreme reversal of fortune experienced by both of the other then-current women’s world all-around medalists – Hungary’s Margit Kalocsai and Poland’s Janina Skirlińska who were, respectively, the 2nd and 3rd place finishers (out of a competitive field of 40 contestants) at the 1934 World Championships.[9] Kalocsai‘s and Skirlińska’s extreme reversals of fortune paralleled, with immediately adjacent juxtapositioning, each other’s, with score placements that nearly universally were far from being aligned with their other international competitive standings – whereas Kalocsai finished immediately above Skirlinska at the 1934 World Championships (2nd, to Skirlinska’s 3rd), she finished immediately below Skirlińska (41st, to Skirlińska’s 40th)[8]: 871  at these 1936 Berlin Summer Olympics. With the exception of Kalocsai’s marks on balance beam, where her combined compulsory and voluntary scores gave her an overall score of 5th[8]: 871  on that apparatus, all of both Kalocsai’s and Skirlinska’s marks in both the compulsory and voluntary exercises on each apparatus (Kalocsai was 61st on parallel bars, 33rd on vault, and, again, 5th on balance beam, whereas Skirlinska was 48th on parallel bars, 36th on vault, and 15th on balance beam)[8]: 870–871  were far from being at the top of the competitive field. (Two years later, whereas Kalocsai lacked the opportunity to re-assert her high ranking at the world championships due to Hungary not sending a team, Skirlinska re-asserted her competitive excellence at the next world championships in 1938 where, in the all-around individual standings, she was the 4th-place finisher (out of a field of 32 competitors), the highest-finishing non-Czechoslovakian female competitor at those championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia.)[10]

Děkanová was competitor #11 in the gymnastics competition at the 1936 Berlin Summer Olympic Games, as is illustrated by this cropped photograph, from the Official Olympic Report, of her performing her compulsory exercise on the uneven bars.

Additionally, the reversal of fortune of many of the top gymnasts in the world at these games was not limited to the reversals of fortune of Dekanova and her fellow 1934 world all-around medalists Kalocsai and Skirlinska. Their reversals of fortune were mirrored on the men’s side in the individual all-around competition, as well, again quite extremely in numerous instances, by several individuals who either already were or would become World or Olympic all-around champions or medalists that decade:

In summary, Dekanova was far from alone in being the only world or Olympic all-around champion or medalist who experienced a stark reversal in fortune, many of them being quite extreme, in their competitive endeavors. She was joined in this experience by no fewer than 10 other gymnasts from no fewer than 7 different countries, including 3 different Olympic all-around champions and 2 different World All-Around Champions: Dekanova’s fellow Czechoslovakians Jan Gajdoš and Emanuel Löffler, Finland’s Heikki Savolainen, Hungary’s Margit Kalocsai and István Pelle, Italy’s Romeo Neri, Poland’s Janina Skirlińska, Switzerland’s Georges Miez, and Yugoslavia’s Josip Primožič and Leon Štukelj.

World War II Activities and Post-Competitive Career

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Like many other Sokol members (gymnasts or otherwise) such as 1922 World All-Around Champion František Pecháček, 1928 Olympic Parallel Bars Champion Ladislav Vácha, and 1938 World All-Around Champion Jan Gajdoš, all also Czechoslovakian, and all of whom lost their lives as resistance fighters during World War II, Děkanová was also involved in the underground Czechoslovakian resistance in World War II. She was a magistrate and was involved in copying and distributing material from illegal publications, such as "V boj" ("Into combat") by prominent journalist Irena Bernášková. She was punished for such activities, once spending several weeks in jail.[4] She also served as a volunteer nurse during the Prague uprising of May 1945 and helped remove wounded soldiers from the front line of combat.[22]

After World War II, she remained active in the sport and trained young gymnasts. She was also involved in developing and maintaining city infrastructure as a planner and dispatcher of road and water management buildings.[4]

