New York fencing club

fencing, IN THE NEWS

Winning The World: Local Fencing Star Takes Gold


March 24, 2023
by Amanda Olsen, Long Island Press

Isabella Chin knows a thing or two about discipline. The 17-year-old senior at Manhasset Secondary School has been fencing since she was in third grade. Her mom suggested fencing when the younger Chin had run through more standard sports like swimming and ice skating. For Chin, fencing clicked in a way she hadn’t experienced with her other activities.


“I like many different components that go into fencing, like how strategy plays a big role. You have to be both mentally and physically in shape. And I also admire how you may be creative in your actions. I also feel like discipline is a big part of the sport and being confident. It teaches you that it’s important.” Chin said.
Chin competed in the Junior World Cup, the ultimate competition for fencers under 20 years old, in Maalot, Israel, in January. Only the twelve best fencers in the country earn spots to represent Team USA at the prestigious competition. Chin represented Team USA proudly and proved that she was the strongest fencer of the day, winning the Gold Medal and becoming a World Cup Champion.


Though Chin is no stranger to international competition, the World Cup still presented a unique challenge. “Every time I do (an international competition,) it always has a different feel to it compared to a domestic competition, because you’re fencing different competitors from different countries, and they all have different styles. When I went to Israel, it was tough. It was something I had to prepare myself for. But I thought it was a good experience, competing with people from different countries.”


Chin is trained in the épée discipline of fencing. This discipline uses the heaviest of the fencing swords, also called an épée. The tip of the epee is spring loaded and requires 750 grams of pressure to register a hit. According to the International Fencing Federation, the épée is a thrusting weapon and the attack is with the point only. In this discipline, the target area is the entire body, head to toe, including any clothing and equipment. Any hit that makes contact is counted. Hits are awarded based solely on whichever fencer makes a hit first.


It might seem like fencing is a male dominated sport, but in reality, women have been participating for many years. Competitive fencing was one of the first sports featured in the modern Olympics. Women’s foil fencing was added in 1924, and the epee style in 1996. While men and women do compete separately, in Chin’s training, “we practice with both boys and girls. I feel like there’s no separation. More and more girls are participating in it, which I feel is really good. There’s more and more every year.”


Chin practices four days a week at New York Fencing Academy in Port Washington. Her coach, Sergey Danilov, describes her as one of the hardest working students there. “Isabella is usually one of the first to show up in the gym, and she’s definitely the last one to leave the gym. So she’s a very hard worker. She would usually come earlier and do just a regular warmup. After that she spent some time on self-improvement, which means using some exercises to improve yourself such as work, target work, and after that she normally would have a lesson, a private lesson, with me. And after that, she joins the group class where she is training with other athletes. After the group class, she always stays for extra defense, more bouts or to do some target work.”


Michael Mokretsov, co-owner of the fencing academy, also praised Chin’s dedication. “Isabella is not just a great fencer, but also a great student at school, an amazing teammate, and simply a hardworking person. She spends numerous hours on her studies to remain an excellent student and countless hours perfecting her actions at the gym, and yet, she manages to remain social with her family and friends. If there is one person who deserves this result, it is Isabella. She always stays for extra practice in the gym to get better but never forgets to help her younger teammates at New York Fencing Academy to succeed as well.”


This hard work has paid dividends outside of fencing as well. Chin has been recruited to fence for Harvard next year. One of her teammates is an opponent she faced at the World Cup.


“There is no doubt that Harvard earned a great person,” Danilov said. “Our congratulations to Isabella Chin and the entire “village” which helped her get great results on and off the strip.”


Chin, for her part, is keeping her focus on the near future, and her next competition. She has several fencing events over the coming months. “Yeah, I’m gonna be at Harvard. But for now, I’m preparing for the junior zonal championships, also known as the Pan American championships, which is … March fourth to sixth. And after that, I’ll be training for summer nationals, which is, I think, the biggest competition for the year because it’s the last competition of the season. But after that, I’ll be preparing myself for Harvard fencing team.”


