Ekaterina Vedeneeva

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FullnameEkaterina Olegovna Vedeneeva
Alternative name(s)Jekaterina Vedenejeva
Nickname(s)Katja, Katya
Born (1994-06-23) 23 June 1994 (age 31)
Ekaterina Vedeneeva
Vedeneeva in 2022
Personal information
Full nameEkaterina Olegovna Vedeneeva
Alternative name(s)Jekaterina Vedenejeva
Nickname(s)Katja, Katya
Born (1994-06-23) 23 June 1994 (age 31)
Gymnastics career
DisciplineRhythmic gymnastics
Country
represented
 Slovenia
(2018–2024)
Former countries represented Russia
ClubTiM
GymGimnastični center Ljubljana
Head coach(es)Elena Drozhanova
Former coach(es)Irina Viner
Retiredyes
Medal record
Rhythmic gymnastics
Representing  Slovenia
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
World Championships 0 0 2
European Championships 0 0 1
FIG World Cup series 2 4 5
FIG World Challenge Cup series 0 3 8
Grand Prix 7 3 6
World Games 0 0 1
Total 9 10 23
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place2022 SofiaRibbon
Bronze medal – third place2023 ValenciaRibbon
European Championships
Bronze medal – third place2023 BakuClubs
World Games
Bronze medal – third place2022 BirminghamClubs

Ekaterina Olegovna Vedeneeva (Russian: Екатерина Олеговна Веденеева; Slovene: Jekaterina Olegovna Vedenejeva; born 23 June 1994)[1] is a Russian-born Slovenian retired individual rhythmic gymnast who began competing for Russia, then competed for Slovenia between 2018 and 2024.[2] She now works as a coach in Russia.[3]

She made her debut for Slovenia in August 2018 at the World Cup event in Kazan, Russian Federation.[2] On the national level, she is a four-time (2019, 2021, 2022, 2024) Slovenian National all-around champion. In 2021, she became the first Slovenian rhythmic gymnast to compete at the Olympics when she competed at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo, and she competed again at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, where she qualified for the final. She is the first Slovenian rhythmic gymnast to win a medal at the European and World Championships, and the first Slovenian gymnast of any discipline to win a medal in the history of The World Games.

2017-2021 Olympic cycle

Her mother, Julia Vedeneeva, has coached rhythmic gymnastics and encouraged her to take up the sport.[4] She started training rhythmic gymnastics in her hometown of Irkutsk in Russia and later moved to Novogorsk, where the main training center for rhythmic gymnastics in Russia is located.[5]

In 2015, Vedeneeva was selected to represent Russia, together with Maria Titova, at the 2015 Summer Universiade in Gwangju, South Korea. She finished in 5th place in the all-around competition, tied with Elizaveta Nazarenkova.[6] She qualified to finals with two apparatuses, placing 5th in the ball final with a score of 17.550 and 7th in the clubs final with a score of 17.250.[7]

2018

In 2018, she chose to represent Slovenia.[8] She moved to Ljubljana with her coach.[5] On July 31,[9] she officially received her Slovenian citizenship. This gave her the opportunity to start competing at international competitions. In August, she competed at World Cup Kazan in Russia. Vedeneeva placed 8th in the all-around and qualified to two apparatus finals, where she placed 5th with hoop (18.950) and 7th with ball (17.800). In September 2018, she competed at her first World Championships. She helped Slovenia to achieve their best result ever in the team competition, placing 11th together with teammates Aleksandra Podgoršek and Anja Tomazin. She also placed 17th in the all-around qualifications and qualified to the final. She placed 13th, which was also the best result at that time for Slovenia.[5]

