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Gertrude Emilia Eberle (born 4 March 1964 in Arad, Romania), was a Romanian gymnast of German and Hungarian descent who
was of European, World, and Olympic calibre.
Eberle, a pupil of the famous husband-wife coaching team Béla
Károlyi and Márta Károlyi before they defected from
Romania to the United States, was the first female Romanian
gymnastics star to succeed Nadia Comaneci,
although she was often in Comaneci's shadow as for the greater part
of Eberle's career, they competed together. Despite this, she made
a name for herself, garnering 13 individual medals at the
European/World/Olympic level. Most notable among her
accomplishments was her winning the Floor Exercise title at the 1979
Worlds ahead of her legendary contemporaries Nelli
Kim and Maxi
Gnauck as well as earning a silver medal on uneven bars at the
1980 Olympics,
being narrowly edged out of gold medal place by Gnauck.
She was also on the gold medal winning team at the 1979 World
Championships held in Fort Worth, Texas, USA. Despite her fall on
the balance beam in the team optionals segment of the competition,
other scores of hers were strong enough to keep the Romanian team
in contention for the gold with the Soviet team. Ultimately, her
compatriot Comaneci came back from an injury, having competed only
in the compulsories segment of the team competition and having
abstained from competing on any of the other apparatuses during the
optionals segment of the competition, and competed on beam getting
a very high score of 9.95, allowing the Romanians to scratch
Eberle's lower score and win the gold medal. In any event, Eberle
did help her team to a rare victory over the Soviet team, which was
one of the Soviet team's only three world or Olympic title losses
from 1952, when a full women's gymnastics program was first held at
the Olympic games, to 1992, which was the last appearance of the
unified Soviet team (under the guise of the Commonwealth of
Independent States).
Although a strong gymnast all-around (being silver medalist in
the all-around twice in 1979 - at that year's World Cup and
European Championships), she was especially noted for her work on
the uneven bars where her routine could vary greatly from
year-to-year with a very different set of skills from competition
to competition, including her often very quick and unusual
transitions from one bar to the other.
Like the Karolyis, Comaneci, and others, Eberle defected from
Romania, in 1989, to Hungary, and then to the USA two years later,
in 1991. She is married and had a son, Roland, in 1999, and coaches
in California with her fellow expatriate Romanian, gymnastics coach
and choreographer Géza Poszar.
In November 2008, Eberle--who now goes by the name Trudi
Kollar--gave an interview to KCRA-TV claiming that while she was a Romanian
national team gymnast, coaches Bela and Márta
Károlyi regularly beat her and her teammates for mistakes they
made in practice or competition. "In one word, I can say it was
brutal," she told KCRA. [1]
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