Kamil Ibragimov | |
Full Name: | Kamil Anvarovich Ibragimov |
Nationality: | Russian |
Birth Date: | 13 August 1993 |
Birth Place: | Moscow, Russia |
Height: | 1.77 m |
Weight: | 69 kg |
Country: | Russia |
Weapon: | Sabre |
Hand: | Right-handed |
Club: | CSKA Moscow (Central Sports Army Club) and MGFSO [RUS].[1] |
Natlcoach: | Christian Bauer |
Perscoach: | Aleksandr Shirshov |
Fieranking: | current ranking |
Kamil Anvarovich Ibragimov (ru|Камиль Анварович Ибрагимов; born 13 August 1993) is a Russian right-handed sabre fencer, two-time team European champion, and two-time team world champion.[2]
Ibragimov is the son of foil fencers Anvar Ibragimov and Olga Velichko[3] and is of Tatar and Russian origin. He began fencing at the age of seven under the guidance of 1992 Olympic champion Aleksandr Shirshov, who remains his personal coach.
Ibragimov is a Russian Armed Forces athlete, and his clubs are the Russian Central Sports Army Club and MGFSO.[1]
Amongst seniors, he made his breakthrough during the 2012–13 season, when he climbed his first World Cup podium with a gold medal in the Glaive d'Asparoukh after defeating Romania's Tiberiu Dolniceanu in the final.[4] That same year, he won the Junior World Championship in Poreč[5] and the 2013 Summer Universiade in Kazan.[6] At the World Championships in Budapest, he was eliminated in the second round. In the team event, where Ibragimov stood as reserve, Russia won the gold medal after prevailing over Romania in the final.
In the 2014 European Championships at Strasbourg, Ibragimov made his way to the semi-finals where he was stopped by team-mate Aleksey Yakimenko and came away with the bronze medal.[7] In the team event, Russia met Italy in the final. Russia were defeated 44–45.[8] A month after, in the World Championships at Kazan, Ibragimov was defeated in the second round. The team event was Ibragimov's first time as a full member of the side.[9] Russia met Germany in the semi-finals. Selected to close the match instead of captain Nikolay Kovalev, Ibragimov could not prevent Germany from winning 45–40. They met Hungary in the small final, but were defeated once again and came away with no medal.
In the 2014–15 season Ibragimov won the Trofeo Luxardo in Padova after seeing off Ukraine's Andriy Yagodka in the final.[10]
Year | Location | Event | Position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | Budapest, Hungary | Team Men's Sabre | 1st[11] | |
2015 | Moscow, Russia | Team Men's Sabre | 2nd[12] | |
2016 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | Team Men's Sabre | 1st[13] | |
2017 | Leipzig, Germany | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[14] | |
2018 | Wuxi, China | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[15] |
Year | Location | Event | Position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Strasbourg, France | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[16] | |
2014 | Strasbourg, France | Team Men's Sabre | 2nd[17] | |
2016 | Toruń, Poland | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[18] | |
2016 | Toruń, Poland | Team Men's Sabre | 1st[19] | |
2017 | Tbilisi, Georgia | Team Men's Sabre | 1st[20] | |
2018 | Novi Sad, Serbia | Individual Men's Sabre | 2nd[21] | |
2019 | Düsseldorf, Germany | Individual Men's Sabre | 2nd[22] |
Date | Location | Event | Position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013-01-19 | Plovdiv, Bulgaria | Individual Men's Sabre | 1st[23] | |
2015-03-28 | Seoul, South Korea | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[24] | |
2018-03-30 | Seoul, South Korea | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[25] |
Date | Location | Event | Position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2015-01-30 | Padua, Italy | Individual Men's Sabre | 1st[26] | |
2015-05-01 | Madrid, Spain | Individual Men's Sabre | 2nd[27] | |
2015-10-30 | Budapest, Hungary | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[28] | |
2016-01-29 | Padua, Italy | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[29] | |
2016-02-19 | Warsaw, Poland | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[30] | |
2017-11-03 | Algiers, Algeria | Individual Men's Sabre | 3rd[31] | |
2022-01-15 | Tbilisi, Georgia | Individual Men's Sabre | 2nd[32] |