Elena's eyes are the saddest eyes I've ever seen. She was great champion and very talented girl - unfortunatly, she paid the price of others cruel ambitions. One and only - Elena Mukhina. ❤
That was the first thing I noticed about her. Her eyes. Her face is gaunt and pale and her cheeks are hollow. She looks rail-thin and you can see the suffering from deep within her soul. She was a victim of child abuse and exploitation. 💔
her life was really fucking tragic too, both her parents died within like the first four years of her life, leaving her an orphan, and then i believe when she was a bit older her guardian passed away. there was nobody there to protect this poor girl. may she rip
@@hannahtanski3911 Her grandmother, Anna Ivanovna raised her after her parents passed. In 2005, her grandmother passed. Her friend Elena Gurina had taken over her care as her grandmother aged.
Dont say fake news....father is probably still alive. At least he was when she died and inherited her flat and medals. Mother died yes in fire that alcoholic father provoked. He was in prison for a while....after he had another women and family. Return to Lena only for money when she was already paralyzed. The Grandma was strange character, strong and cold....very religious in bad way so there cant be warm touch too.
Elena was such an UNDERRATED gymnast. She never gets mentioned and that disturbs me because not only should we remember that this type of abuse (yes it is abuse) should not be allowed. What she could have been if the people around her cared more about her life.
I agree. Nadia Comenici is often mentioned, it would be good to remember Elena in those instances. It is my understanding that Comenici was treated extremely poorly as well (form the documentary Athlete A - I don't know that much about it). But about physical abuse if they didn't perform and that all the announcers spoke about Comenici never smiling. 👎👎
@@dyslexiahelpforallages4176 She wasn't undererrated. She was expected to take gold in the Moscow Olympics. Maybe you haven't heard of her, but we all saw her on Saturday tv on ABC and she was considered a tough tough contender for gold. That entire Russian team was
@@asturiasceltic3183 I guess I'm thinking in the history of gymnastics. I am 35, so I wasn't able to watch her when she performed. But, I also haven't really heard her mentioned and have been a light fan of gymnastics for awhile.
@@dyslexiahelpforallages4176 You probably saw her without knowing it. Do you remember a news story of a funeral that Svetlana Khorkina attended and suddenly burst into tears and ran out of the funeral? That was Elena's funeral.
Freedom, ha! You,like most people, probably don’t realize what it is like for someone with a spinal cord injury. They have absolutely no control over their bowel and bladder. It is like being in hell.
I was a gymnast at the time. Her catastrophic injury really affected me. There was a lot of secrecy around what had actually happened to her back then. She was one of my favourites. Poor girl 😢.
@@lesliegoodman-malamuth9796 Me too. I noticed the little red-head girl was no longer there and I thought she got in trouble or didn't make the Olympic team and didn't know the horrible truth until about 6 years ago while being on TH-cam
@@asturiasceltic3183 I am glad that in many nations, “safe sport” precautions of all kinds are being put into place for gymnasts and other young athletes. Since I was molested as an adolescent by a doctor, the Larry Nassar case revived horrible memories. Though I’d told myself that I was “only groped,” “only” remains much too much for a young girl to tolerate. I still freeze when someone snaps off a light abruptly, as did my erstwhile optometrist.
Appreciate the story, but it's not just a Soviet problem. Julissa Gomez died in America while learning a vault she didn't feel comfortable with. Not to mention those who died from eating disorders. It should never happen.
Good that you write this here. But about these cases no such propaganda film - we have here - will be made. The goal for this video is to not to show how much cruelty is in gymnastics, but in Sowjet Union.
Julissa Gomez (as sad as her story is) was not treated anywhere near as badly as Yelena Mukhina. The Soviet regime was on another level of harshness and was nothing like how American gymnasts were treated!
I read somewhere that Elena Davydova the 1980 champion used to visit Elena regularly after her accident and they remained close friends until Elena died
I remember reading where Yelena said, when she snapped her neck practing that dangerous skill (invented by a male gymnast, the Thomas Salto and now banned), that her male coach forced her to do, her first thought was...."well at least I won't have to go to the Olympics!".......I was shocked and deeply disturbed reading that because that's a serious indication of how much abuse she endured. Most people would be terrified at the thought of being paralyzed but that being her first thought, speaks volumes! May Yelena Mukhina RIP! 🙏 I'm equally appalled at the beta males who bullied Simone Biles for withdrawing from competition due to her mental health issues. It speaks volumes about how abusive beta males are to females and how much males rationalize abuse towards females!
I Also couldn't understand the bully mentality and lack of compassion from the conservative TH-cam news blogs and the all out attack on her patriotism referring her decision to a "woke" response for her twisties and stress.Women get stressed by excess hormones that cause postpartum infanticide,or suicide. I thought they had good fact finders before they " open mouth, insert foot".
I bet those beta males hated her for being a female and black. Typical racist and sexist behavior because they went beyond being disappointed at her; they were bashing her. As long as she was winning, they could tolerate her being black. So when she started having the twisties and feeling mentally out of her element, they used this as an excuse to voice their hate in the form of calling her “weak” etc. She has nothing to prove to anyone. She’ll always be an amazing gymnast 💗
Yes so true @Lizzie Beth, When I first read about Mukhina's injury I remember being shocked her first thought was that too - just speaks to how much pressure and abuse she was under. Such a tragic story and all the more cause it was preventable :-(
When you care more about a medal than a human being. That’s what happens. They didn’t even go to the hospital to see her. They should all be behind bars. RIP Elena. You deserved more than what you got ❤️❤️🙏🙏
That's how communist countries that focus on face and soft power act. China is doing exactly the same thing and everybody is watching in HD screens and applauding for how great they are and giving them a "soft warning" for displaying political items at awards ceremony, like the cyclists who "decided" to wear a mao zedong pin (Im sure it was their decision). And China just testing how many boundaries they can cross without any consequences. No worries, if any of their athletes become severely disabled they'll just kick them to the curb, if they still can be used somehow they will rehabilitate them for the paralympics, what matters is to bring medals to mother land.
I can't recall how old she was in each instance, but I read that by the time she was a senior gymnast both her parents had died. I have also never heard of her having siblings. This is so tragic. She was just 19 when she was paralyzed. Rest peacefully, Elena. You were a magnificent person and this never should have happened to you. ❤😥
I was a gymnast and around the same age as Elena Muhkina . What her coaches did to her was terrible . I watched the documentary it was abuse plain and simple .They should have never made her train on a broken leg like that . They caused her spinal cord injury and paralysis . Rest In Power Elena !❤️❤️❤️
There was a similar episode with another neck injury before that. A spinous process broke off of one of her neck vertebae. The coach made her take off the neck brace and train. She had a chronic wrist injuries and often dislocated fingers from bad falls. Choreographer used to sneak her smelling salts, Elena hid a bud of cotton wool wet with the smelling salts solution in the sleeve of her leo to sneak a sniff when she felt like fainting from pain. If she gained as much as 100 grams of weight, she'd be running at nights instead of sleep to avoid coach's fury. She said in several interviews that she felt suicidal and at the end of her rope
Especially tell all men. No empathy, instrumentalizing for personal gain, disbelief and gaslighting. The daily utterly common things. doing horrific damage.
Sorry ,but there is truly no reason for this story to be repeated to those whom have in actuality no connection to her. Waste of time to do such -- perhaps only for those whom may want to know whom she is or whom she had been.
Simone Biles has no bearing on this subject matter -- time to leave her where she belongs -- on the sidelines.Unless wanting to,discuss her actions ,of quitting on the American team ,the other fellow teammates with what had been construed as being nothing but excuses . After all ,her scores were already lower than her other teammate ,based on what has been claimed/ stated in other stories / articles regarding the 2020 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo.
@@wandabailey7870 I feel like her story is a valuable cautionary tale for any athlete. It's a great, real life example of the consequences of over-working your body. Of not listening to yourself when something doesn't feel right. It's also noteworthy because this happened in training, not in competition. The injuries athletes suffer each and every year often occur when they're doing everyday, regular workouts and practicing. It highlights the point that it's critical to never let your guard down in terms of safety. People thought this girl was INVINCIBLE she was so talented. So yeah, I think this is actually an incredibly important set of information that would do nothing but benefit those who heard it and possibly save lives.
People praised the Soviet Union and the Communist countries for their sports program because of their work ethic, but the sports teams were nothing but machines and pawns by a horrible political system. And for what??!!.. This poor girl was so abused. We know now.
@@sandrasanders706 Step out of your anti-communist narrow, which is brainwashed in your mind and see what sport is doing to people all over the world. Extrem skills come often with a high price. Wake up!
@@sakura44553 your comment didn't age well. The Beijing winter Olympics has just finished and the shame of Russia doping a 15 year old figure skater (kamila valieva) and then not supporting her after an obvious mental breakdown on the ice at these Olympics. Also, this has nothing to do with communism per se, just authoritarian dictatorships (like Putin's Russia right now) that don't give a fig for their athletes.
I'll just be over here, sobbing over my girl Lena. She was everything a gymnast should be - dynamic, artistic, elegant, expressive.... unforgettable. And still, ever and always, my favourite gymnast of all time. What happened to her was.... there are no words. None. I don't think I'll ever forgive the Soviet system for what they did to her, not for as long as I live.
