Nick Itkin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nationality United States
Born (1999-10-09) October 9, 1999 (age 26)
Height6 ft 2 in (188 cm) [1]
Weight157 lb (71 kg) [1]
Nick Itkin
Personal information
Nationality United States
Born (1999-10-09) October 9, 1999 (age 26)
Height6 ft 2 in (188 cm) [1]
Weight157 lb (71 kg) [1]
Fencing career
SportFencing
Country United States
WeaponFoil
Handright-handed
ClubLos Angeles International Fencing Center[2]
Head coachMichael Itkin
FIE rankingcurrent ranking
Medal record
Men's foil
Representing the  United States
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place2020 TokyoTeam
Bronze medal – third place2024 ParisIndividual
World Championships
Silver medal – second place2022 CairoTeam
Silver medal – second place2023 MilanIndividual
Silver medal – second place2025 TbilisiTeam
Bronze medal – third place2022 CairoIndividual
Pan American Games
Gold medal – first place2019 LimaTeam
Gold medal – first place2023 SantiagoIndividual
Gold medal – first place2023 SantiagoTeam
Pan American Championships
Gold medal – first place2019 TorontoTeam
Gold medal – first place2022 AsunciónTeam
Gold medal – first place2023 LimaTeam
Gold medal – first place2024 LimaIndividual
Gold medal – first place2024 LimaTeam
Gold medal – first place2025 Rio de JaneiroTeam
Silver medal – second place2023 LimaIndividual
Silver medal – second place2025 Rio de JaneiroIndividual
Bronze medal – third place2022 AsunciónIndividual
US National Championships
Gold medal – first place2017 Salt Lake CityIndividual
Gold medal – first place2018 PhiladelphiaIndividual
Gold medal – first place2021 St. LouisIndividual
Gold medal – first place2022 CharlotteIndividual
Gold medal – first place2023 St. LouisIndividual
Junior World Championships
Gold medal – first place2017 PlovdivTeam
Gold medal – first place2018 VeronaIndividual
Bronze medal – third place2018 VeronaTeam

Nick Itkin (/ˈɪtkɪn/ IT-kin; born October 9, 1999)[3] is an American foil fencer. He is a two-time Olympic bronze medalist, two-time World Championship individual medalist, 2023 Pan American Games team gold medalist, 2024 Pan American Games team gold medalist, six-time Division 1 National Champion, and two-time NCAA individual champion.[4][5]

He earned the foil individual silver medal at the 2023 World Fencing Championships, to become the first U.S. man, and third U.S. fencer overall, to win individual medals at back-to-back World Fencing Championships. Itkin competed in his second Olympic Games representing the United States at the 2024 Paris Olympics, winning a bronze medal in the individual foil competition.

Itkin was born in Los Angeles, California, and is Jewish.[6][7] His parents are Michael ("Misha"; a fencing coach) and Tatiana (a former rhythmic gymnast, and current coach).[8][9][10] His father emigrated from Ukraine to the United States, and opened up a fencing club in Los Angeles.[11] His older sister Julia competed in rhythmic gymnastics for the US national team.[10] He attended Palisades Charter High School, graduating in 2017.[10]

Fencing career

2015–19: Junior World Champion

Itkin trains under his father at Los Angeles International Fencing Center, which his father founded in 2003.[9] In 2015, he was a Cadet Junior Olympics bronze medalist, and in 2016 he was a Cadet Pan American Championships gold medalist.[12] In 2017 he was a Junior Pan American Championships silver medalist.[12]

At the 2018 Junior World Fencing Championships in Verona, Italy, Itkin won the gold medal in foil.[13] He defeated future world champion Tommaso Marini of Italy in the final.[14] He also won a team bronze medal at the championships.[1] When he then also won consecutive NCAA fencing championships in foil, in 2018 and 2019 as he fenced for the University of Notre Dame where he studied political science, he decided to pursue fencing at the senior level.[12][15][16] In 2018 he became the first American fencer to win gold medals at all three of the NCAA Fencing Championships, the US National Fencing championships, and the Junior World Fencing Championship in the same year.[17][18] In 2019 he also won a team gold medal at the 2019 Pan American Fencing Championships in Toronto, Canada.[19]

2020–23: First Olympics team medal and back-to-back World Championship medals

Itkin won the gold medal at a 2020 World Cup in Paris, becoming the youngest top-10 foil fencer in the world.[9] Among other victories, in the competition he defeated the reigning world champion and world No. 3 Enzo Lefort of France, and the reigning Olympic champion Daniele Garozzo of Italy.[20]

In 2021, Itkin won the U.S. National Championship in foil, in Philadelphia.[9]

At the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, at 21 years of age, Itkin won a bronze medal with Team USA in the men's team foil competition.[21][8] He came in 12th in the individual men's foil competition at the Olympics.[1] At the 2022 Pan American Fencing Championships in Asunción, Paraguay, he won a team gold medal, and an individual bronze medal.[22]