2019

In April 2019 she became the first Slovenian to earn a medal at the Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup, achieving a bronze in the ribbon final at the Tashkent World Cup.[10] At the 2019 European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships, in Baku, Azerbaijan, she qualified for the club final, where she finished in 7th place. That same year, she became the first Slovenian to win a medal at the Rhythmic Gymnastics Grand Prix after winning a silver medal in the ball final at the Holon Grand Prix in Israel.[11] At the 2019 World Championships in Baku, Azerbaijan, she qualified to the individual all-around final, where she placed 17th with total score of 78.650, just missing out on an Olympic berth by one place.[12]

2020

In 2020, she started the season at Grand Prix in Moscow, where she placed 6th in the all-around competition. The next day, she competed in all of the apparatus finals and won a bronze medal in the ribbon final with a score of 19.900. She represented Slovenia at the 2020 European Championships in Kyiv, Ukraine and finished on 13th place in the all-around competition.

2021

In 2021, she started the season at the Grand Prix stage in Moscow, where she placed 8th in the all-around competition and qualified to all the apparatus finals. She won a bronze medal in the ribbon final with a score of 22.050. During the 2021 World Cup series, Vedeneeva qualified for an Olympic berth as the highest ranked eligible gymnast who had not already qualified for the Olympics, in front of Uzbekistan's Sabina Tashkenbaeva and Japan's Chisaki Oiwa.[13] At the Moscow World Challenge Cup, she won a bronze medal in the all-around competition - the first World Cup all-around medal for Slovenia. The following day, she also won three more bronze medals in ball, clubs and ribbon in the apparatus finals.

At the 2020 Olympic Games (delayed and held in 2021 due to the Covid pandemic), Vedeneeva finished sixteenth in the qualification round for the individual all-around final.[14] She was the first rhythmic gymnast to represent Slovenia at the Olympics.[15]

In October 2021, she competed at the 2021 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships in Kitakyushu, Japan, qualifying to the all-around final and finishing in 12th place. She also qualified for the ribbon final, achieving 7th place. It was the first time that a Slovenian gymnast had managed to advance to a world championship apparatus final.[16]

2022-2024 Olympic cycle

2022

In June 2022, she won her third Slovenian National all-around title, almost 22 points ahead of silver medalist Brigita Krašovec.

Vedeneeva was the first Slovenian rhythmic gymnast to compete at a World Games at the 2022 World Games in Birmingham, USA. She placed 4th in the hoop and ribbon finals and took a historic bronze medal in the clubs final.

On 14–18 September 2022, Vedeneeva competed at her fourth World Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria. She qualified to the ball, clubs and ribbon finals and placed 6th, 8th and 3rd in them respectively. Her bronze medal with the ribbon was her first World Championships medal and also the first medal for Slovenia at an Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships.[17][18] In the individual all-around qualifications, she took 6th place and advanced to the final, where she finished in 7th place, her best result to that date.

2023

Vedeneeva began her 2023 season on 17 March by appearing at the World Cup in Athens. She finished 7th in the all-around final, won a gold medal in the ribbon final, and was 6th in clubs and 4th in ball. She also competed at the World Cups in Sofia (31 March - 2 April, 9th in the all around and 6th in ball); Tashkent (14-16 April, 3rd in ball, and 4th in the all-around, clubs, ribbon and hoop); Baku (21-23 April, 12th in the all-around, 8th in clubs and 4th in ribbon); and Milan (21-23 July, 9th in the all-around competition, 4th in ribbon and 7th in clubs).[19]

At the 2023 European Championships in May, Vedeeneva finished 6th in the all-around final, 4th with the ribbon, and 3rd with clubs. The bronze medal was her first European Championships medal and also the first won by a gymnast representing Slovenia.[20] In addition, she appeared at the World Challenge Cup in Cluj Napoca (14-16 July, finishing 9th in the all-around and 5th in clubs).[19]

At the 2023 World Championships in August, Vedeeneva she scored 97.550 in qualification, earning herself an Olympic spot and all-around final place and also qualifying for the ball and hoop apparatus finals (where she finished 8th and 6th respectively). At the competition, she changed her ball routine from music performed by Russian and Putin-ally Philipp Kirkorov to a song by the Ukrainian Mariya Chaykowskaya.[21] Vedeeneva also qualified to the ribbon final, where she beat the score of Italy's Sofia Raffaeli by 0.05 to end in third place. She thus defended her 2022 World Championship bronze medal. She finished 9th in the all-around final.[22]