She's my favorite too. Not enough people notice her absolutely gorgeous ballet skills on beam and floor. She was perfection! What happened to her is CRIMINAL. This tragic story makes me so angry every time it crosses my mind. And very, very, very sad. I hope at least now she is at peace.
@@MeganVictoriaKearns The Soviet Union was very evil regime that lasted from 1917 to 1991. The Red Square scared the shit out of the Western world. The Iron Curtain was very real.
no because same. she was so ahead of the time in terms of her tumbling and skills, but was able to retain the classic grace of the soviets. i feel so sorry and sad for her, she had nobody left to watch for her or even protect her, she was an orphan. what bothers me even more was that klimenko was allowed to coach more gymnasts after!
The problem I have with Simone Biles's decision is when she decided to withdraw. She should have retired after the US qualifiers and let someone else take her place and realize their dreams. Because of her someone lost out on their dreams and that isn't right
Erin Meany I wonder if any of you can comprehend the unrealistic and immense pressure that Simone was under? It’s almost a wonder that she didn’t have a nervous breakdown because of it. The fact that she didn’t is a testament to her mental toughness. Simone and all the others are elite athletes, but they are not a machine!
@@cynthiasealy573 No, they can't comprehend because they don't care. All they are is armchair critics.This is the same attitude that got Elena injured.
I've known about Elena for years but this is the most in depth look with the most footage of her and interviews I've ever seen. Thank you for putting this together. An absolute tragedy.
She was on the podium crying tears of disappointment anticipating not being allowed to leave… that impacted me so much… the abuse and slavery this woman endured… these coaches are monsters.
They should make a movie about her. To tell her story and so others know her name, but also so the grueling side of sports can be seen by the wider public.
Crow embarrass the nation?!? Seriously?!? No matter what happened, Simone could never embarrass a nation! She is an incredible athlete and human being…and should never be viewed as someone to just get medals for a nation…….
My opinion is if she knew ahead of the olympics that she wasn't physically and mentally ready for the 2020 Olympics she should have stepped down and let someone else take her spot.
There's a large swath of Americans who are psychopaths and have zero capabilities for human emotions and empathy. Those psychopaths were the ones bullying Simone. Very sick, evil, malignant and demonic is what psychopaths are.
Thank god Simone is strong enough to Stand up to herself no matter how much people were pressuring her and saying she’s a disgrace for knowing when she needed to sit it out . The medal isn’t worth her mental and physical well being
@@nyx7506no I disagree. Everyone has opinions about a lot of things they can’t personally do and they do count. How many of us could be prime minister or president? Yet everyone’s opinion counts, that’s why we have elections.
I feel deeply down when I remember that she lost her parents in her childhood and was shelterless, What a dirty system we have which sacrifices such delicate fairies for a piece of olympics medal , instead of helping the youths to blossom, we humans are abusing them with an excruciating pressure, but at what cost ? In her interviews her innocent eyes and face were always sad and full of words she couldn't say , And she wasn't been taken care as she should have been . If I was there that time I liked to serve her for all of my life 💔
I was a gymnast. I was a gymnast who broke my neck doing a triple front. Only I over rotated rather than her under rotating. People just don’t realize how lucky I am when I tell them what I went through.
1:14 damn, that image screams hopelessness. The way she stares into thin air... Seeing her like that, I can see how the legend of her first words after the accident ("at least I don't have to go to the Olympics") could be true.
You could say the same about America - that the health and welfare of the athletes has been secondary in the past. After all, there was one doctor assigned to all our gymnasts and he was sexually abusing them. Someone knew something but until the gymnasts themselves took a stand, no one in American gymnastics did anything.
I've heard that it's possible the coaches themselves were being pushed hard by people higher up the pecking order such as Soviet government officials. I think Elena herself may have said she didn't completely blame her coach as "he's a victim of the system."
@@lesleyb5591 yes if you went against the system you could be sent to the gulags and your family could be targeted also by government officials , it was a very cruel regime in those years and people lived in fear
She was not injured doing the double back shown here, she was being forced to try the now banned Thomas Salto and she landed on her chin breaking her neck and instantly becoming a quadriplegic. The Soviet team forced her back into training even though the leg was not healed properly.
You could see how exhausted she was, she lost speed in the middle of her second rotation in the double back. Most elite gymnasts can do that skill every day, when one can't it means there is something wrong and that gymnast needs rest and/or healing. I could feel her exhaustion just watching her videos. Poor dear! She had no parents to advocate for her.
This is such a sad sad story. I'm glad you brought out the point about how different the equipment was then. Even more pressure on the body. Also the music just adds to the unsettling story.
Almost as tragic as her paralysis is what appears to be neglectful post-injury care. It doesn’t seem as though she had much rehabilitation. In another video, Elena is seen propped up in a standard (not even high-back) manual wheelchair, with her fingers curled in and contractured so as to be useless. In the U.S., she would have gotten aggressive rehab to preserve every possible bit of function, and she would have had an electric wheelchair with a joystick or puff controller, and therapy and splints to prevent deformity from developing. Who knows how she was even carried off the floor after crashing, and if any mishandling worsened the spinal cord damage.
It does seem as though her post-injury care was severely lacking. And, the horrible part is, proper care was most likely available in some capacity but she didn’t receive it because she was no longer of any use to the Soviets. They knew she’d never compete again, so they just moved on. Incredibly, incredibly unfair and cruel. May you now have the peace you sought, Elena 🕊
It's so sad that the same psychological/ physical pressure that Simone faced is what literally killed Elena. I hope that the gymnastics world will learn from these mistakes as a way of honoring her memory.
R u kidding??? If it was the same they wouldnt have allowed Simone to back out of competition. She would have been forced despite what she wanted. Its completely different and comparing the 2 just takes away from Elenas harrowing story.
@@nomdeplume2213 the only difference is that Simone had the strength to stand up for herself and say no…. If not, she VERY WELL could’ve ended up with an injury like Elena’s. Don’t forget that the Olympics before this last one, Simone was there and was getting sexually abused by the “doctor” who she was sent to BY her coaches.
@deirdrekiely6187 She and other gymnasts talk about it all the time. How the hell would you know enough to just say she definitely hasn't been through anything similar. You must not pay attention. I never said their situations were exactly the same, i said PSYCHOLOGICAL PRESSURE which they ALL have pointed out. Just because simone lived through it does not mean she doesn't know what it's like to be in that space.
I'd never heard of Elena. I have always LOVED Nadia, but honestly, Elena was just as or even better than Nadia. I know it's difficult to compare, and really, we shouldn't because each gymnast has their own beautiful style. My feeling is that she was forced to learn and perfect some extremely difficult and dangerous executions for the USSR's glory. Pretty sick and weak of a supposedly world power at the time to pressurize a little girl to make the country look good. I have to say Elena was a BOSS!!!! May God rest her sweet soul ❤️
У Лены был замечательный , хороший тренер, который относился к ней , как дочери. Он решил показать Лену одному из лучших мужских Советских тренеров. Лена была очень покорная и выполняла всё, работала намного больше , чем ей говорили. Но новый Ленин тренер работал только с мужчинами, это была его первая ученица, а у девочек другой характер и физиология, чем у мальчиков. Её тренер выдумывал сложнейшие элементы и Лена покорно их учила. Она выступала с травмами, её организм был измучен. Ей очень не повезло с тренером ….
I remember her competing after she had one of her injuries. She had not yet returned to her competition form/fitness. The commentators had nothing to say about her amazing performance, just her "weight gain". They kept saying how surprised they were that she could get the elevation she had at her weight....
Young people do not understand the Soviet system back then. Prior to the fall if communism, daring to defy any authority in any way would not do any good to try. That's how that system worked at the time; nothing good comes out of defying. No choices at all.
GOD BLESS the memory of ELENA MUKHINA .May her soul delights in peace.Her heavenly body is free of pain suffering and regret. Her earthly spirit was lovely . Surely Her heavenly spirit is pure beauty. A champion of life.🛡🏆💐🌹💐🌹💐 💜💛💜💛💜❤💖❤💖❤💖❤💖❤🔥
@Angry Grizzly Walked away and LIED? She was not mentally able to perform and backed out rather than give a bad performance that would bring down her team’s score. She could have been critically injured had she performed in her current mindset. She did the right thing.
I read she had twisties and it can come suddenly one day to a gymnast, maybe she felt stress and pressure because of the olympics. If it was something else feeling mentally not okay can be very dangerous for a gymnast. It was totally right of her to take her own health first imo, I doubt the others would want her get hurt just because she's doing it for the team. I remember in the 90s one girl (I don't remember her name) did that and she hurt her food and destroyed her own career just because she decided to (or was pressured by her trainer) do it for the team. I don't get how people see it as a great or beautiful olympic moment, imo it's Oone of the sad and disgusting olympic moments considering what happened to her, her trainer should have stopped her instead of pressuring her to do it. What I remember but still sad even if it was only her choice but her trainer should still have stopped her, that's his damn job if a gymnast is doing something he/she sees she shouldn't or isn't capable of.
