Romania at the Olympic Games – Year Nadia Comăneci
The year 2026 has been officially declared as the year “Nadia Comăneci” by the Romanian authorities to mark 50 years since the first ten in gymnastics obtained at the Montreal Olympics back in 1976
Florin Orban, 20.05.2026, 13:45
The year 2026 has been officially declared ‘Year Nadia Comaneci’ by the Romanian authorities to mark 50 years since the perfect ten in gymnastics, Nadia won at the Montreal Olympics in 1976.
Nadia Comăneci has been considered the most important athlete Romania has ever had. Designated Athlete of the 20th Century in 1999, Nadia has been for many generations of gymnastics lovers, the most eloquent symbol of elegance in sports.
She was born on November 12, 1961 in Onești (eastern Romania). At the tender age of only 5 she took her first steps in gymnastics being discovered during a selection contest involving local kindergartens. After only one year of training she started participating in children contests. At her first international participation, during a contest in Bulgaria in 1973, she came first in the uneven bars and beam events. She also compelled international recognition in the events that followed with exercises characterized by elegance and precision. Her first major trophy came in 1973, when she got the first place in the individual all round and all the other disciplines.
Nadia made her debut in senior competitions in 1975 at the European Championship of Skien. The gymnast made a brilliant debut in continental competitions, where with four gold and one silver medal she outperformed the world’s best gymnast at that time, the Soviet Ludmilla Tourischeva.
Nadia Comăneci made history one year later with three gold medals in the individual all round, uneven bars and beam events of the Montreal Olympics. She won silver in the nations contest with the Romanian team and bronze in the floor event. Her best performance, however, was the first ten in the history of gymnastics, which led to the first major change in the noting system.
For five years, Nadia dominated the world’s gymnastics hierarchy. In 1977 and 1979 she wins again the world title in the individual all round event and other silver and bronze medals at the continental championships held in Prague and Copenhagen. Also At the world championships in Fort Worth in 1979, she decisively contributes to the first world title for the Romanian side, but injuries prevented her from competing in all exercises.
Nadia also confirmed her value at the Moscow Olympics in 1980, from where she walked away with two gold medals in the beam and floor events. A year later she ends her career also in a brilliant manner by reaping 5 gold medals in her last formal competition, the University Games in Bucharest.
She made the headlines again in 1989, by crossing Romania’s border into Hungary, and settled in the United States. Her gesture dealt a heavy media blow to dictator Nicolae Ceausescu’s regime.
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