2024

Vedeneeva began her 2024 season at the Grand Prix in Marbella, Spain. She was sixth in the all-around and won silver in the ribbon final behind Stiliana Nikolova. She also won bronze medals in the ball and hoop finals.[23][24] At the Athens World Cup in Palaio Faliro, Greece, she placed 4th in the all-around and qualified to the clubs final, where she again placed 4th. She competed at Grand Prix Thiais at the end of March and won the bronze medal in the all-around behind Takhmina Ikromova and Hélène Karbanov. In April, she finished 4th in the all-around at Tashkent World Cup and qualified to all four finals.

On 3–5 May, Vedeneeva competed at the inaugural 2024 European Cup Baku, where she took 6th place in the all-around qualifications and qualified to all apparatus finals. Two weeks later on May 18, she won her fourth national title. She said that she was very happy with her performance and that she had wanted to show she was well-prepared for the 2024 European Championships being held the week after.[25]

At the European Championships, Vedeneeva finished in 11th place in the all-around final after a drop at the end of her clubs routine and having a knot in her ribbon routine. Vedeneeva expressed satisfaction with her stronger performances with the ball and hoop but dissatisfaction with her score for the hoop, accusing the judges of bias. She said, "There were six European championships in my career, and they were all very biased, and not just to me. The scandal that took place yesterday with the license for the Olympic Games reaffirms the full subjectivity of our sport", referencing the Polish Gymnastics Federation's accusation that one of their gymnast's scores were unfairly lowered to prevent her from winning the Olympic quota available at the Championships.[26] Vedeneeva qualified for one apparatus final, hoop, and came in 5th place.[27]

Vedeneeva competed at the Milan World Cup in late June. She came in sixth in the all-around and qualified for three of the four apparatus finals. The last day of the competition, June 23, fell on her 30th birthday, for which she was presented flowers.[28]

On August 8–9, she represented Slovenia at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, France, where she was the first Slovenian gymnast to qualify to the individual all-around final. In the finals, she placed 6th. Afterward, she said that it was the best performance she could give and that she was not immediately planning on retiring, although she was unsure of whether she would continue for another four years.[29]

Vedeneeva announced her retirement from competitive sport on 9 May 2025 via her Instagram profile.[30][31] She began training to become a judge and changed her nationality for gymnastics back to Russia; while she expressed thanks for the opportunities the Slovenian gymnastics federation had given her, she said that they had mutually parted ways, as the Slovenian federation was not able to offer her any pay for working for them.[31][32] She also coaches children in Krasnoyarsk.[32]

Gymnastics technique

Vedeneeva is known for the strength of her classical ballet technique and her pivot turns in various positions. She has also discussed the challenges of both incorporating enough apparatus difficulty elements in a routine to gain a high enough difficulty score to be competitive and preserving the artistry of rhythmic gymnastics in the newly open-ended marking system of the 2016-2021 quad which, she believes, prefers the former.[33]

Detailed Olympic results

Year Competition Description Location Music Apparatus Rank-Final Score-Final Rank-Qualifying Score-Qualifying
2020 Olympics Tokyo All-around 16th 89.700
"Libertango" by The Swingle Singers Hoop 17th 22.800
"Boléro: Tempo di Bolero" by London Symphony Orchestra, Claudio Abbado Ball 15th 23.550
"Белый лебедь" by Tamara Gverdtsiteli Clubs 18th 22.550
"Nocturne" by Tamara Gverdtsiteli, Dmitry Duzhev Ribbon 11th 20.800
2024 Olympics Paris All-around 6th 131.900 6th 130.800
"Mind Heist: Evolution" by Zack Hemsey Hoop 7th 34.100 7th 34.150
"Demain n'existe pas" by Lara Fabian Ball 8th 31.950 11th 32.600
"Swan Lake (Act IV Allegro)" by Smolensk Symphonic Orchestra Clubs 8th 33.150 8th 32.300
"Do not Deny, if Loving" by Vlad Nezhniy Ribbon 5th 32.700 8th 31.750