@Angry Grizzly Simone would have broken her neck just like this had she not withdrawn. I know the media makes it sound like she's giving a different story every day, but the only truth if you actually watch her interviews is that she couldn't orient herself in space and thus knows that she's not physically capable of safely performing the moves that she needs to do to compete. With regards to stress and her aunt and the Larry Nassar abuse and all the other shit she's been through, she literally NEVER used these things as an excuse to back out. She's willing to power through those hardships, which on any person would be a huge blow and completely legitimate reason to need time and space. What she's not willing to do is put her safety at risk. The only reason the media is making it sound like she's using these things to get out of it is because they keep asking her "Could this have contributed" and she keeps replying "Maybe" because she doesn't know what exactly is causing her twisties and thus isn't going to rule out these things. Next thing you know the headlines are "Simone Biles says [insert hardship here] may have led to this." But literally the only thing preventin her from competing was her inability to orient herself in space.
So she tried to tell them so many times she was hurt it would hurt herself and they didn't listen, it totally was their fault and not hers. It was so brave of her to even try to tell no with all that pressure from the Sovjet system. Makes me so angry how they forced her and destroyed a gifted young womans future and life. Her story is one of the reasons why it's so important there are rules in the Olympics when it comes to very dangerous skills so athletes can't be forced or pressured to do something they're not capable of by their trainers or country. And I think too it was so brave of Simone to stop and not go on and hurt herself even with all the pressure and hate she probably would get. Twisties (that seems to be the problem) is real and can be very dangerous for a gymnast, I really hope for her own sake that she recovers fast.
Ditto. The skills that make us breathless require so much speed and power and it all happens in a second or two. Remember Jullissa Gomez? th-cam.com/video/1qHsHqNjetY/w-d-xo.html. Force = mass x acceleration
This story is so incredibly important to tell for so many reasons. The greatest asset you will ever have is your health, never put it at risk if you can help it…. Sad she couldn’t protect her own because they just absolutely refused to let her. So tragic. 😪 Doctors often times don’t always act in the best well being of the patient… it hasn’t changed today, and it exists all over this country. As a victim of medical malpractice, I know this firsthand.
I’m so sorry sweet angel, the people you had in your life you who were suppose to care & love you unconditionally, FAILED YOU, TOOK YOUR LIFE AWAY FROM YOU! NO-ONE HAS THE RIGHT TO TAKE SOMEONE ELSES LIFE AWAY! SLEEP WELL PRINCESS, SOAR HIGH
Exactly. People on here are claiming to know about the accident when it happened and I doubt it at least in the USA. There was no news about it. No one knew what happened to her outside the sports world. It was like one day she is there the next day she is not
😮🙏 Thank You for telling Elena Mukhina's struggles , pains & life story to warn others of not pushing oneself to the limits ... As they are consequences & may the Sporting Governing Agencies be more Safety & Health Conscious towards fellow athletes ... 🙏 May Elena be blessed to a Better World & Realm ... & be Reunited with Her Loved Ones in a Better Place in due Time & Space ... 🙏🕯🌼🌿🌍🕊
First Woman doing a Thomas Salto was Elena Davydova at the Olympics 1980 , she trained it along Mukhina for the Olympics. You get goosebumps when you see her doing it, when you know that a Humans Life was ruined due to that element !
Simone didn’t have the right to take a break, because of her mental break, according to the Hateful US fans. The US fans were so nasty towards Simone. They didn’t care about Simone the person, because many so called fans were mad, because some had dubbed her the Goat. So there was an inordinate amount of hate sent to Simone, but the mental break, may have come from trying to stop certain people from hating her. But they weren’t that upset about her routines, they were upset because some called her the Goat. So they unloaded so much hate towards her, because people like her “should” be able to perform for them no matter the problem.
She got what she deserved. Drop out before the competition if you need to work on yourself but she was selfish. Mental illness doesn’t just come upon you. She wasn’t as good as she was so she used mental illness as an excuse.
@@lois2997So... did you watch the video or just spew your vitreol without on-boarding any info? Are you capable of learning? And do tell us all about your expert opinion of Simone Biles now...
Apparently Simone was not allowed her ADHD medication in Japan. My daughter also has ADHD and it makes all the difference between whether she can concentrate or not and I believe this is why Simone found the rotations difficult. My daughter sang a lot as a young woman and you would not believe the difference the drug makes in the ability to concentrate and perform. Her teacher remarked that it was like teaching two different people. People with ADHD should be allowed their medication, no ifs or buts. It’s a life saver for them.
I would 100% agree that that would make a HUGE impact on her. I'm in my mid 30's and take 60 mg. of Adderall daily and if I forget there is a remarkable impact on my day, let alone if you have to go a prolonged time without it your body withdrawals and for myself that is sever migraines and just general irritability.
Nobody should have a problem with use in daily life. But in a competition I say It doesn't matter if someone has ADHD I've taken Adderall and others like it they are performance enhancing drugs.
@@Bantzhole The reason they did that to you is because you do not have ADHD! People with ADHD require Ritalin to put them on an equal not enhanced footing.
@@fizzao1342 you clearly stated yourself that your daughter preformed better with the medication. It's clearly a performance enhancer and if you must know I was prescribed the stuff when I was younger decided for myself to quit and find my way without copious amount of pills to get through each day.
We cannot create world champions by force or authority. Gone are the days with the wind and we have to give respect, love, care, understand them and space or else we are comitting the gravest mistakes that would not be forgiven to achieve our objectives with self interest in the name of motherland means nothing.
Not at all the same but when I did gymnasics as a kid (we had a team of 12 year olds) I was TOLD I would perform on a certain practice beam. It wobbled becasue the legs weren't even and the mat and cover in were loose. I refused and walked right out of the gym. Fortunately, I had parents who taught me to stand up for myself. The equipment wasnt safe and I had support, who knows what would have happened if my parent didn't get that beam removed from the gym.
That’s why I love the Brazilian gymnastic team, Flávia Saraiva and Rebeca Andrade are great examples of how to deal with hardships with a positive attitude, their coach Chico doesn’t allow them to push too much and focuses more on doing fewer stunts but with a lot of preparation
I remember learning her story from the book “Little Girls in Pretty Boxes”, where it was mentioned that Elena Mukhina was Julissa’s favorite gymnast. I appreciated learning more about Mukhina with this piece. Her story should not be forgotten.
You look at the tactics of Russia and Romania with their female gymnasts. They were mistreated and abused and starved. When Nadia was in training her evil coach Bela even restricted water. Water. He wanted them to be skinny, starved birds. But, look at today. Gymnasts like Simone are strong, healthy and eat nutritionally good food. It is because she gets rest and can eat and become strong and healthy that her body can handle the skills and do the amazing things. Look at katelyn Ohashi of UCLA. She is not a thin bird and is so great. And the fact that Simone said 'no' is another feat for gymnasts. When the Twisties hit it is dangerous and deadly for any gymnast to perform. It is unfortunate they hit right as the Olympics began but, you cannot control when it hits. It is important to step away. How sad that so many wonderful gymnast were injured terribly and made to suffer during these training sessions that abused these girls horribly. And having an abuser like Nassar exposed and jailed is another plus in the liberating of the gymnasts.
@@nancymcgowan3433 Those that don't train at an elite level are unaware of how gymnast were trained in the US from the 80s till just recently.. The gymnasts that trained under Bela, Marta and all the other abusive National Coaches went through hell and were trained in an Americanized version of Eastern Bloc training because it produced medals. If you were in pain, you kept your mouth shut or you were off the team. John Goddard was heard to tell an injured gymnast to get the eff out of the gym and not come back. Or tell that to Julissa Gomez, who was forced to compete a Yurachenko vault she wasn't ready to do. Bela was not paying attention and she missed her hands on the horse and slammed headfirst into the horse. She broke her neck and ended up in a coma from which she would never wake up. She died as a result of the accident. Bela and Marta had that same mindset as Elena's coach. The medals and glory was more important then the health of the gymnast. No one spoke against it until the Nassar scandal broke and it came out that gymnasts of all levels, including Olympians, were being abused in every way possible. Simone has been very vocal about what happened to her, yes she is a Nassar survivor, and Is leading the fight to give gymnasts back control of their bodies, health and career.
EXACTLY! I'm actually relieved that Simone has had the strength and clarity to put her health first. I don't care if she gets a medal she's already shown she's the amazing. I do care if she ends up like Ylena or ruins her life.
Now maybe people can understand the pressure Simone Biles carried for years. After a year off from competition, and for the first time not having her parents with her, she couldn’t continue, and she had the guts and the support of her coach and team to say, “I’m sorry, it’s just too much.” Although things are somewhat better now, gymnasts are still expected to push themselves to a degree that is ridiculous. At least now, thanks to Biles, maybe they can say NO. Poor Elena Mukhina didn’t have a chance.
Watching Simone pull out reminded me of another incident--that of Keri Strug. And everyone thought what a hero she was. And Karoli on the sidelines pushing her to do that second vault. Despicable. Who is advocating for these girls?
I believe Elena died in December. It is tragic, I find her techniques and graceful dancing very mesmerizing! Her story haunts me! I see her, she had something so magical about her! If this tragedy wouldn't of happened! I truly believe without doubt, she would have been a great Olympian champion and Nadia would not have the spotlight.
