Meinhardt, Gerek

Meinhardt_Gerek-th.jpg

 

Foil Prodigy Gerek Meinhardt Signs On To Join Notre Dame Fencing Program In 2008-09
Seventeen-year-old San Francisco native currently ranked number one among all U.S. men's foilists; also second in world under-20 rankings.
From http://www.cstv.com/sports/c-fenc/stories/121307aaa.html
Dec. 13, 2007

Meinhardt_Gerek.jpeg Fencing prodigy Gerek Meinhardt - a 17-year-old who already holds the nation's top ranking among all men's foilists and is ranked second in the world among under-20 foilists - recently signed on to join the Notre Dame fencing program, starting in the 2008-09 academic year. The Olympic hopeful has been ranked first in the nation at five different age groups (ranging from 12 years old to the senior-level listing) and became the youngest men's foil national champion in U.S. fencing history, after topping current Columbia University junior Kurt Getz at the 2007 Summer Nationals in Miami. As a 16-year-old, Meinhardt became the first male fencer - from any of the three weapons - ever to earn a spot in the U.S. senior, junior (U-20) and cadet (U-17) national teams during the same season.

With most of the current Irish squad set to return in 2008-09, the talented Meinhardt could help Notre Dame be a major contender for the NCAA combined men's and women's fencing title in the spring of 2009. Meinhardt trains in his hometown of San Francisco at the Massialas Foundation, where he is coached by former Olympian Greg Massialas (the 1980 U.S. national champion).

Meinhardt_Gerek2.jpegGerek Meinhardt could be a key part of Notre Dame's bid for the 2009 NCAA fencing title.

"Gerek is a complete winning machine with superb technique and intelligent tactical abilities that make him possibly the most promising young foillist in the history of U.S. fencing," says sixth-year Notre Dame head coach Janusz Bednarski, whose assistant coach Gia Kvaratskhelia will be the primary instructor of Meinhardt during his time with the Irish.

"Recently we have seen Gerek winning World Cups today and we can expect one day for him to be an NCAA Champion. His great talent has been developed through the excellent club coaching of Greg Massialas. Gerek is on to pace to fence in the 2008 Olympics and we all will be cheering him on for great results in Beijing."

In addition to being a virtual lock to make the 2008 U.S. Olympic team, Meninhardt is a standout student who posted a lofty SAT score that ranks among the highest ever by an incoming Notre Dame fencing recruit. After attending high school for two years in San Francisco, he made the bold move of pursuing his Olympic dream while continuing his studies through various college online programs.

Meinhardt first began fencing at the age of nine and steadily has climbed up the national and international rankings. He currently sits atop the U.S. Fencing Association (USFA) rankings for all men's foilists - above the likes of 28-year-old veterans Jon Tiomkin (a 2004 Olympian) and Jed Dupree (the 2001 NCAA champion) - and he recently rose to the number-two spot in the FIE world rankings for under-20 men's foilists, behind 19-year-old Italian standout Martino Minuto. Meinhardt also currently holds an overall world ranking of 18th among all men's foilists, with the 17 fencers above him on that list having an average age of 26 (none of them are younger than 22).

In addition to winning the recent Senior Pan America Zonal Championship that was held in Mont-Tremblant, Canada (Aug. '07), Meinhardt turned in a respectable 28th-place finish at the Senior World Championships in St. Petersburg, Russia (Sept. '07), and then placed 13th while fencing against another elite field (110 total fencers) at the Challenge Licciardi, in Aix-en-Provence, France (Nov. '07). He also finished as the runner-up - behind Hungary's Bence Szeki - at the under-20 Junior World Cup that was held in Bratislava ((Memorial de Martinegro; Oct. '07).

"I chose Notre Dame because of the school's history of academic and athletic excellence, its facilities, and the campus environment," says Meinhardt. "I also have known and respected Coach Gia Kvaratskhelia and many of the fencers on the team for several years."

Meinhardt's ties to Notre Dame trace back to the Kanza Fencing Club in Salina, Kan., the club that Kvaratskhelia shaped into one of the nation's top foil centers (before joining Notre Dame prior to the 2006-07 season). Three current Notre Dame fencers - junior Mark Kubik, sophomore Teddy Hodges and freshman Steve Kubik - also are products of Kanza and have trailed alongside Meinhardt in the past, as have many other elite foilists from throughout the nation.