L-R: Olympic Boxing Champion Július Torma, Czechoslovakian Prime Minister Antonín Zápotocký, Prague Mayor Václav Vacek, Děkanová, Olympic Running Champion Emil Zátopek, at the 1948 London Summer Olympic Games

Post-WWII Competitive Record and Reputation

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Despite being in her mid-to-late 30s and having earned considerable laurels, Dekanova returned to competitive gymnastics in some capacity after World War II. She appears to have been an object of contention in power struggles among various officials. In a letter, dated August 1, 1948, to the Czechoslovakian National Women's Board of Instructors and the Women's Technical Committee, Marie Provazníková, leader of Sokol women and the head of the International Gymnastics Federation's own Women's Technical Committee, stated that functionaries unknown to her named Děkanová to the Czechoslovakian Women's Gymnastics Olympics Team for the 1948 London Summer Olympics. About this nebulous administrative maneuver, however, Provaznikova stated in that letter

"Deliberately, much less with approval of the Women's Technical Committee COS, sister Vlasta Děkanová was named a substitute on the competing team. She is not prepared for the contest and lacks other qualifications, which in all probability will be impossible to remedy and the team will start minus an alternate."[7]: 341 

Additionally, in her autobiography, Provaznikova wrote further on this particular subject.

"They [the "communists"] simply demanded I put Vlasta Děkanová on the list of members of the Olympic team. I refused, stating that inclusion in this group was earned through a series of tests and no one had the right to change this. I also added that to use Děkanová as an alternate would imperil the final outcome, since both substitutes would be involved in the optional team exercise with indian clubs, which was her weak point. She was a former top competitor, brought up in the old school and lacked the supple, fluent movement needed for that particular drill. While I was chairman of the Women's Technical Committee FIG the communists could not afford a public break with me as it would cause worldwide attention. Nonetheless, since Nora Buddeusová was an excellent international judge and we needed her in that capacity, we moved Vlasta Děkanová up from assistant to head coach. We paid dearly for that compromise at the games."[7]: 364 

Provaznikova’s assertions about Děkanová, however, contrast with at least one piece of evidence suggesting Děkanová’s continued prime competitive abilities post-WWII when she was 37 years old. In a domestic competition, on 6 October 1946, featuring dozens of contestants, Děkanová placed 2nd with 66.7 points, which was 95.28% of the maximum score of 70, just behind her perennial World Championship and Olympic teammate Zdeňka Veřmiřovská who scored 67.2 points, or 96% of the maximum possible score, and 5 or more percentage points ahead of all of the rest of her competitors. In this 2nd place position, Děkanová placed far ahead of 3 individuals who apparently made the Olympic team less than 2 years later: Miloslava Misáková who was tied for 12th place with 56.2 points, Olga Šilhánová who was tied for 18th place with 54.7 points, and Věra Růžičková who was in 30th place with 44.2 points.[23]

Legacy

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Before the introduction of the women's full program at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, medals were awarded to women's teams only, without distinguishing individual athletes. Therefore, Děkanová was the most decorated female artistic gymnast at the World and Olympic level, overall, in the era before World War II, taking into account what information is publicly available.

Additionally, as Děkanová led her team to its first two World Championship victories and coached her team to Olympic victory in 1948, she can be credited as playing a very crucial role in establishing the legacy of her country in the sport of women's gymnastics. At the 15 World and Olympic competitions held, from 1934 to 1970, they won team medals at all but 2 of those competitions, and one of their only two non-medal-wins was due to not attending, therefore, they won team medals at 13 out of their 14 showings at those various championships throughout that era.