Achievements

Routine music information

Year Apparatus Music title
2024 Hoop Mind Heist: Evolution by Zack Hemsey
Ball Demain n'existe pas by Lara Fabian
Clubs "Swan Lake (Act IV Allegro)", by Smolensk Symphonic Orchestra
Ribbon Do not Deny, if Loving by Vlad Nezhniy
2023 Hoop (first) Je n'attendais que vous by Garou
Hoop (second) Мама by Anzhelika Varum
Ball (first) Dulcea Si Tandra Mea Fiara by Catalina Caraus and Eugen Doga
Ball (second) Diva by Filipp Kirkorov
Ball (third) Поговори со мной by Марія Чайковська
Clubs Trije ljubčki by Helena Blagne
Ribbon Я тебя никогда не забудуn by Тамара Гвердцители and Д. Дюжев (Tamara Gverdtsiteli and Dmitry Duzhev)
2022 Hoop (first) Et Su Tu N'existais Pas by Toto Cutugno, Veronika Agapova
Hoop (second) Nocturne No. 20 in C Sharp Minor, Op. Posth by Frederique Chopin
Ball (first) Libertango by Lise de la Salle
Ball (second) The Winner Takes It All by Carla Bruni
Clubs (first) Malagueña by Connie Francis
Clubs (second) Катя-Катерина by Андрей Державин
Ribbon (first) Поговори со мной by Мария Чайковская
Ribbon (second) Эхо любви by Анна Герман
2021 Hoop Libertango by The Swingle Singers
Ball Boléro: Tempo di Bolero by London Symphony Orchestra, Claudio Abbado
Clubs Белый лебедь by Tamara Gverdtsiteli
Ribbon Nocturne by Tamara Gverdtsiteli, Dmitry Duzhev
2020 Hoop Piano Concerto No.2 in C Minor, Op.18: I. Moderato by Sviatoslav Richter
Ball Boléro by London Symphony Orchestra, Claudio Abbado
Clubs Bahama Mama by Boney M.
Ribbon unknown
2019 Hoop (first) Ka-Ching! by Shania Twain
Hoop (second) Malagueña by Connie Francis
Ball Lyra by Maksim Mrvica
Clubs Harika by Ozan Doğulu
Ribbon Hoşgeldin by Nida Öz
2018 Hoop Madrid by Sayed Balaha
Ball Sunrise, Sunset by Fiddler on the Roof
Clubs Requiem by Alma
Ribbon The Color Of The Night by Lauren Christy
2017 Hoop Is It Right by Elaiza
Ball Baby I Don't Know (I Love You Remix) by DJ Jessie Cole
Clubs Ravel's Bolero by Ray Conniff
Ribbon "Caruso" by Lara Fabian
2016 Hoop Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) by Emily Browning
Ball Les Demoiselles by Rochefort Theme
Clubs Asturias (feat. Jesse Cook) by William Joseph
Ribbon L'eté indien by Piano Bar Band
2015 Hoop Le Bien Qui Fait Mal by Mozart L'Opéra Rock
Ball Fantasy No 1 by Tetyana Hoch & Lazy Pixel
Clubs Asturias (feat. Jesse Cook) by William Joseph
Ribbon L'eté indien by Piano Bar Band

Competitive highlights

(Team competitions in seniors are held only at the World Championships, Europeans and other Continental Games.)