Thank you for informing us & exposing this. I'm an older one, this is what we thought was was going on at the time with Soviet athletes. We always felt bad when they lost, because we believed they would be punished back home. So this is not a surprise for many of us Yet when you connect the dots, put the story together- particularly interviews straight from her, it's even worse than we imagined back then. No wonder why the Soviet Union kept shoving Olga korbut in our faces. Remember folks, this isn't the past, its what Russia & China currently do to their athletes We know what went on at the Beijing Olympics... that was only a decade ago
Laura, I know from the Holy Ghost, that Heaven does, indeed, exist, and that our Heavenly Father dearly loves his daughter, Elena, and that He has the power and ability to take away her emotional pain, and that therefore, He most likely has done so, especially because Elena already learned more than she had to in this life! This is why she now has peace, because our Father in Heaven gave her grace in the state of being she is in now, as He will do for all of us, his beloved children. Especially to those who love our Father, who desires to give his children all that he has! We need to show him that we do, in deed, love Him! We do this by keeping His commandments, as the holy scriptures explain to us in many, many verses. It’s simple: if we love Him, we follow Him. ALL of the above is made possible through His beloved Son, Jesus Christ, who showed his Father that he loved him, by keeping ALL of his Father’s commandments AND especially volunteering to actually give his very life to all of us who choose to repent and therefore become clean, so that we will live with God again, as we did before this life. “Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee.” I, personally, am looking so forward to living in the same existence with God, our Heavenly Father, again, as we did before, where we will have peace, and where our joy will be complete!!! I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ. Thank you for reading and pondering. May you seek out the being who loves you more than any human ever could, your very own Father in heaven. I wish you happiness, peace in your heart, and love toward others. For more enlightenment and encouragement, I invite you to visit churchofjesuschrist.org Love and blessings to you!
@@111marcie Simone was not being abused! Nasser is in jail and she has a great coach. She had a bad day on vault and lost her confidence, that's all. She cracked under the pressure.
@@JaneSmith0709 And she decided to quit before pressure got the best out of her and she would end up severely injured. If she didn't feel confident, mentally or physically, and when performing a sport that can leave you paralized in a second, she did the best.
@@Sarablueunicorn I can appreciate that, but you can't call yourself the GOAT if you cave to pressure like that. Part of being a top athlete is handling the mental pressure as well as the physical aspect, that's what makes a champion a champion. If everyone could do it then it wouldn't be special. She can take herself out for mental reasons, she has that right and I don't take that away from her, but she can't call herself the GOAT after doing so.
Her story was presented so well here. I vaguely remember hearing of this as a kid but not in such detail. What a tragic story that should have been prevented. RIP Elena you were an amazing young woman. 💖
Whats sad is Elena isn't alone in the abuse she endured. This happened all across gymnastics, I mean look at Keri Strug. Underneath her heroic display of perseverance was a young woman brainwashed into believing she had no other choice outside of continuing her vault clearly injured and risking even further injury. Only recently has the abuse within the sport been realized
Wow this was sooo heart breaking to watch. I can’t imagine being that young and not being able to stand up for yourself and living through such physical and mental torture everyday
Very sad story 😢. Too bad she couldn’t escape from them. She was either really brainwashed or too scared to for herself and her family 😢. I’ve heard of her name but didn’t know this story. Thanks for posting about it. These poor gymnasts. They go through so much 😢.
this will be forever why simone speaking out and stepping back will forever not only change the sport but be important. if it was a time where elena could have spoken up, she had nobody to care for her or look out for her, her entire family had died when she was young and she was an orphan, i just cannot stop thinking about how horrifyingly sad it is how she blamed herself for her accident. i hope you’re at peace now elena
I have no words for this immence tragedy. Those cruel coaches should have been convicted of torture, and attempted murder. And then should have also paid for damages/trauma. This is so not fair. My heart breaks for this remarkable woman
it wasn't even only the pro circles. my mom grew up in the 70s/80s in a tiny little village in the eastern block, she was a talented gymnast but her coach pushed her too hard which directly resulted in her breaking her leg despite her repeatedly telling them the vault was too far, she was shamed for "missing out" on the season due to her broken leg, then once she was healed she started going through puberty and her coach didn't like her new figure so she was pushed out of the sport, i can tell she's still hurt over it even after all these years
Simone showed this in her Olympics she took control and said No! She’s Amazing! And a Strong powerful voice and she’s not Just a Gymnast she’s the hope of showing It’s your. Body and health ! And she chose Safety! People had the nerve to say she Quit no she didn’t she wasn’t her mental health is important esp with the difficulty and skills she performs No one relise how hard and dangerous the skills she performs! Simone is showing woman to put Your mental health and physical health first ! Maybe if their was a Simone in the young girls life that ended up dying bec the coaches were monsters Alaina maybe she would be alive today! Rest In Peace Alaina you did not sue in vain Godbless Simone The Lord is with Simone he has Amazing plans for the Beautiful young Lady and the Greatest Gymnast of all time !
Tears are flowing down as I watch… her eyes are the saddest and most tiring, heartbreaking is an understatement. Sorry Elena - you finally could rest ❤️
I'M FURIOUS AND SAD. I don't care about what anybody sais, she was at the same level of Nadia and when you see her, you realized that she should have been a perfect 10. New moves, more grace, original and she made the best Korbut ever when she beat Nadia.
Elena's eyes are the saddest eyes I've ever seen. She was great champion and very talented girl - unfortunatly, she paid the price of others cruel ambitions. One and only - Elena Mukhina. ❤
Most stories call her 'the girl with ice eyes', but yes it's very sad what happened to her, I'm glad the thomas salto is banned for wag and mag now
That was the first thing I noticed about her. Her eyes. Her face is gaunt and pale and her cheeks are hollow. She looks rail-thin and you can see the suffering from deep within her soul. She was a victim of child abuse and exploitation. 💔
her life was really fucking tragic too, both her parents died within like the first four years of her life, leaving her an orphan, and then i believe when she was a bit older her guardian passed away. there was nobody there to protect this poor girl. may she rip
@@hannahtanski3911 Her grandmother, Anna Ivanovna raised her after her parents passed. In 2005, her grandmother passed. Her friend Elena Gurina had taken over her care as her grandmother aged.
Dont say fake news....father is probably still alive. At least he was when she died and inherited her flat and medals. Mother died yes in fire that alcoholic father provoked. He was in prison for a while....after he had another women and family. Return to Lena only for money when she was already paralyzed. The Grandma was strange character, strong and cold....very religious in bad way so there cant be warm touch too.
Elena was such an UNDERRATED gymnast. She never gets mentioned and that disturbs me because not only should we remember that this type of abuse (yes it is abuse) should not be allowed. What she could have been if the people around her cared more about her life.
I agree. Nadia Comenici is often mentioned, it would be good to remember Elena in those instances. It is my understanding that Comenici was treated extremely poorly as well (form the documentary Athlete A - I don't know that much about it). But about physical abuse if they didn't perform and that all the announcers spoke about Comenici never smiling. 👎👎
@@dyslexiahelpforallages4176 She wasn't undererrated. She was expected to take gold in the Moscow Olympics. Maybe you haven't heard of her, but we all saw her on Saturday tv on ABC and she was considered a tough tough contender for gold. That entire Russian team was
@@asturiasceltic3183 I guess I'm thinking in the history of gymnastics. I am 35, so I wasn't able to watch her when she performed. But, I also haven't really heard her mentioned and have been a light fan of gymnastics for awhile.
@@dyslexiahelpforallages4176 You probably saw her without knowing it. Do you remember a news story of a funeral that Svetlana Khorkina attended and suddenly burst into tears and ran out of the funeral? That was Elena's funeral.
Very sad. When she won it was for her country. She was praised. When she got injured , she was forsaken and left to suffer and die. Cruel.
Heartbreaking. Elena had more freedom AFTER her injury than before.
She died in her early 40s. I hope her coaches are in h€||
Freedom, ha! You,like most people, probably don’t realize what it is like for someone with a spinal cord injury. They have absolutely no control over their bowel and bladder. It is like being in hell.
@@scot60mid forties .
I was a gymnast at the time. Her catastrophic injury really affected me. There was a lot of secrecy around what had actually happened to her back then.
She was one of my favourites.
Poor girl 😢.
No one knew what happened to her in the USA. Maybe the sports world did but the everyday American didn't
The truth about the circumstances and extent of Elena’s injury did not come out until after the fall of the Soviet Union.
@@asturiasceltic3183 I certainly didn’t; I just noticed that she was Just Gone from one meet to the next…
@@lesliegoodman-malamuth9796 Me too. I noticed the little red-head girl was no longer there and I thought she got in trouble or didn't make the Olympic team and didn't know the horrible truth until about 6 years ago while being on TH-cam
@@asturiasceltic3183 I am glad that in many nations, “safe sport” precautions of all kinds are being put into place for gymnasts and other young athletes. Since I was molested as an adolescent by a doctor, the Larry Nassar case revived horrible memories. Though I’d told myself that I was “only groped,” “only” remains much too much for a young girl to tolerate. I still freeze when someone snaps off a light abruptly, as did my erstwhile optometrist.
Appreciate the story, but it's not just a Soviet problem. Julissa Gomez died in America while learning a vault she didn't feel comfortable with. Not to mention those who died from eating disorders. It should never happen.