References

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  1. ^ a b "1934 World Gymnastics Championships Budapest, Hungary" (PDF). June 1934. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b "1938 World Gymnastics Championships Prague, Czechoslovaki" (PDF). July 1938. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d History.com, Gymnastics. "1938: The First All-Around World Champion in Women's Gymnastics". Gymnastics-History.com. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e Uhrová, Eva (2010). "Stříbrná zlatá Vlasta Děkanová - Mistryně světa v tělocviku" [Silver Gold Vlasta Deanová - World Champion in Gym]. Krásná paní (in Czech). Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Upomínkový diplom pro Vlastu Děkanovou" [Commemorative diploma for Vlasta Dekanova]. eSbírky (in Czech). Národní Museum. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  6. ^ Huguenin, Andre. 110e Anniversaire: Objectif An 2000 (PDF) (in French, German, and English). International Gymnastics Federation. p. 115.
  7. ^ a b c Dusek, Peter Paul Jr. (1981). Marie Provaznik: Her Life and Contributions to Physical Education. University of Utah. p. 360.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Organizing Committee for the 11th Berlin Olympiad. "The XIth Olympic Games Berlin, 1936 Official Report (Volume II)". pp. 870–871. Retrieved 2 May 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l The Story Goes On: 125 Ans/Years Federation Internationale Gymnastique 1881-2006 (PDF) (in French and English). International Gymnastics Federation. p. 65.
  10. ^ Macanovic, Hrvoje (30 July 1938). "Setsko gimnasticko prvenstvo 1938 u Pragu" [World Gymnastics Championships 1938 in Prague.]. Sokolsky Glasnik (in Slovenian). Vol. 9, no. 26–29. p. 34. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
  11. ^ History.com, Gymnastics. "1922: The First World All-Around Champion in Men's Gymnastics". Gymnastics-History.com. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  12. ^ a b History.com, Gymnastics. "1926: The Men's Competition at the World Championships in Lyon". Gymnastics-History.com. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
  13. ^ a b c d e f "Francuski prikaz o poslednjim pariškim gimnastičkim iakmičenjima za sveisko prvenstvo" [A French account of the last Parisian gymnastic competitions for all championship.]. Sokolsky Glasnik (in Slovenian). Vol. 2, no. 30. 23 July 1931. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  14. ^ The Games of the Xth Olympiad Los Angeles 1932 Official Report (PDF). Xth Olympiade Committee of the Games of Los Angeles, U.S.A. 1932, Ltd. p. 365. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  15. ^ "Francuski prikaz o poslednjim pariškim gimnastičkim iakmičenjima za sveisko prvenstvo" [A French account of the last Parisian gymnastic competitions for all championship.]. Sokolsky Glasnik (in Slovenian). Vol. 2, no. 30. 23 July 1931. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  16. ^ Macanovic, Hrvoje (8 June 1934). "X medunarodne gimnastičke utakmice u Budimpešti" [X International Gymnastics Matches in Budapest.]. Sokolsky Glasnik (in Slovenian). Vol. 5, no. 24. p. 6. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  17. ^ a b c van Rossem, G. (ed.). The Ninth Olympiad Being the Official Report of the Olympic Games of 1928 Celebrated at Amsterdam. Translated by Fleming, Sydney W. Amsterdam: J. H. Debussy Ltd. p. 668.
  18. ^ History.com, Gymnastics. "1938: Another Perfect 10 and Shot Put Struggles during the Men's Competition at the World Championships". Gymnastics-History.com. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  19. ^ a b History.com, Gymnastics. "1930: An Abrupt End to the World Championships in Luxembourg". Retrieved 23 April 2024.,
  20. ^ a b History.com, Gymnastics. "Math Problems and Two Perfect 10s during the Men's Competition at the World Championships (1934)". Gymnastics-History.com. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  21. ^ Macanovic, Hrvoje (30 July 1938). "Setsko gimnasticko prvenstvo 1938 u Pragu" [World Gymnastics Championships 1938 in Prague.]. Sokolsky Glasnik (in Slovenian). Vol. 9, no. 26–29. p. 34. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
  22. ^ "Potvrzení o účasti v Pražském povstání" [Confirmation of participation in the Czech Uprising]. eSbírky (in Czech). National Museum. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  23. ^ "Vysledky vyhledavaciho zavodu zen 6. Rijna 1946 v Tyrsov dome" [The results of the women's search office on 6 October 1946 in Tyrs's house.]. Sokolsky Vestnik (in Czech). Vol. 44, no. 41. 11 November 1946. p. 529. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
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