Yannick Borel
Personal information
Born (1988-11-05) 5 November 1988
Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe
Height1.95 m (6 ft 5 in)
Weight94 kg (207 lb)
Sport
CountryFrance
SportFencing
WeaponÉpée
Handright-handed
National coachHugues Obry
ClubLevallois Sporting Club
FIE rankingcurrent ranking
Medal record
Men's épée
Representing  France
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2016 Rio de JaneiroTeam
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2011 CataniaTeam
Gold medal – first place2017 LeipzigTeam
Gold medal – first place2018 WuxiIndividual
Gold medal – first place2019 BudapestTeam
Gold medal – first place2022 CairoTeam
Silver medal – second place2012 KievTeam
Silver medal – second place2023 MilanTeam
European Games
Gold medal – first place2015 BakuTeam
European Championships
Gold medal – first place2011 SheffieldTeam
Gold medal – first place2016 ToruńIndividual
Gold medal – first place2016 ToruńTeam
Gold medal – first place2017 TbilisiIndividual
Gold medal – first place2018 Novi SadIndividual
Gold medal – first place2022 AntalyaIndividual
Silver medal – second place2018 Novi SadTeam
Bronze medal – third place2022 AntalyaTeam

Yannick Borel (born 5 November 1988) is a French right-handed épée fencer.[1]

Borel is a two-time team European champion, four-time individual European champion, four-time team world champion, and 2018 individual world champion.

A three-time Olympian, Borel is a 2016 team Olympic champion.

Borel competed in the 2012 London Olympic Games, the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

Career

Early years

Borel was born in Guadeloupe, overseas France. When he had to choose an extracurricular activity at the age of ten, he hesitated between fencing and gwo ka, a genre of Guadeloupe folk music. He chose the former because the club was close to his school and several of his friends already fenced.[2] Five-time Olympic medallist Laura Flessel, also from Guadeloupe, was also a major inspiration for him. He learnt épée under coaches Rudy Plicoste and Barbara Paulin.

At the age of fifteen he was noticed by France's head coach Jérôme Roussat, who offered him a spot at the national junior training centre in Reims, Metropolitan France. Borel's parents refused, because they wanted him to finish high school before focussing on sport.[3] He was allowed to go after he obtained his baccalauréat in 2007 and began training with the best junior fencers alongside to his physical therapy studies.[4] That year he was selected into the French national junior team that won a silver medal at the Junior European Championships in Prague.[5] The next season, he earned a silver medal at the Herakled Cup in Budapest and won the Uhlmann Cup in Laupheim, two events of the Junior World Cup. He also became junior national champion.

Senior career

In 2009 Borel gave up his physical therapy studies, which were too demanding for a high-performance athlete, and switched to physical education at INSEP, where he trained with the senior national team.[4] He took part in the 2009 Summer Universiade, but did not earn any medal. Two quarter-finals finishes in the 2010–11 season had him selected into the senior national team for the first time. At the 2011 European Championships in Sheffield he reached the table of 16, defeating 2010 World silver medallist and teammate Gauthier Grumier along the way, but he yielded to Germany's Jörg Fiedler and finished 11th. In the team event France saw off Switzerland, Ukraine and finally Hungary to earn a gold medal.[6]

After this result Borel transferred from the Cercle d'Escrime de Châlons to the Levallois Sporting Club, where he joined teammates Ulrich Robeiri and Gauthier Grumier.[7] At the 2011 World Championships in Catania Borel reached again the table of 16, before being stopped by Korea's Park Kyoung-doo. In the team event France cruised to the quarter-finals, then defeated Germany, South Korea and Hungary to post their sixth World title in a row.[8] Borel finished the season World No.14, a career best as of 2015.

In the 2011–12 season Borel climbed his first World Cup podium with a bronze medal in Legnano. He qualified to the 2012 Summer Olympics as one of the two top-ranked Europeans.[9] As men's team épée did not feature on the Olympic programme, World Championships were held separately in April. France defeated Russia, then prevailed by a single hit over Italy in the semi-finals. They failed to establish a new record of seven straight World titles after a surprise 37–44 defeat against the United States and had to settle for silver.[10] For his Olympic début Borel defeated Ukraine's Dmytro Karyuchenko and Switzerland's Fabian Kauter. In the quarter-finals he met Norway's Bartosz Piasecki and took an early 6–2 lead, but failed to press his advantage and was finally defeated 14–15 by Piasecki, who eventually won the silver medal.[11]

After the Games Borel was dropped from the national team and had two dry seasons, although he was France's flagbearer at the 2013 University Games.[12] He bounced back in the 2014–15 season with a silver medal at the Heidenheim World Cup.