"Gerek has a smaller frame, at 5-10, and he fences with an unorthodox style that is anything but classical. But he continually beats people with his footwork and so many intangibles that place him well beyond his years," says Kvarathskhelia, who first began observing Meinhardt's fencing greatness when he was 14.

"Through years of repitittion, Gerek has become very committed to his footwork and that makes him so dangerous. The opponent can never catch him on the strip. Despite his unusual style, Gerek can deliver the touch from any angle and at any time of a bout, no matter where his hand or body are located.

"Gerek is very well-coached, fundamentally sound and - most importantly - has great emotional maturity. He recently went through the grueling cadet, junior and senior World Cup cycles all in one year, without getting burned out. Emotionally, he is like a grown-up. He can be really calm but also really aggresive - whatever he needs to win a bout, he will come up with it. Gerek could lose 5-4 in a pool bout and then turn it up in the direct-elimination phase and beat the same opponent 15-1, no matter how good that opponent might be.

"Gerek's parents, Kurt and Jane, both are architects and they have committed a lot of time and money to his fencing, with so much travel involved. The parents are delightful people and that has rubbed off on Gerek. He has a very easygoing personality and is very social and likeable. Gerek is a low-key, down-to-earth kid and - off the strip - you never would know he was one of the best young fencers in the world. He is a hard worker and just a flawless guy. All of the fencing community loves him and we obviously are thrilled that he has decided to be part of the Notre Dame program."

Meinhardt_Minuto1.jpeg Gerek Meinhardt (photo right) and Italy's Martino Minuto (photo left) are the world's top-ranked fencers in the under-20 division.

As a 16-year-old in the 2006-07, Meinhardt held the nation's top ranking at there different levels (senior, junior and cadet) while cracking the world rankings at #74 and ranking 16th among the world's U-20 foilists. He was runner-up in both the U-20 and U-17 bouting at the 2006 Junior Pan Am Championships (San Antonio; Aug. '06) while also competing with the U.S. cadet- and junior-level teams at the World Championships in Izmir, Turkey (April '07). Meinhardt had an impressive seventh-place finish at the La Havana Senior Grand Prix in Cuba (June '06) and added top finishes at Junior World Cups that fall in Bratislava (5th), Madrid (3rd) and Aix-en-Provence (6th). He also won the overall men's foil competition at the USFA North American Cup held in Tucson, Ariz. (April '07), three months before his historic win at Summer Nationals.

Meinhardt - whose first taste of Senior World Cup competition came at the Paris Grand Prix in January of 2006 - was the nation's top-ranked cadet foilist as a 15-year-old (2005-06), when he also was ranked fourth among the U-20 fencers, eighth among the U.S. senior-level foilists and 21st in the world U-20 rankings. His top international events that year included placing fifth at the Junior World Cup in Montreal (Jan. '06) and competing with the U.S. cadet and junior teams at the World Championships in Taebek City, Korea (April '06). On the domestic circuit during the first half of 2006, he won the N.A.C. event in Houston (Jan.) and was the junior champion (U-18) at the Summer Nationals in Atlanta.

His 14-year-old season (2004-05) also included a USFA top ranking (Y-14), plus fourth among the cadets, ninth in juniors and 22nd among all U.S. men's foilists. Meinhardt earned the "A" classification in foil at the age of 14 and later fenced in his first international competition, placing sixth at the Junior World Cup held in Madrid (Nov. '04). He later won the Y-14 title at the N.A.C. in Chattanooga, Tenn. (April '05) and won both the Y-14 and cadet titles at 2005 Summer Nationals in Sacramento, Calif.

The 2003-04 season is the only time in the past six years that Meinhardt has not held a number-one national ranking, as he was second in the USFA's Y-14 rankings, 14th among the cadets and 25th in the junior-level rankings. One year season earlier as a 12-year-old (2002-03), he sat atop the USFA's Y-12 rankings for boys foilists (also sixth in epee), in addition to ranking seventh among Y-14 foilists and 42nd in the cadet rankings. He won the N.A.C. in Overland Park, Kan. (April '03), producing his first gold medal in a national competition.

He made his debut at a USFA national event at the age of 10-and-a-half, as a Y-10 and Y-12 competitor at the N.A.C. held in Colorado Springs (Nov. '00).