And as far as Olympic aspirations, Chin is leaving that far future undecided. “Oh, I haven’t decided yet, but I feel like if I have a chance to go, I’d definitely try to go.”

fencing, PRESS RELEASES

For Immediate Release: LI Student Isabella Chin Becomes Fencing Junior World Cup Champion


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Sergey Danilov, info.nyfa@gmail.com, (614) 302-9009

LI STUDENT ISABELLA CHIN BECOMES FENCING JUNIOR WORLD CUP CHAMPION

Port Washington, NY (January 26, 2023) – On January 21, Isabella Chin (17) from Manhasset, fencer at New York Fencing Academy, competed in the Junior World Cup (under 20 years old) in Maalot, Israel. Only the twelve best fencers in the country earn spots to represent Team USA at the prestigious competition as part of the final selection towards the World Championships.

Chin showed a real desire to represent Team USA proudly and prove that she is the strongest fencer of the day, winning the Gold Medal and becoming a World Cup Champion.

Chin started the direct elimination round (playoffs) by beating an Israeli opponent, and then besting her friend and USA teammate by just one point. The next challenge was waiting for her in the quarterfinals where she faced the current Word Cup Champion, Kravetz from Israel, but nothing could stop her that day. With a close score of 14:13, Chin secured her spot on the podium. Determined to move on, Chin eliminated her next Ukrainian challenger 15:12,  and advanced to the final match where she fenced her current USA teammate and future teammate at Harvard University. Chin delivered a decisive answer to who was the best on that day – winning 15:10. Chin became the Junior World Cup Champion, adding another gold medal to her collection of three National Champion titles.

Chin’s coaches and the owners of New York Fencing Academy, Sergey Danilov and Michael Mokretsov, commented, “Isabella is not just a great fencer, but also a great student at school, an amazing teammate, and simply a hardworking person. She spends numerous hours on her studies to remain an excellent student and countless hours perfecting her actions at the gym, and yet, she manages to remain social with her family and friends. If there is one person who deserves this result, it is Isabella. She always stays for extra practice in the gym to get better but never forgets to help her younger teammates at New York Fencing Academy to succeed as well.”

Chin’s results are excellent not only in fencing but also in the classroom of Manhasset High School, helping her to get recruited to Harvard University, where she starts this fall and where she will continue her athletic and academic career.  “There is no doubt that Harvard earned a great person,” says Coach Danilov. “Our congratulations to Isabella Chin and the entire “village” which helped her get great results on and off the strip.” 



New York Fencing Academy (NYFA) was founded in 2010 in Brooklyn, NY by owner and head coach Michael Mokretsov.  In 2018, NYFA opened their second location in Port Washington, Long Island, NY with head coach and co-owner, Sergey Danilov.  NYFA is a center for excellence in epee, with one of the strongest competitive epee programs in the country. NYFA has produced Olympic, World and National Champions, and has members on the USA, French, and Greek national teams.  NYFA provides private lessons, group classes, after school programs, and camps for students of all ages and all levels, beginners to advanced. Visit www.fencenyfa.com for more info.

 

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Contact: Sergey Danilov, (614) 302-9009

Company: New York Fencing Academy

Brooklyn: 2896 W 12th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11224, club phone: (718) 996-0426

Long Island: 8 Haven Avenue, Port Washington, NY 11050, club phone: (516) 472-7042

info.nyfa@gmail.com

www.fenceNYFA.com  

 

 

CLUB NEWS, fencing

Coach Alex Zurabishvili Joins New York Fencing Academy


Please join us in welcoming Coach Alex Zurabishvili as Head Coach of NYFA-Westchester! Alex brings over 20 years of experience as epee coach at clubs throughout the New York Metropolitan area and as Designated Coach for Team USA. In addition to joining NYFA’s coaching team, Alex is epee coach at Columbia University and NY Athletic Club.

Click below for his bio

Alex Zurabishvili, NYFA-W Head Coach

fencing, IN THE NEWS

Long Island coach celebrates Romain Cannone’s Olympic gold


August 6, 2021
by News 12 Long Island

https://longisland.news12.com/long-island-coach-celebrates-romain-cannons-olympic-gold-in-fencing

Michael Mokretsov, who owns the New York Fencing Academy in Port Washington, just got a little more popular now that he successfully coached Romain Cannone to win Olympic gold.