Good that you write this here. But about these cases no such propaganda film - we have here - will be made. The goal for this video is to not to show how much cruelty is in gymnastics, but in Sowjet Union.
@@sakura44553 The sport of gymnastics everywhere is cruel.
@@sofiarangel1315 yep
Julissa Gomez (as sad as her story is) was not treated anywhere near as badly as Yelena Mukhina. The Soviet regime was on another level of harshness and was nothing like how American gymnasts were treated!
@@MagicalMukhinasorry ? Who was killed ? Not Mukhina. And let’s talk about sex scandal in American gymnastics
Elena is the reason why the Thomas Salto was banned.
Good
Is it though? It was still done in the 90s.
It took them 12 years to ban it for the women and finally for men in 2012. Crazy!
For guys it was done even until the 2010s
@@colesmith7509 no till 2017 in men gymnastics
I read somewhere that Elena Davydova the 1980 champion used to visit Elena regularly after her accident and they remained close friends until Elena died
I remember reading where Yelena said, when she snapped her neck practing that dangerous skill (invented by a male gymnast, the Thomas Salto and now banned), that her male coach forced her to do, her first thought was...."well at least I won't have to go to the Olympics!".......I was shocked and deeply disturbed reading that because that's a serious indication of how much abuse she endured.
Most people would be terrified at the thought of being paralyzed but that being her first thought, speaks volumes! May Yelena Mukhina RIP! 🙏
I'm equally appalled at the beta males who bullied Simone Biles for withdrawing from competition due to her mental health issues. It speaks volumes about how abusive beta males are to females and how much males rationalize abuse towards females!
I Also couldn't understand the bully mentality and lack of compassion from the conservative TH-cam news blogs and the all out attack on her patriotism referring her decision to a "woke" response for her twisties and stress.Women get stressed by excess hormones that cause postpartum infanticide,or suicide. I thought they had good fact finders before they " open mouth, insert foot".
I bet those beta males hated her for being a female and black. Typical racist and sexist behavior because they went beyond being disappointed at her; they were bashing her. As long as she was winning, they could tolerate her being black. So when she started having the twisties and feeling mentally out of her element, they used this as an excuse to voice their hate in the form of calling her “weak” etc. She has nothing to prove to anyone. She’ll always be an amazing gymnast 💗
@@LeMarais88 🙄🙄
Yes so true @Lizzie Beth, When I first read about Mukhina's injury I remember being shocked her first thought was that too - just speaks to how much pressure and abuse she was under. Such a tragic story and all the more cause it was preventable :-(
@@LeMarais88 👏👏👏
When you care more about a medal than a human being. That’s what happens. They didn’t even go to the hospital to see her. They should all be behind bars. RIP Elena. You deserved more than what you got ❤️❤️🙏🙏
That's how communist countries that focus on face and soft power act. China is doing exactly the same thing and everybody is watching in HD screens and applauding for how great they are and giving them a "soft warning" for displaying political items at awards ceremony, like the cyclists who "decided" to wear a mao zedong pin (Im sure it was their decision). And China just testing how many boundaries they can cross without any consequences. No worries, if any of their athletes become severely disabled they'll just kick them to the curb, if they still can be used somehow they will rehabilitate them for the paralympics, what matters is to bring medals to mother land.
Look at what happened to Kamila Valieva in Beijing
@@Sarablueunicorn you don’t think American coaches aren’t cruel
No, innocent people are jailed in Russia only.
It breaks my heart what happened to this tragic young woman.
I can't recall how old she was in each instance, but I read that by the time she was a senior gymnast both her parents had died. I have also never heard of her having siblings. This is so tragic. She was just 19 when she was paralyzed. Rest peacefully, Elena. You were a magnificent person and this never should have happened to you. ❤😥
Me too ....rip❤
Elena was alone. She didn’t have parents😔
I was a gymnast and around the same age as Elena Muhkina . What her coaches did to her was terrible . I watched the documentary it was abuse plain and simple .They should have never made her train on a broken leg like that . They caused her spinal cord injury and paralysis . Rest In Power Elena !❤️❤️❤️
Sorry correction her mom died I a fire 🔥. :( but still orphaned ) :(
Based on what I read, Elena did the Thomas salto routine with still unhealed leg wound from surgery without the presence of her coach klimenko.
Did you get to know her? I recently knew of Elena's story, and I immediately admired how talented and strong she was.
There was a similar episode with another neck injury before that. A spinous process broke off of one of her neck vertebae. The coach made her take off the neck brace and train. She had a chronic wrist injuries and often dislocated fingers from bad falls. Choreographer used to sneak her smelling salts, Elena hid a bud of cotton wool wet with the smelling salts solution in the sleeve of her leo to sneak a sniff when she felt like fainting from pain. If she gained as much as 100 grams of weight, she'd be running at nights instead of sleep to avoid coach's fury. She said in several interviews that she felt suicidal and at the end of her rope
So sad 😢😢😢
The doctors and coaches did not care. RIP Elena
I love her so much. Her story should be told to all, not just gymnasts.
Especially tell all men. No empathy, instrumentalizing for personal gain, disbelief and gaslighting. The daily utterly common things. doing horrific damage.
Sorry ,but there is truly no reason for this story to be repeated to those whom have in actuality no connection to her.
Waste of time to do such -- perhaps only for those whom may want to know whom she is or whom she had been.
Simone Biles has no bearing on this subject matter -- time to leave her where she belongs -- on the sidelines.Unless wanting to,discuss her actions ,of quitting on the American team ,the other fellow teammates with what had been construed as being nothing but excuses .
After all ,her scores were already lower than her other teammate ,based on what has been claimed/ stated in other stories / articles regarding the 2020 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo.
@@wandabailey7870 I feel like her story is a valuable cautionary tale for any athlete. It's a great, real life example of the consequences of over-working your body. Of not listening to yourself when something doesn't feel right. It's also noteworthy because this happened in training, not in competition. The injuries athletes suffer each and every year often occur when they're doing everyday, regular workouts and practicing. It highlights the point that it's critical to never let your guard down in terms of safety. People thought this girl was INVINCIBLE she was so talented. So yeah, I think this is actually an incredibly important set of information that would do nothing but benefit those who heard it and possibly save lives.
@Wanda you must be fun at parties. People with zero understanding and compassion usually are.
such a sad story, they treated her like a slave. R.I.P. Elena
People praised the Soviet Union and the Communist countries for their sports program because of their work ethic, but the sports teams were nothing but machines and pawns by a horrible political system. And for what??!!.. This poor girl was so abused. We know now.
I would have said sorry no but I heard that one way ticket to Siberia was still about then
@@sandrasanders706 Step out of your anti-communist narrow, which is brainwashed in your mind and see what sport is doing to people all over the world. Extrem skills come often with a high price. Wake up!
Don’t say rip that’s rude literally bro
@@sakura44553 your comment didn't age well. The Beijing winter Olympics has just finished and the shame of Russia doping a 15 year old figure skater (kamila valieva) and then not supporting her after an obvious mental breakdown on the ice at these Olympics.
Also, this has nothing to do with communism per se, just authoritarian dictatorships (like Putin's Russia right now) that don't give a fig for their athletes.
I'll just be over here, sobbing over my girl Lena. She was everything a gymnast should be - dynamic, artistic, elegant, expressive.... unforgettable. And still, ever and always, my favourite gymnast of all time. What happened to her was.... there are no words. None. I don't think I'll ever forgive the Soviet system for what they did to her, not for as long as I live.
She's my favorite too. Not enough people notice her absolutely gorgeous ballet skills on beam and floor. She was perfection! What happened to her is CRIMINAL. This tragic story makes me so angry every time it crosses my mind. And very, very, very sad. I hope at least now she is at peace.
@@MeganVictoriaKearns The Soviet Union was very evil regime that lasted from 1917 to 1991.
The Red Square scared the shit out of the Western world.
The Iron Curtain was very real.
no because same. she was so ahead of the time in terms of her tumbling and skills, but was able to retain the classic grace of the soviets. i feel so sorry and sad for her, she had nobody left to watch for her or even protect her, she was an orphan. what bothers me even more was that klimenko was allowed to coach more gymnasts after!
The fact that the coach wasnt even arrested-
This should be watch by everyone who accuses Simone Biles of being weak and a quitter. The athletes should have a prerogative of their own body.
The problem I have with Simone Biles's decision is when she decided to withdraw. She should have retired after the US qualifiers and let someone else take her place and realize their dreams. Because of her someone lost out on their dreams and that isn't right
Erin Meany I wonder if any of you can comprehend the unrealistic and immense pressure that Simone was under? It’s almost a wonder that she didn’t have a nervous breakdown because of it. The fact that she didn’t is a testament to her mental toughness. Simone and all the others are elite athletes, but they are not a machine!
@@cynthiasealy573 OMG, are you her besty?
@@cynthiasealy573 No, they can't comprehend because they don't care. All they are is armchair critics.This is the same attitude that got Elena injured.
Ralph Hahn 🙄
I've known about Elena for years but this is the most in depth look with the most footage of her and interviews I've ever seen. Thank you for putting this together. An absolute tragedy.
