American Lee Kiefer clinches her second consecutive women's foil gold medal
David Wharton
Lee Kiefer celebrates after winning gold in an all-American women's foil final at the 2024 Olympics in Paris. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
If France isn’t exactly the birthplace of fencing, it’s close — this country’s passion for swordplay dates back to King Charles IX in the 16th century.
But on Sunday evening at the 2024 Paris Olympics, it was two Americans who claimed possession of the sport, charging into the finals of the women’s foil competition at the storied Grand Palais.
And it was defending champion Lee Kiefer who made history.
Three years after her unexpected gold at the Tokyo Games, the top-seeded Kiefer continued to dominate the event with a record second title, defeating ninth-seeded Lauren Scruggs 15-6.
Lee Kiefer, left, faced off with Lauren Scruggs in an all-American women's foil final on Sunday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
This wasn’t the first time an Olympic fencing championship featured two American women. Mariel Zagunis defeated teammate Sada Jacobson for the saber title at the 2008 Beijing Games.
2024 Paris Summer Olympic Games
Complete Olympics coverage
But the underdog Scruggs helped make this one notable. After a series of close bouts, she looked almost comfortable in the semifinals, taking an early lead against 12th-seeded Eleanor Harvey of Canada and maintaining control for a 15-9 victory.
After the deciding touch, the Queens, N.Y., native turned to her coach with eyes wide, then began to cry.
Lee Kiefer, center, of the U.S. bites a gold medal next to silver medalist Lauren Scruggs, left, and bronze medalist Eleanor Harvey from Canada after the women's foil final Sunday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
The route was a bit tougher for Kiefer, who needed a burst of touches to defeat third-seeded Alice Volpi of Italy, 15-10.
In the years since Tokyo, Kiefer has focused on augmenting her repertoire. A defensive fencer by nature, she has been trying to attack more often.
“I feel like I can still get so much better and still grow and advance,” she said earlier this year. “That might sound surprising if you have an Olympic medal and you’re ranked No. 1 in the world, but the nuances are so much fun.”
The work paid off Sunday as she deftly shifted gears depending on the opponent and circumstance. Against Scruggs, she opened an early four-touch lead and was never seriously challenged.
In the bronze-medal bout, Harvey defeated Volpi to make it a clean sweep for North America. With her victory, Kiefer can now focus on rooting for husband and two-time bronze medalist Gerek Meinhardt in the men’s foil on Monday.
David Wharton
Lee Kiefer celebrates after winning gold in an all-American women's foil final at the 2024 Olympics in Paris. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
If France isn’t exactly the birthplace of fencing, it’s close — this country’s passion for swordplay dates back to King Charles IX in the 16th century.
But on Sunday evening at the 2024 Paris Olympics, it was two Americans who claimed possession of the sport, charging into the finals of the women’s foil competition at the storied Grand Palais.
And it was defending champion Lee Kiefer who made history.
Three years after her unexpected gold at the Tokyo Games, the top-seeded Kiefer continued to dominate the event with a record second title, defeating ninth-seeded Lauren Scruggs 15-6.
Lee Kiefer, left, faced off with Lauren Scruggs in an all-American women's foil final on Sunday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
This wasn’t the first time an Olympic fencing championship featured two American women. Mariel Zagunis defeated teammate Sada Jacobson for the saber title at the 2008 Beijing Games.
2024 Paris Summer Olympic Games
Complete Olympics coverage
But the underdog Scruggs helped make this one notable. After a series of close bouts, she looked almost comfortable in the semifinals, taking an early lead against 12th-seeded Eleanor Harvey of Canada and maintaining control for a 15-9 victory.
After the deciding touch, the Queens, N.Y., native turned to her coach with eyes wide, then began to cry.
Lee Kiefer, center, of the U.S. bites a gold medal next to silver medalist Lauren Scruggs, left, and bronze medalist Eleanor Harvey from Canada after the women's foil final Sunday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
The route was a bit tougher for Kiefer, who needed a burst of touches to defeat third-seeded Alice Volpi of Italy, 15-10.
In the years since Tokyo, Kiefer has focused on augmenting her repertoire. A defensive fencer by nature, she has been trying to attack more often.
“I feel like I can still get so much better and still grow and advance,” she said earlier this year. “That might sound surprising if you have an Olympic medal and you’re ranked No. 1 in the world, but the nuances are so much fun.”
The work paid off Sunday as she deftly shifted gears depending on the opponent and circumstance. Against Scruggs, she opened an early four-touch lead and was never seriously challenged.
In the bronze-medal bout, Harvey defeated Volpi to make it a clean sweep for North America. With her victory, Kiefer can now focus on rooting for husband and two-time bronze medalist Gerek Meinhardt in the men’s foil on Monday.
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Summary
2024 Paris Olympics: American Lee Kiefer wins second consecutive women's foil gold, defeating Lauren Scruggs in the final. Scruggs made history by reaching the finals as an underdog, but Kiefer continued her dominance with a 15-6 victory. The victory follows Kiefer's unexpected gold at the Tokyo
Reading History
| Date | Name | Words | Time | WPM |
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| 2024/07/29 19:43 | Anonymous | 446 | - | - |