He competed for France at the 2016 Olympics, where he was part of the French team that won the team gold medal.[12] Because of this, he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour.[12]

He won the gold medal in the men's épée event at the 2022 European Fencing Championships held in Antalya, Turkey.[13]

Medal record

Olympic Games

Year Location Event Position
2016 Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Team Men's Épée 1st[14]

World Championship

Year Location Event Position
2011 Italy Catania, Italy Team Men's Épée 1st[15]
2012 Ukraine Kyiv, Ukraine Team Men's Épée 2nd[16]
2017 Germany Leipzig, Germany Team Men's Épée 1st[17]
2018 China Wuxi, China Individual Men's Épée 1st[18]
2019 Hungary Budapest, Hungary Team Men's Épée 1st[19]
2022 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Team Men's Épée 1st[20]

European Championship

Year Location Event Position
2011 United Kingdom Sheffield, United Kingdom Team Men's Épée 1st[21]
2016 Poland Toruń, Poland Individual Men's Épée 1st[22]
2016 Poland Toruń, Poland Team Men's Épée 1st[23]
2017 Georgia (country) Tbilisi, Georgia Individual Men's Épée 1st[24]
2018 Serbia Novi Sad, Serbia Individual Men's Épée 1st[25]
2018 Serbia Novi Sad, Serbia Team Men's Épée 2nd[26]
2022 Turkey Antalya, Turkey Individual Men's Épée 1st[27]
2022 Turkey Antalya, Turkey Team Men's Épée 3rd[28]

Grand Prix

Date Location Event Position
2015-05-22 Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Individual Men's Épée 1st[29]
2015-12-04 Qatar Doha, Qatar Individual Men's Épée 3rd[30]
2018-05-25 Colombia Cali, Colombia Individual Men's Épée 1st[31]
2019-01-25 Qatar Doha, Qatar Individual Men's Épée 1st[32]
2020-03-06 Hungary Budapest, Hungary Individual Men's Épée 2nd[33]
2022-01-28 Qatar Doha, Qatar Individual Men's Épée 1st[34]
2022-04-29 Egypt Cairo, Egypt Individual Men's Épée 1st[35]

World Cup

Date Location Event Position
2012-01-27 Italy Legnano, Italy Individual Men's Épée 3rd[36]
2015-01-22 Germany Heidenheim, Germany Individual Men's Épée 2nd[37]
2016-11-18 Argentina Buenos Aires, Argentina Individual Men's Épée 3rd[38]
2017-01-26 Germany Heidenheim, Germany Individual Men's Épée 2nd[39]
2017-02-17 Canada Vancouver, Canada Individual Men's Épée 3rd[40]
2017-05-12 France Paris, France Individual Men's Épée 2nd[41]
2018-02-16 Canada Vancouver, Canada Individual Men's Épée 3rd[42]

References

  1. "INTERNATIONAL FENCING FEDERATION – The International Fencing Federation official website". INTERNATIONAL FENCING FEDERATION – The International Fencing Federation official website. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  2. Benoît Jourdain (23 July 2012). "Yannick Borel, de la Pointe à l'épée" (in French). France TV Sport.
  3. Farid Achache (30 May 2012). "JO 2012 : Yannick Borel veut faire mouche" (in French). Radio France Internationale.
  4. 1 2 Céline Authemayou (12 June 2012). "Aux JO et pas pour un coup d'épée dans l'eau". L'Étudiant (in French).
  5. Albert Philippe (5 November 2007). "Escrime : la Guadeloupe sabre le Champagne". DOMactu.com (in French).
  6. "Escrime : les épéistes français sacrés champions d'Europe par équipes" (in French). Agence France-Presse. 18 July 2011.
  7. "Yannick Borel signe à Levallois". Le Parisien (in French). 27 September 2011.
  8. "Mondiaux d'escrime : les épéistes français conservent leur titre" (in French). Agence France-Presse. 15 October 2011.
  9. "Épée : Yannick Borel décroche son billet pour Londres". Le Monde (in French). 17 March 2012.
  10. Joanne Gerstner (25 April 2012). "A new era in epée: Men's epée fencing team overcomes odds to win United States' first world title". USA Fencing.
  11. Christophe Gaudot (1 August 2012). "Yannick Borel éliminé en quart à l'épée" (in French). France TV Sport.
  12. 1 2 3 "Fencer – BOREL Yannick – FRANCE – FIE – International Fencing Federation". fie.org. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  13. Lloyd, Owen (19 June 2022). "Borel and Bashta bag gold medals at European Fencing Championships". InsideTheGames.biz. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
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