She was on the podium crying tears of disappointment anticipating not being allowed to leave… that impacted me so much… the abuse and slavery this woman endured… these coaches are monsters.
Blame it on the Soviet regime!
They should make a movie about her. To tell her story and so others know her name, but also so the grueling side of sports can be seen by the wider public.
th-cam.com/video/I6aCU6_YUa0/w-d-xo.html
Yes, seen by the whole world.
That everyone knows what Russia did, their lies....lies..lies.
Elena's story always makes me cry.
And, now we know why she always looked so sad in competition and even atop the awards podium..❤
And this is exactly why everybody should have supported Simone Biles
Crow embarrass the nation?!? Seriously?!? No matter what happened, Simone could never embarrass a nation! She is an incredible athlete and human being…and should never be viewed as someone to just get medals for a nation…….
My opinion is if she knew ahead of the olympics that she wasn't physically and mentally ready for the 2020 Olympics she should have stepped down and let someone else take her spot.
I did I thought everyone did.
@@TheWoodland12 Everyone does not. How could you support a known drug user and quitter?!
There's a large swath of Americans who are psychopaths and have zero capabilities for human emotions and empathy. Those psychopaths were the ones bullying Simone. Very sick, evil, malignant and demonic is what psychopaths are.
So eerie that she actually seems a bit happier paralyzed, overall. And even worse that I totally get it.
I know what you mean. Poor Elena had such a tragic life 😢
Thank god Simone is strong enough to Stand up to herself no matter how much people were pressuring her and saying she’s a disgrace for knowing when she needed to sit it out . The medal isn’t worth her mental and physical well being
You can't compare Elena's years with Simone's times.
Simone was no hero.
@@lois2997unless you can do better your opinion means nothing.
@@nyx7506no I disagree. Everyone has opinions about a lot of things they can’t personally do and they do count. How many of us could be prime minister or president? Yet everyone’s opinion counts, that’s why we have elections.
@@nyx7506 neither does yours
I feel deeply down when I remember that she lost her parents in her childhood and was shelterless, What a dirty system we have which sacrifices such delicate fairies for a piece of olympics medal , instead of helping the youths to blossom, we humans are abusing them with an excruciating pressure, but at what cost ?
In her interviews her innocent eyes and face were always sad and full of words she couldn't say ,
And she wasn't been taken care as she should have been . If I was there that time I liked to serve her for all of my life 💔
I was wondering where he parents were and why they were letting that happen. 😪
Carey Metz her mother had died, her father was apparently an alcoholic and in prison
This is what communism does
Thank you for sharing Elena’s story.
I was a gymnast. I was a gymnast who broke my neck doing a triple front. Only I over rotated rather than her under rotating. People just don’t realize how lucky I am when I tell them what I went through.
1:14 damn, that image screams hopelessness. The way she stares into thin air... Seeing her like that, I can see how the legend of her first words after the accident ("at least I don't have to go to the Olympics") could be true.
You could say the same about America - that the health and welfare of the athletes has been secondary in the past.
After all, there was one doctor assigned to all our gymnasts and he was sexually abusing them. Someone knew something but until the gymnasts themselves took a stand, no one in American gymnastics did anything.
Thank you for the insight into what these incredible gymnists go through. It breaks my heart.
These coaches are monsters!
Worse than that
I've heard that it's possible the coaches themselves were being pushed hard by people higher up the pecking order such as Soviet government officials. I think Elena herself may have said she didn't completely blame her coach as "he's a victim of the system."
@@lesleyb5591 yes if you went against the system you could be sent to the gulags and your family could be targeted also by government officials , it was a very cruel regime in those years and people lived in fear
She was not injured doing the double back shown here, she was being forced to try the now banned Thomas Salto and she landed on her chin breaking her neck and instantly becoming a quadriplegic. The Soviet team forced her back into training even though the leg was not healed properly.
You could see how exhausted she was, she lost speed in the middle of her second rotation in the double back. Most elite gymnasts can do that skill every day, when one can't it means there is something wrong and that gymnast needs rest and/or healing. I could feel her exhaustion just watching her videos. Poor dear! She had no parents to advocate for her.
This is such a sad sad story. I'm glad you brought out the point about how different the equipment was then. Even more pressure on the body. Also the music just adds to the unsettling story.
Almost as tragic as her paralysis is what appears to be neglectful post-injury care. It doesn’t seem as though she had much rehabilitation. In another video, Elena is seen propped up in a standard (not even high-back) manual wheelchair, with her fingers curled in and contractured so as to be useless. In the U.S., she would have gotten aggressive rehab to preserve every possible bit of function, and she would have had an electric wheelchair with a joystick or puff controller, and therapy and splints to prevent deformity from developing. Who knows how she was even carried off the floor after crashing, and if any mishandling worsened the spinal cord damage.
Was this the standard of care in 1980, in the U.S? You are correct about the care being better here than the USSR.
She didn't even get the surgery for a couple of days.
It does seem as though her post-injury care was severely lacking. And, the horrible part is, proper care was most likely available in some capacity but she didn’t receive it because she was no longer of any use to the Soviets. They knew she’d never compete again, so they just moved on. Incredibly, incredibly unfair and cruel. May you now have the peace you sought, Elena 🕊
In the USA she would have been living in the streets
@@brandycarter9829seriously ? You are just trrrible . Unfortunately at that time not much could have been done
It's so sad that the same psychological/ physical pressure that Simone faced is what literally killed Elena. I hope that the gymnastics world will learn from these mistakes as a way of honoring her memory.
R u kidding??? If it was the same they wouldnt have allowed Simone to back out of competition. She would have been forced despite what she wanted. Its completely different and comparing the 2 just takes away from Elenas harrowing story.
They are not going to stop, is just that at those times, everything was worst. Have you seen China train the poor girls?
@@nomdeplume2213 the only difference is that Simone had the strength to stand up for herself and say no…. If not, she VERY WELL could’ve ended up with an injury like Elena’s.
Don’t forget that the Olympics before this last one, Simone was there and was getting sexually abused by the “doctor” who she was sent to BY her coaches.
Simone does not endure what Elena did. What the hell are you talking about?
@deirdrekiely6187 She and other gymnasts talk about it all the time. How the hell would you know enough to just say she definitely hasn't been through anything similar. You must not pay attention. I never said their situations were exactly the same, i said PSYCHOLOGICAL PRESSURE which they ALL have pointed out. Just because simone lived through it does not mean she doesn't know what it's like to be in that space.
I'd never heard of Elena. I have always LOVED Nadia, but honestly, Elena was just as or even better than Nadia. I know it's difficult to compare, and really, we shouldn't because each gymnast has their own beautiful style. My feeling is that she was forced to learn and perfect some extremely difficult and dangerous executions for the USSR's glory. Pretty sick and weak of a supposedly world power at the time to pressurize a little girl to make the country look good. I have to say Elena was a BOSS!!!! May God rest her sweet soul ❤️
У Лены был замечательный , хороший тренер, который относился к ней , как дочери. Он решил показать Лену одному из лучших мужских Советских тренеров. Лена была очень покорная и выполняла всё, работала намного больше , чем ей говорили. Но новый Ленин тренер работал только с мужчинами, это была его первая ученица, а у девочек другой характер и физиология, чем у мальчиков. Её тренер выдумывал сложнейшие элементы и Лена покорно их учила. Она выступала с травмами, её организм был измучен. Ей очень не повезло с тренером ….
They are not a world power.Just criminals.
And Putin rules Russians with an iron fist.Sending people to prison as he wishes.
I remember her competing after she had one of her injuries.
She had not yet returned to her competition form/fitness.
The commentators had nothing to say about her amazing performance, just her "weight gain". They kept saying how surprised they were that she could get the elevation she had at her weight....
To make the matter even worse: Klimenko (the coach) never apologized or even talked to her after the incident.
He is a coward.
Young people do not understand the Soviet system back then. Prior to the fall if communism, daring to defy any authority in any way would not do any good to try. That's how that system worked at the time; nothing good comes out of defying. No choices at all.
These people are monsters.
GOD BLESS the memory of ELENA MUKHINA .May her soul delights in peace.Her heavenly body is free of pain suffering and regret. Her earthly spirit was lovely . Surely Her heavenly spirit is pure beauty. A champion of life.🛡🏆💐🌹💐🌹💐 💜💛💜💛💜❤💖❤💖❤💖❤💖❤🔥
Amen
What a sad story. I, too, applaud Simone for her decision.
@Angry Grizzly Walked away and LIED? She was not mentally able to perform and backed out rather than give a bad performance that would bring down her team’s score. She could have been critically injured had she performed in her current mindset. She did the right thing.
I read she had twisties and it can come suddenly one day to a gymnast, maybe she felt stress and pressure because of the olympics. If it was something else feeling mentally not okay can be very dangerous for a gymnast. It was totally right of her to take her own health first imo, I doubt the others would want her get hurt just because she's doing it for the team.
I remember in the 90s one girl (I don't remember her name) did that and she hurt her food and destroyed her own career just because she decided to (or was pressured by her trainer) do it for the team. I don't get how people see it as a great or beautiful olympic moment, imo it's Oone of the sad and disgusting olympic moments considering what happened to her, her trainer should have stopped her instead of pressuring her to do it. What I remember but still sad even if it was only her choice but her trainer should still have stopped her, that's his damn job if a gymnast is doing something he/she sees she shouldn't or isn't capable of.