Meinhardt currently owns a huge lead of nearly 2,700 points in the USFA U-20 rankings, with his 6,827 points well ahead of second-ranked Nicholas Chinman (4,186), a sophomore at Penn State. Meinhardt (5,300) also owns a lead of more than 1,000 points in the USFA overall men's foil rankings, followed by Dupree (4,266), Tiomkin, current Ohio State junior Andras Horanyi and Columbia's Getz. Tiomkin fenced collegiately at St. John's and was the 2002 NCAA runner-up while Horanyi won the 2007 NCAA title (after being the '06 runner-up). Tiomkin ('99, '03), Dupree ('01, '02, '05) and Horanyi ('06) had combined to win six of the eight previous USFA men's foil national titles, before Meinhardt topped Getz in the 2007 final.

The recently-completed North American Cup in Richmond, Va., saw Meinhardt tie for third while Horanyi defeated Canadian Josh McGuire in the final bout - capping the competition in a men's foil field of 153 competitors.

The 17 fencers currently listed ahead of Meinhardt in the overall world rankings include five from Italy - Andrea Baldini (#1; 22 yrs old), Andrea Cassara (#5; 23), Salvatore Sanzo (#8; 32), Simone Vanni (#9; 28) and Steffano Barrera (#17; 27) - plus Germany's Benjamin Kleibrink (#2; 22), Peter Joppich (#4; 25), the French trip of Erwam LePechoux (#3; 25), Nicholas Beaudan (#15; 32) and Brice Guyart (#16; 26), Chinese fencers Sheng Lei (#6; 23), Liangliang Zhang (#11; 25) and Jun Zhu (#13; 23), the Japanese pair of Yuki Ota (#7; 22) and Kenta Chida (#14; 22), Poland's Slawomir Mocek (#10; 31) and Israel's Tomer Or (#12; 29)

Notre Dame fans wishing to regularly track Meinhardt's progress can do so via the USFA website (www.usfencing.org) and the international fencing site (www.fie.ch).

 

Men's Foil Olympians

Men's Individual Foil

 

1904 Albertson Van Zo Post, Silver
1904 Charles Tatham, Bronze
1932 Joseph Levis, Silver
1960 Albert Axelrod, Bronze

Men's Team Foil

1904 Albertson Van Zo Post, Gold w/ Cuban Team
1904 Charles Tatham, Silver
1904 Fitzhugh Townsend, Silver
1904 Arthur Fox, Silver
1920 Henry Breckinridge, Bronze
1920 Francis Honeycutt, Bronze
1920 Arthur Lyon, Bronze
1920 Harold Rayner, Bronze
1920 Robert Sears, Bronze
1932 George Calnan, Bronze
1932 Joseph Levis, Bronze
1932 Hugh Alessandroni, Bronze
1932 Dernell Every, Bronze
1932 Richard Steere, Bronze
1932 Frank Righeimer, Bronze
*the total figure of 42 medals includes individual fencers in team events

Best Non-Medaling Olympic Performances
4th Place MFT 1948
Daniel Bukantz, Dean Victor Cetrulo, Dernell Every, Silvio Louis Giolito, Bennet Nathaniel Lubell, Austin Martin Prokop

4th Place MFT 1956
Albert Axelrod, Daniel Bukantz, Harold David Goldsmith, Byron Lester Krieger, Bennet Nathaniel, Lubell, Sewall Shurtz

4th Place MFT 2004
Jed Dupree, Dan Kellner, Jon Tiomkin

5th Place MFT 1928
George Charles Calnan, Rene Peroy, Joseph Louis Levis, Harold Marvin Rayner, Henry Cabell Breckinridge, Dernell Every

5th Place MFT 1936
Joseph Louis Levis, Hugh Vincent Alessandroni, John F. Potter, John Gavin Hurd, Warren Alvin Dow, William Thomas Pecora

5th Place MFT 1960
Albert Axelrod, Daniel Bukantz, Eugene Gerson Glazer, Harold David Goldsmith, Joseph Paletta, Jr.