While Cannone isn’t a Long Islander, Mokretsov is. He lives in Woodmere and has worked with Cannone since he was 12 years old.

“When he started, he was a regular kid,” says Mokretesov. “He wasn’t super strong or super-fast. There was nothing specific to tell about him to say OK an Olympic champion walking in the gym.”

Alan Temiryaev was Cannone’s former training partner. Temiryaev says Romain worked hard. He also says don’t be surprised if another gold medalist comes out of the Port Washington club.

“Definitely sets the bar high and now it makes me feel like I have to do it so see you guys in 2028 LA,” says Temiryaev.

fencing, IN THE NEWS

Who is Romain Cannone, the Olympic champion that nobody expected at the Olympics?


July 25, 2021
by Ijaz Ibrahim,
cceverybody

PORTRAIT – The French swordsman has not experienced a trajectory like the others to become Olympic champion at 24 years old. His first medal on the international scene in individual. The most beautiful.

Special envoy to Tokyo

He lived his childhood in Brazil, then in the United States

If Romain Cannone was indeed born in France on April 12, 1997, near Boulogne-Billancourt, he did not stay there very long, then following his parents to Brazil to live his first school years in kindergarten. Before another great upheaval and a departure for New York, where his parents decide to launch a macaroon shop. And it is in the Big Apple that he will discover fencing at the age of 9, under the leadership of his cousin Zoey who pushes him to try foil, before becoming a star of his school. of Coney Island, the New York Fencing Academy (NYFA).

He has a Ukrainian mentor

The one who shaped the not very academic but very spectacular fencing of Cannone is called Misha Mokretsov. The meeting between the two occurs in 2010, when the Frenchman is still only 13 years old. At the time, it was more intended for the practice of foil, before changing to épée, convinced by Mokretsov, a former silver medalist in his country, Ukraine. Together, they will continue their journey, which made Cécile Cannone, Romain’s mother, say on the NYFA website: “Mokretsov is a true fencing enthusiast and he knows how to pass this on to his students. But the two of them are actually much more than student teachers to each other. It’s a very deep friendship, and he gives Romain great advice in many areas of his life.“

He shouldn’t have played his games

An Olympic title sometimes comes down to little. Initially selected as a replacement for the team event, Cannone was not expected to compete in the individual competition in Tokyo. An honor that should have gone to Daniel Jerent (30), both reigning Olympic champion and world champion in 2019, both times in the team event. Except that the latter, targeted by an investigation by the French Agency for the Fight against Doping (AFLD) for a positive control for a diuretic, Dorzolamide, was finally ruled out by the French Fencing Federation. A decision taken according to an extremely simple precautionary principle: by keeping Jerent in the team, the Federation took the risk, one day, of losing their possible medal on the green carpet if the swordsman was found guilty (which is not the case. case for now). A principle which therefore made Cannone happy.

He has never been on an international individual podium before.

The resident of Insep, and member of the VGA Saint-Maur (Val-de-Marne) club, only points to 47e world rank. Far behind his two compatriots present in Tokyo, Yannick Borel (6e) and Alexandre Bardenet (11e). Suffice to say that imagining him going so far was a colossal surprise. Especially since he owed his selection to his team performances, and not to those in individual, to say the least since he had never climbed on an international podium without his little comrades by his side. His best result was a 7e place at a World Cup event in Vancouver on February 8, 2019. But with the health crisis, world fencing has gone almost a year and a half without competition, which has undoubtedly made it possible to reshuffle the cards and open up the field of possibilities. Cannone is the best example of this with his formidable feat.

He is studying in Master

Throughout his career, Cannone never stopped studying, especially in the United States where he was at university. Since his return to France from Insep, he has also joined a Parisian school, SKEMA, where he follows a “Master in Audit, Management Control and Information Systems“. “I very much appreciate the understanding and support of SKEMA on my double project: high level athlete and higher education», He explained on the school website. “I benefit from adjustments to my course, shifting periods of internship… This allows me to devote myself fully to the periods of preparation and competition. This flexibility and the support of my teachers are a real plus. I live and train at INSEP and I jump in the RER A as soon as possible to join my classes.“