@Angry Grizzly Simone would have broken her neck just like this had she not withdrawn. I know the media makes it sound like she's giving a different story every day, but the only truth if you actually watch her interviews is that she couldn't orient herself in space and thus knows that she's not physically capable of safely performing the moves that she needs to do to compete. With regards to stress and her aunt and the Larry Nassar abuse and all the other shit she's been through, she literally NEVER used these things as an excuse to back out. She's willing to power through those hardships, which on any person would be a huge blow and completely legitimate reason to need time and space. What she's not willing to do is put her safety at risk. The only reason the media is making it sound like she's using these things to get out of it is because they keep asking her "Could this have contributed" and she keeps replying "Maybe" because she doesn't know what exactly is causing her twisties and thus isn't going to rule out these things. Next thing you know the headlines are "Simone Biles says [insert hardship here] may have led to this." But literally the only thing preventin her from competing was her inability to orient herself in space.
Would stop bringing her up. Totally different situations nobody cares about Simone . She was selfish
😭😭😭 rip a Olympic legend whom deserves loads of respect and credit
So she tried to tell them so many times she was hurt it would hurt herself and they didn't listen, it totally was their fault and not hers. It was so brave of her to even try to tell no with all that pressure from the Sovjet system. Makes me so angry how they forced her and destroyed a gifted young womans future and life. Her story is one of the reasons why it's so important there are rules in the Olympics when it comes to very dangerous skills so athletes can't be forced or pressured to do something they're not capable of by their trainers or country.
And I think too it was so brave of Simone to stop and not go on and hurt herself even with all the pressure and hate she probably would get. Twisties (that seems to be the problem) is real and can be very dangerous for a gymnast, I really hope for her own sake that she recovers fast.
Ditto. The skills that make us breathless require so much speed and power and it all happens in a second or two. Remember Jullissa Gomez? th-cam.com/video/1qHsHqNjetY/w-d-xo.html. Force = mass x acceleration
This story is so incredibly important to tell for so many reasons. The greatest asset you will ever have is your health, never put it at risk if you can help it…. Sad she couldn’t protect her own because they just absolutely refused to let her. So tragic. 😪
Doctors often times don’t always act in the best well being of the patient… it hasn’t changed today, and it exists all over this country. As a victim of medical malpractice, I know this firsthand.
The Soviet govt controlled the doctors ; can’t place all blame on them. They would have been thrown out the window
Her coach killed her.
So much for the mocking of the “twisties lill overrated problem” by some individuals whose best jump was jump up in a gym in zumba class
I’m so sorry sweet angel, the people you had in your life you who were suppose to care & love you unconditionally, FAILED YOU, TOOK YOUR LIFE AWAY FROM YOU!
NO-ONE HAS THE RIGHT TO TAKE SOMEONE ELSES LIFE AWAY!
SLEEP WELL PRINCESS, SOAR HIGH
We will never forget what suffering and pain you had to go through! We will mourn you until the end of our days! Sleep well, our bright Angel!
Elena was 6 months older than me. I remember her because I wondered what happened to her. The Soviets kept it under wraps for years.
Exactly. People on here are claiming to know about the accident when it happened and I doubt it at least in the USA. There was no news about it. No one knew what happened to her outside the sports world. It was like one day she is there the next day she is not
Yep, the USSR lied about this for years
@@scot60nope.
😮🙏 Thank You for telling Elena Mukhina's struggles , pains & life story to warn others of not pushing oneself to the limits ... As they are consequences & may the Sporting Governing Agencies be more Safety & Health Conscious towards fellow athletes ... 🙏 May Elena be blessed to a Better World & Realm ... & be Reunited with Her Loved Ones in a Better Place in due Time & Space ... 🙏🕯🌼🌿🌍🕊
You forgot to said she beat Nadia on that competition.
First Woman doing a Thomas Salto was Elena Davydova at the Olympics 1980 , she trained it along Mukhina for the Olympics. You get goosebumps when you see her doing it, when you know that a Humans Life was ruined due to that element !
What a sad story. You did a wonderful job with this video. New sub!
Discovered you from this video and binged all of your content. Love how you do stories most people haven't heard of. Keep up the good work 👏
Simone didn’t have the right to take a break, because of her mental break, according to the Hateful US fans. The US fans were so nasty towards Simone. They didn’t care about Simone the person, because many so called fans were mad, because some had dubbed her the Goat. So there was an inordinate amount of hate sent to Simone, but the mental break, may have come from trying to stop certain people from hating her.
But they weren’t that upset about her routines, they were upset because some called her the Goat. So they unloaded so much hate towards her, because people like her “should” be able to perform for them no matter the problem.
She got what she deserved. Drop out before the competition if you need to work on yourself but she was selfish. Mental illness doesn’t just come upon you. She wasn’t as good as she was so she used mental illness as an excuse.
@@lois2997So... did you watch the video or just spew your vitreol without on-boarding any info? Are you capable of learning? And do tell us all about your expert opinion of Simone Biles now...
as an orphan, Elena was much more vulnerable to the system :( at least her friend Yelena Davydova was there for her till the end
Apparently Simone was not allowed her ADHD medication in Japan. My daughter also has ADHD and it makes all the difference between whether she can concentrate or not and I believe this is why Simone found the rotations difficult. My daughter sang a lot as a young woman and you would not believe the difference the drug makes in the ability to concentrate and perform. Her teacher remarked that it was like teaching two different people. People with ADHD should be allowed their medication, no ifs or buts. It’s a life saver for them.
I would 100% agree that that would make a HUGE impact on her. I'm in my mid 30's and take 60 mg. of Adderall daily and if I forget there is a remarkable impact on my day, let alone if you have to go a prolonged time without it your body withdrawals and for myself that is sever migraines and just general irritability.
Nobody should have a problem with use in daily life. But in a competition I say It doesn't matter if someone has ADHD I've taken Adderall and others like it they are performance enhancing drugs.
Is it the country that's banning it, or the Olympic Committee? Just curious. I absolutely agree with you.
@@Bantzhole The reason they did that to you is because you do not have ADHD! People with ADHD require Ritalin to put them on an equal not enhanced footing.
@@fizzao1342 you clearly stated yourself that your daughter preformed better with the medication. It's clearly a performance enhancer and if you must know I was prescribed the stuff when I was younger decided for myself to quit and find my way without copious amount of pills to get through each day.
We cannot create world champions by force or authority. Gone are the days with the wind and we have to give respect, love, care, understand them and space or else we are comitting the gravest mistakes that would not be forgiven to achieve our objectives with self interest in the name of motherland means nothing.
Elena, what a beautiful gym angel, she will always be my fave, she can now fly in the air with her angel wings!
Not at all the same but when I did gymnasics as a kid (we had a team of 12 year olds) I was TOLD I would perform on a certain practice beam. It wobbled becasue the legs weren't even and the mat and cover in were loose. I refused and walked right out of the gym. Fortunately, I had parents who taught me to stand up for myself. The equipment wasnt safe and I had support, who knows what would have happened if my parent didn't get that beam removed from the gym.
That’s why I love the Brazilian gymnastic team, Flávia Saraiva and Rebeca Andrade are great examples of how to deal with hardships with a positive attitude, their coach Chico doesn’t allow them to push too much and focuses more on doing fewer stunts but with a lot of preparation
You should do the tragic story of Julissa Gomez; she dies competing for USA team. Gymnastics is brutal.
I remember learning her story from the book “Little Girls in Pretty Boxes”, where it was mentioned that Elena Mukhina was Julissa’s favorite gymnast.
I appreciated learning more about Mukhina with this piece. Her story should not be forgotten.
She was betrayed by a cruel system.
Can you imagine if this went down today in the age of social media?
You look at the tactics of Russia and Romania with their female gymnasts. They were mistreated and abused and starved. When Nadia was in training her evil coach Bela even restricted water. Water. He wanted them to be skinny, starved birds.
But, look at today. Gymnasts like Simone are strong, healthy and eat nutritionally good food. It is because she gets rest and can eat and become strong and healthy that her body can handle the skills and do the amazing things.
Look at katelyn Ohashi of UCLA. She is not a thin bird and is so great.
And the fact that Simone said 'no' is another feat for gymnasts. When the Twisties hit it is dangerous and deadly for any gymnast to perform. It is unfortunate they hit right as the Olympics began but, you cannot control when it hits. It is important to step away.
How sad that so many wonderful gymnast were injured terribly and made to suffer during these training sessions that abused these girls horribly.
And having an abuser like Nassar exposed and jailed is another plus in the liberating of the gymnasts.
It sounds very much like the same tactics used by Eteri Tutberidze.
So, look at the USA who has been abusing its gymnasts for decades
That is so tragic and sad. I'm glad things have slowly evolved....probably moreso in some countries than others.
This makes me think of what Simone Biles could have went through if nothing in gymnastics ever changed.