Itkin won an individual bronze medal in men's foil at the 2022 World Fencing Championships in Cairo, Egypt.[18] In the competition, he defeated world No. 6 Takahiro Shikine of Japan and former world champion and world No. 3 Alessio Foconi of Italy, before losing to Enzo Lefort of France by a score of 15–14 in the semifinals.[18] Lefort won the final to become a two-time reigning world champion.[23]

In 2023, Itkin won the U.S. National Championship in foil for the fifth time, having won five of the six national championships contested between 2017 and 2023. With the 2023 championship, Itkin moved into fourth place on the all-time list of men's foil fencers with the most U.S. national indoor titles.[24]

Despite not winning an individual medal at any of the Grand Prix or World Cup events during the 2023 season, Itkin improved on his 2022 World Championships performance by winning the silver medal in Individual Men's Foil at the 2023 World Fencing Championships. In a 2024 interview, Itkin discussed his tendency to perform better under pressure: "I just love that atmosphere, where the crowd is yelling and everyone's cheering, because when it's not like that, I have to kind of yell and force myself to get that kind of energy and atmosphere coming, but when it's already there naturally it's just so much easier for me."[25] This medal was Itkin's third Senior Worlds medal in the past two years: individual bronze and team silver in 2022 and now individual silver in 2023.[26] He became the first U.S. man, and third U.S. fencer overall, to win individual medals at back-to-back World Fencing Championships.[27][28]

2024–present: World No. 1 and Olympic individual bronze medal

At the Foil Grand Prix held in Washington, D.C. in 2024, Itkin secured the gold medal in front of a home crowd.[29] En route to his victory, Itkin defeated two-time Olympic individual medalist Daniele Garozzo of Italy by a score of 15-9 and fellow Italian and world No. 9 Filippo Macchi 15-6 before defeating Enzo Lefort of France 15-12 in the gold medal match, which was his closest bout of the tournament. In a dominant performance, Itkin outscored his opponents in D.C. by a combined count of 90-47.[30] With this victory, Itkin became the top-ranked men's foil fencer in the world for the 2024 season.[31]

Itkin competed in his second Olympic Games representing the United States at the 2024 Paris Olympics. He won a bronze medal in the individual foil competition, defeating Japanese fencer and World No. 9 Kazuki Iimura in the bronze medal match to become just the fifth ever American foil fencer to bring home an individual Olympic medal.[32] Fencing with Team USA in the team foil event, he and the team came in fourth.[33]

Medal record

Olympic Games

Year Location Event Position
2021 Japan Tokyo, Japan Team Men's Foil 3rd[34]
2024 France Paris, France Individual Men's Foil 3rd[35]

World Championship

Year Location Event Position
2022 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Individual Men's Foil 3rd[36]
2022 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Team Men's Foil 2nd[37]
2023 Italy Milan, Italy Individual Men's Foil 2nd[28]
2025 Georgia (country) Tbilisi, Georgia Team Men's Foil 2nd[38]

Grand Prix

Date Location Event Position
2019-05-17 China Shanghai, China Individual Men's Foil 2nd[39]
2024-02-10 Italy Turin, Italy Individual Men's Foil 3rd[40]
2024-03-17 United States Washington, D.C., United States Individual Men's Foil 1st[41]
2025-03-22 Peru Lima, Peru Individual Men's Foil 3rd[42]
2026-02-06 Italy Turin, Italy Individual Men's Foil 2nd[43]

World Cup

Date Location Event Position
2018-11-09 Germany Bonn, Germany Individual Men's Foil 3rd[44]
2020-01-10 France Paris, France Individual Men's Foil 1st[45]
2023-05-07 Mexico Acapulco, Mexico Team Men's Foil 1st[46]
2024-11-24 Tunisia Tunis, Tunisia Team Men's Foil 2nd[47]
2024-12-08 Japan Takasaki, Japan Team Men's Foil 2nd[48]
2025-01-12 France Paris, France Team Men's Foil 3rd[49]
2025-03-09 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Team Men's Foil 2nd[50]
2025-05-04 Canada Vancouver, Canada Team Men's Foil 1st[51]
2026-01-11 France Paris, France Team Men's Foil 2nd[52]
2026-04-16 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Individual Men's Foil 3rd[53]
2026-04-19 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Team Men's Foil 3rd[54]

Pan American Championship

Year Location Event Position
2019 Canada Toronto, Canada Team Men's Foil 1st[55]
2022 Paraguay Asunción, Paraguay Individual Men's Foil 3rd[56]
2022 Paraguay Asunción, Paraguay Team Men's Foil 1st[57]
2023 Peru Lima, Peru Individual Men's Foil 2nd[58]
2023 Peru Lima, Peru Team Men's Foil 1st[59]
2024 Peru Lima, Peru Individual Men's Foil 1st[60]
2024 Peru Lima, Peru Team Men's Foil 1st[61]
2025 Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Individual Men's Foil 2nd[62]
2025 Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Team Men's Foil 1st[63]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI