Emilia Eberle
Emilia Eberle was born in Arad, Arad County, Romania on March 4th, 1964 and is the Gymnast. At the age of 60, Emilia Eberle biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 60 years old, Emilia Eberle has this physical status:
Emilia Eberle (Romanian pronunciation: [emerle]; born 4 March 1964) is a retired Romanian gymnast of German-Hungarian descent.
Later life
Eberle left Romania in 1989 and 1991, with Károlyis, Comăneci, and others. Roland, her son, was born in 1999 and she is married. She coaches in California with a fellow expatriate from Romania, gymnastics coach and choreographer Géza Poszár.
In November 2008, Eberle, who now goes by the name Trudi Kollar, told KCRA-TV that Béla and Márta Károlyi regularly beat her and her colleagues for mistakes they made in practice or competition. "I can say it was brutal in a single word," she told KCRA.
Career
Following her mother's death, Eberle began gymnastics at the age of 7. At the time she was coached by Judita Varkony and Pavel Rosenfeld, and later on she was taught by Béla Károlyi and Márta Károlyi before moving from Romania to the United States in 1981. She was called to the national team in 1976 and later became the first female Romanian gymnastics star to replace Nadia Comăneci. She was often in Comăneci's shadow because they competed together for the greater part of Eberle's career. Despite all this, she made a name for herself, winning 13 individual accolades at the European, World, and Olympic level. She was most notable among her accomplishments at the 1979 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships, ahead of Nelli Kim and Maxi Gnauck, as well as winning a silver medal on uneven bars at the 1980 Olympics, where she was barely edged out by Gnauck.
Eberle was also on the gold-medal winning squad at the 1979 World Championships. Despite losing the balance beam in the team's optional segment of the tournament, her other scores were good enough to hold the Romanian team in contention for the gold with the Soviet team. Comrade Comăneci recovered from an injury, but she did a good job on the beam, where she managed to post a high score and win the gold medal. It was a rare victory for the Romanians over the Soviet team, and one of the Soviets' only three World Championship or Olympic titles lost between 1952 and 1992, the last appearance of the unified Soviet team (under the auspice of the Commonwealth of Independent States).
Although she was a strong gymnast all-around (he won all-around silver medals at the 1979 World Cup and European Championships), Eberle was most notable for her stints in uneven bars, where her routines varied widely from year to year and even from competition to competition. She went from one bar to the other in a quick and strange fashion.