@@nancymcgowan3433 Those that don't train at an elite level are unaware of how gymnast were trained in the US from the 80s till just recently.. The gymnasts that trained under Bela, Marta and all the other abusive National Coaches went through hell and were trained in an Americanized version of Eastern Bloc training because it produced medals. If you were in pain, you kept your mouth shut or you were off the team. John Goddard was heard to tell an injured gymnast to get the eff out of the gym and not come back. Or tell that to Julissa Gomez, who was forced to compete a Yurachenko vault she wasn't ready to do. Bela was not paying attention and she missed her hands on the horse and slammed headfirst into the horse. She broke her neck and ended up in a coma from which she would never wake up. She died as a result of the accident.
Bela and Marta had that same mindset as Elena's coach. The medals and glory was more important then the health of the gymnast.
No one spoke against it until the Nassar scandal broke and it came out that gymnasts of all levels, including Olympians, were being abused in every way possible.
Simone has been very vocal about what happened to her, yes she is a Nassar survivor, and Is leading the fight to give gymnasts back control of their bodies, health and career.
“could have gone through”
EXACTLY! I'm actually relieved that Simone has had the strength and clarity to put her health first. I don't care if she gets a medal she's already shown she's the amazing. I do care if she ends up like Ylena or ruins her life.
In my opinion, gymnastics hasn't really changed, Simone Biles made a stand.
Simone Biles said "she was feeling pressure" and "wasn't having fun". Wtf.
Now maybe people can understand the pressure Simone Biles carried for years. After a year off from competition, and for the first time not having her parents with her, she couldn’t continue, and she had the guts and the support of her coach and team to say, “I’m sorry, it’s just too much.” Although things are somewhat better now, gymnasts are still expected to push themselves to a degree that is ridiculous. At least now, thanks to Biles, maybe they can say NO. Poor Elena Mukhina didn’t have a chance.
Watching Simone pull out reminded me of another incident--that of Keri Strug. And everyone thought what a hero she was. And Karoli on the sidelines pushing her to do that second vault. Despicable. Who is advocating for these girls?
@@BureauKat No one. Abuse in sport has become normalized in sport as long as they get results. It's disgusting. We should be applauding Simone.
I believe Elena died in December. It is tragic, I find her techniques and graceful dancing very mesmerizing! Her story haunts me! I see her, she had something so magical about her! If this tragedy wouldn't of happened! I truly believe without doubt, she would have been a great Olympian champion and Nadia would not have the spotlight.
Thank you for informing us & exposing this. I'm an older one, this is what we thought was was going on at the time with Soviet athletes. We always felt bad when they lost, because we believed they would be punished back home. So this is not a surprise for many of us
Yet when you connect the dots, put the story together- particularly interviews straight from her, it's even worse than we imagined back then.
No wonder why the Soviet Union kept shoving Olga korbut in our faces.
Remember folks, this isn't the past, its what Russia & China currently do to their athletes
We know what went on at the Beijing Olympics... that was only a decade ago
Elena Mukhina, I hope that heaven does exist and you are happy, free from the chains of slavery that bound you for so long. Rest in peace.
Laura, I know from the Holy Ghost, that Heaven does, indeed, exist, and that our Heavenly Father dearly loves his daughter, Elena, and that He has the power and ability to take away her emotional pain, and that therefore, He most likely has done so, especially because Elena already learned more than she had to in this life! This is why she now has peace, because our Father in Heaven gave her grace in the state of being she is in now, as He will do for all of us, his beloved children. Especially to those who love our Father, who desires to give his children all that he has! We need to show him that we do, in deed, love Him! We do this by keeping His commandments, as the holy scriptures explain to us in many, many verses. It’s simple: if we love Him, we follow Him. ALL of the above is made possible through His beloved Son, Jesus Christ, who showed his Father that he loved him, by keeping ALL of his Father’s commandments AND especially volunteering to actually give his very life to all of us who choose to repent and therefore become clean, so that we will live with God again, as we did before this life. “Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee.” I, personally, am looking so forward to living in the same existence with God, our Heavenly Father, again, as we did before, where we will have peace, and where our joy will be complete!!! I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ.
Thank you for reading and pondering. May you seek out the being who loves you more than any human ever could, your very own Father in heaven. I wish you happiness, peace in your heart, and love toward others.
For more enlightenment and encouragement, I invite you to visit churchofjesuschrist.org
Love and blessings to you!
Yo solo quiero que el Espíritu Santo me dé la certeza de que Elena está en el cielo, para tener paz, porque está historia me tiene muy, muy afligida.
I would like to think that Elana is applauding Simone from heaven!
@Angry Grizzly ok angry grizzly
Yes someone had to take a stand or the abuse would continue.
@@111marcie Simone was not being abused! Nasser is in jail and she has a great coach. She had a bad day on vault and lost her confidence, that's all. She cracked under the pressure.
@@JaneSmith0709 And she decided to quit before pressure got the best out of her and she would end up severely injured. If she didn't feel confident, mentally or physically, and when performing a sport that can leave you paralized in a second, she did the best.
@@Sarablueunicorn I can appreciate that, but you can't call yourself the GOAT if you cave to pressure like that. Part of being a top athlete is handling the mental pressure as well as the physical aspect, that's what makes a champion a champion. If everyone could do it then it wouldn't be special. She can take herself out for mental reasons, she has that right and I don't take that away from her, but she can't call herself the GOAT after doing so.
Elena is a champion in how she resolved her injury with grace.
R.I.P. Elena
Her story was presented so well here. I vaguely remember hearing of this as a kid but not in such detail. What a tragic story that should have been prevented. RIP Elena you were an amazing young woman. 💖
This is What everyone should remember. She died because of this. Just so sad and tragic
Her funeral with that beautiful piano song yesterday broke me complitly. No comments are alowed
Whats sad is Elena isn't alone in the abuse she endured. This happened all across gymnastics, I mean look at Keri Strug. Underneath her heroic display of perseverance was a young woman brainwashed into believing she had no other choice outside of continuing her vault clearly injured and risking even further injury. Only recently has the abuse within the sport been realized
Such a sad story. Thank you for sharing.
Wow this was sooo heart breaking to watch. I can’t imagine being that young and not being able to stand up for yourself and living through such physical and mental torture everyday
Another great effort! Much appreciated!!!
Very sad story 😢. Too bad she couldn’t escape from them. She was either really brainwashed or too scared to for herself and her family 😢. I’ve heard of her name but didn’t know this story. Thanks for posting about it. These poor gymnasts. They go through so much 😢.
Basically, what they did to Elena is torture.
Oh man. This absolutely breaks my heart and makes me angry no one was held accountable.
this will be forever why simone speaking out and stepping back will forever not only change the sport but be important. if it was a time where elena could have spoken up, she had nobody to care for her or look out for her, her entire family had died when she was young and she was an orphan, i just cannot stop thinking about how horrifyingly sad it is how she blamed herself for her accident. i hope you’re at peace now elena
I have no words for this immence tragedy. Those cruel coaches should have been convicted of torture, and attempted murder. And then should have also paid for damages/trauma. This is so not fair. My heart breaks for this remarkable woman
it wasn't even only the pro circles. my mom grew up in the 70s/80s in a tiny little village in the eastern block, she was a talented gymnast but her coach pushed her too hard which directly resulted in her breaking her leg despite her repeatedly telling them the vault was too far, she was shamed for "missing out" on the season due to her broken leg, then once she was healed she started going through puberty and her coach didn't like her new figure so she was pushed out of the sport, i can tell she's still hurt over it even after all these years
Simone Biles should not ever be mentioned with the Late, Great Elena Mukhina. Period.
yes
🎯🎯
Simone Biles, Elana Mukhina.. Now what?
Simone showed this in her Olympics she took control and said No! She’s Amazing! And a Strong powerful voice and she’s not Just a Gymnast she’s the hope of showing It’s your. Body and health ! And she chose Safety! People had the nerve to say she Quit no she didn’t she wasn’t her mental health is important esp with the difficulty and skills she performs No one relise how hard and dangerous the skills she performs! Simone is showing woman to put Your mental health and physical health first ! Maybe if their was a Simone in the young girls life that ended up dying bec the coaches were monsters Alaina maybe she would be alive today! Rest In Peace Alaina you did not sue in vain Godbless Simone The Lord is with Simone he has Amazing plans for the Beautiful young Lady and the Greatest Gymnast of all time !
Tears are flowing down as I watch… her eyes are the saddest and most tiring, heartbreaking is an understatement. Sorry Elena - you finally could rest ❤️
Poor young girl. She did not deserve it. ❤️
Those coaches and coordinators should have been in prison! Never would have happened though.
I'M FURIOUS AND SAD.
I don't care about what anybody sais, she was at the same level of Nadia and when you see her, you realized that she should have been a perfect 10. New moves, more grace, original and she made the best Korbut ever when she beat Nadia.
I feel sorry Elena, that kind of abuse should be stopped.
I aplaud Simone that she said no
@Angry Grizzly Troll
Povera creatura Yelena 💔 tanto brava e talentuosa quanto triste e sfortunata 😔😥 possa riposare in pace
You're mention MS Biles. Good for you. This report is enormous. I had no idea. None. 🙏
I had no idea.
Damn. I had no idea.
M. Illinois. 🇺🇸
Yelena Mukhina was such a beautiful girl.🌹
Such a sad story.
RIP, Elena.