5th Place MFT 1984
Peter Bramwell, Henry Lewison, Gregory David Massialas, Michael Anthony Marx, Mark Jeffrey, Troy Smith

Men's Foil World Champions

Bronze Medalists

1997, Cliff Bayer, JMF
2002, Brendan Meyers, CMF
2004, Brendan Meyers, JMF
2007, Enzo Castellani, CMF

US National Men's Foil Champions

1888-2007

1888 William Thornton Lawson
1889 Bernard Francis O'Connor
1890 Samuel T. Shaw
1891 Graeme Monroe Hammond
1892 William Scott O'Connor
1893 William T. Heintz
1894 Charles George Bothner
1895 Albertson Van Zo Post
1896 Georges Kavanagh
1897 Charles George Bothner* *
(He won the epee and sabre titles as well)
1898 WAR - NO CONTEST
1899 Georges Kavanagh
1900 Charles Fitzhugh Townsend
1901 Charles Tatham
1902 James P. Parker
1903 Charles Fitzhugh Townsend
1904 Charles George Bothner
1905 Charles George Bothner
1906 Scott Dudley Breckinridge
1907 Camille Waldbott
1908 William Law Bowman
1909 Oliver A. Dickinson
1910 George K. Bainbridge
1911 George Horace Breed
1912 Sherman Hall
1913 Paul Julien Meylan
1914 Scott Dudley Breckinridge
1915 Oliver A. Dickinson
1916 Alfred Ernest Sauer
1917 Sherman Hall
1918 WAR - NO CONTEST
1919 Sherman Hall
1920 Sherman Hall
1921 Major Francis Webster Honeycutt
1922 Major Harold Marvin Rayner
1923 Rene Peroy
1924 Leo George Nunes
1925 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1926 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1927 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1928 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1929 Joseph Louis Levis
1929 - outdoor Joseph Levis
1930 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1931 Lieutenant George Charles Calnan
1932 Joseph Louis Levis
(Lt.George Calnan killed in air crash
prior to '33 Nationals)
1933 Joseph Louis Levis
1933 - outdoor Joseph Levis
1934 Hugh Vincent Alessandroni
1935 Joseph Louis Levis
1936 Hugh Vincent Alessandroni
1937 Joseph Louis Levis
1938 Dernell Every
1939 Norman Lewis
1940 Dernell Every
1941 Dean Victor Cetrulo
1942 Warren Alvin Dow
1943 Warren Alvin Dow
1944 Alfred Rex Snyder
1945 Dernell Every
1946 Jose Raoul deCapriles
1947 Dean Victor Cetrulo
1948 Bennet Nathaniel Lubell
1949 Dr. Daniel Bukantz
1950 Silvio Louis Giolito
1951 Silvio Louis Giolito
1952 Dr. Daniel Bukantz
1953 Dr. Daniel Bukantz
1954 Joseph Louis Levis
(won title after 17 years in retirement)
1955 Albert Axelrod
1956 Sewall Shurtz
1957 Dr. Daniel Bukantz
1958 Albert Axelrod
1959 Ensign Joseph Paletta, Jr.
1960 Albert Axelrod
1961 Lawrence Joseph Anastasi
1962 Edwin Allen Richards
1963 Edwin Allen Richards
1964 Herbert Morris Cohen
1965 Robert Boyer Russell
1966 Max Geuter
1967 Heizaburo Okawa
1968 Heizaburo Okawa
1969 Carl Lewis Borack
1970 Albert Axelrod
1971 Uriah Jones
1972 Joseph Bertham Freeman
1973 Edward Pennington Ballinger
1974 Heik Hambarzumian
1975 Edward Pennington Ballinger
1976 Lieutenant Edward Joseph Donofrio
1977 Michael Anthony Marx
1978 Martin Lang
1979 Michael Anthony Marx
1980 Gregory David Massialas
1981 Mark Jeffrey Troy Smith
1982 Michael Anthony Marx
1983 Mark Jeffrey Troy Smith
1984 Michael J. W. McCahey
1985 Michael Anthony Marx
1986 Michael Anthony Marx
1987 Michael Anthony Marx
1988 Gregory David Massialas
1989 Peter Bramwell Henry Lewison
1990 Michael Anthony Marx
1991 Eric Oliver Bravin
1992 Eric Oliver Bravin
1993 Michael Anthony Marx
1994 Eric Oliver Bravin
1995 Cliff Bayer
1996 Eric Oliver Bravin
1997 Cliff Bayer
1998 Cliff Bayer
1999 Jon Tiomkin
2000 Cliff Bayer
2001 Sean McClain
2002 Jon Tiomkin
2003 Jon Tiomkin
2004 Dan Kellner
2005 Jed Dupree
2006 Andras Horanyi
2007 Gerek Meinhardt

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