Anna Márton

The native form of this personal name is Márton Anna. This article uses the Western name order.
Anna Márton

At the 2014 Orléans Grand Prix
Personal information
Born (1995-03-15) 15 March 1995
Budapest, Hungary
Weapon(s) sabre
Hand Right-handed
Club MTK-Pézsa Tibor Vívóakadémia
Head coach(es) Gábor Gárdos, Pézsa Tibor
FIE Ranking current ranking

Anna Márton (born 15 March 1995) is a Hungarian sabre fencer, junior European and World champion in 2014, member of the Hungarian national team.

Career

Márton (L) fences Ukraine's Olha Zhovnir at the 2014 European Championships

Márton began fencing at the age of nine. She is coached by Gábor Gárdos since she is ten.[1] She won the 2010 Cadet European Championships in Athens and earned a bronze medal at the Cadet World Championships in Baku that same year.

She joined in 2011 the senior national team at the age of sixteen and took part in the World Championships in Catania.[2] She did not get past the qualification phase in the individual event. In the team event, Hungary defeated Canada and South Korea before losing to top-seed Russia, who eventually won the gold medal.

In the 2011–12 season Márton won a double gold medal in the cadet category and an individual gold medal in the junior category at the European Championships in Poreč. She took part in the senior European Championships in Legnano, but lost in the first round to World No.1 Olha Kharlan.[3] The following year, she reached the quarter-finals at the European Championships in Zagreb, ceding to Kharlan again. She was stopped by China's Zhu Min in the table of 32 of the World Championships at home in Budapest.

In the 2013–14 season Márton became Junior European and World champion in Jerusalem and Plovdiv respectively. She also reached the table of 16 in four stages of the Fencing World Cup. She was stopped in the second round by Russia's Yana Egorian at the European Championships in Strasburg, but she got to the table of 16 at the World Championships in Kazan, where she was edged out by Russia's Yekaterina Dyachenko.[4]

Márton studies biology at Eötvös Loránd University.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "Márton Anna világai" (in Hungarian). UtánpótlásSport. 16 April 2015.
  2. "Márton Anna „Vívás ésszel és szívvel"" (in Hungarian). ujeuropaalapitvany.hu.
  3. "Vívó Eb: a világelsővel már nem bírt a 18 éves magyar lány" (in Hungarian). Nemzeti Sport Online. 17 June 2014.
  4. "Vívó-vb: egy tussal maradt le a negyeddöntőről Márton Anna" (in Hungarian). Nemzeti Sport Online. 8 July 2014.

External links

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