International: Senior
Year Event AA Team Hoop Ball Clubs Ribbon
2024 Olympic Games6th
World Cup Milan6th13th (Q)6th5th7th
European Championships11th5th11th (Q)9th (Q)15th (Q)
World Challenge Cup Portimao4th9th (Q)3rd3rd2nd
European Cup Baku6th (Q) 6th5th4th5th
World Cup Tashkent 4th 7th 4th 6th 4th
Grand Prix Thiais3rd5th2nd1st1st
World Cup Athens4th10th (Q)14th (Q)4th9th (Q)
Grand Prix Marbella6th3rd3rd9th2nd
2023 World Championships9th6th6th9th (Q)3rd
World Cup Milan9th21st (Q)10th (Q)7th4th
European Championships6th9th (Q)16th (Q)3rd4th
World Cup Baku12th30th (Q)12th (Q)8th4th
World Cup Tashkent4th4th3rd4th4th
World Cup Sofia9th6th14th (Q)12th˙
World Cup Athens7th14th (Q)4th6th1st
Grand Prix Marbella6th9th (Q)5th8th4th
2022 Grand Prix Brno1st1st1st1st1st
World Championships7th9th (Q)6th8th3rd
World Games4th11th (Q)3rd4th
World Cup Pesaro6th15th (Q)2nd4th3rd
World Challenge Cup Pamplona3rd2nd4th3rd2nd
European Championship 6th 6th 6th 4th 5th
World Cup Baku5th11th (Q)9th (Q)7th3rd
World Cup Tashkent2nd2nd3rd2nd1st
Grand Prix Moscow6th5th4th8th3rd
2021 World Championships12th16th (Q)17th (Q)14th (Q)7th
Olympic Games16th (Q)
World Cup Moscow3rd5th3rd3rd3rd
European Championships12th9th (Q)17th (Q)14th (Q)22nd (Q)
World Cup Pesaro11th15th (Q)10th (Q)19th (Q)4th
World Cup Baku11th19th (Q)18th (Q)9th (Q)7th
World Cup Tashkent6th10th (Q)7th6th9th (Q)
World Cup Sofia12th5th11th (Q)24th (Q)6th
Grand Prix Moscow8th4th4th5th3rd
2020European Championships13th
Grand Prix Moscow6th8th8th5th3rd
2019 World Championships17th22nd17th (Q)11th (Q)17th (Q)21st (Q)
World Cup Kazan9th18th (Q)19th (Q)9th (Q)6th
World Cup Cluj-Napoca14th11th (Q)10th (Q)9th (Q)24th (Q)
Grand Prix Holon4th2nd6th5th
European Championships10th (Q)10th (Q)7th10th (Q)
World Cup Baku21st35th (Q)17th (Q)20th (Q)23rd (Q)
World Cup Tashkent7th13th (Q)7th4th3rd
World Cup Pesaro15th36th (Q)10th (Q)11th (Q)18th (Q)
Grand Prix Thiais18th20th (Q)16th (Q)9th24th (Q)
Grand Prix Moscow15th16th (Q)15th (Q)12th (Q)18th (Q)
2018 World Championships13th11th10th (Q)27th (Q)24th (Q)14th (Q)
World Cup Kazan8th5th7th12th (Q)12th (Q)
Luxembourg Trophy1st1st1st1st1st
Aura Cup1st1st4th1st1st
2017 International Tournament of Holon2nd3rd6th4th1st
Luxembourg Trophy1st1st1st1st2nd
2015 Summer Universiade5th9th (Q)5th7th10th (Q)
National
Year Event AA Team Hoop Ball Clubs Ribbon
2024Slovenian Championships1st
2022Slovenian Championships1stDNSDNSDNSDNS
2021Slovenian Championships1stDNSDNSDNSDNS
2019Slovenian Championships1st2ndDNSDNSDNSDNS
2017Russian Championships5th5th3rd5th
2015Russian Championships7th5th5th3rd4th
Q = Qualifications (Did not advance to Event Final due to the 2 gymnast per country rule, only Top 8 highest score);
WR = World Record; WD = Withdrew; NT = No Team Competition; DNS = Did Not Start

See also

References

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