Nedo Nadi
Nedo Nadi (
9 July 1894 –
29 January 1940) was an
Italian fencer, widely regarded as the most versatile ever. He is the only fencer to win a
gold medal in each of the
three weapons at a single
Olympic Games and won the most gold medals ever in fencing at a single Games. (Until
1972 it was also the record number of gold medals won at a single Games by any competitor.) He won six Olympic gold medals in total:
*1912 Individual
foil,
*1920 Individual foil,
*1920 Individual
sabre,
*1920 Team foil,
épée and sabre.
Early life
Nedo Nadi was born in
Livorno,
Italy, the elder son of famous Italian fencing master, Giuseppe (Beepe) Nadi. He had a younger brother Aldo who was an olympic gold medallist in his own right. Nedo had his first fencing lesson with a foil at the age of seven in his father's gymnasium at Livorno. His father taught him foil and sabre but believed the épée to be an "undisciplined" weapon and refused to teach it. The brothers therefore used to go and practice by themselves and were essentially self taught. At the age of fourteen Nedo won a solid silver trophy for his three weapon work during the Jubilee celebration of
Emperor Franz Joseph at
Vienna.
1912 Olympic Games
Competing for his country at
1912 Stockholm Olympics, Nadi became the youngest fencer to win a foil gold medal. Aged 18 years and 29 days, he beat teammate Pietro Speciale and Richard Verderber of
Austria for the individual gold with seven straight victories in the final pool.
World War I
Nadi served in the
Italian Army during
World War I and was
decorated for
bravery.
1920 Olympic Games
Nadi resumed his competitive career after World War I was over. Defeated
central European countries and the
Soviet Union did not attend the
Antwerp games. This meant that
Hungary, one of the strongest fencing nations, would be absent. Nadi therefore decided to expand his chances for gold and entered all three fencing disciplines.
Nedo Nadi's 1920 Olympic performances were acclaimed as near to perfection as a fencer could execute. Nadi won the individual foil gold medal with a record 10 wins in the final pool.
Frenchman, Roger Ducret, who won bronze went on to win the individual gold in 1924, after Nadi had retired from the Olympic arena.
Nadi's entry in the épée event annoyed his father, who regarded the épée as "a crude and undisciplined weapon". Unlike the foil, where a fencer could only score off a hit which landed on the trunk of the opponent's body, or the sabre where the upper torso and face mask count as scoring hits, in épée any part of the body is a legitimate hit. Nevertheless, Nedo Nadi led the Italian épée team, which included his brother Aldo, to the Olympic team gold medal.
Nedo Nadi's perfect balance, timing and rapid reflexes were an advantage in any style of fencing, so without much difficulty he won the individual sabre gold medal by 11 victories to 9. His brother Aldo won the silver medal. In the team sabre event, the Italian team supported their star fencer and cruised to an easy victory.
Nadi added three team victories to his tally of two individual golds and his younger brother Aldo won three team gold and one silver to make the family total a record for any sport in one Olympic Games.
Later life
Aldo and Nedo only fenced each other once in public and that match was drawn. Aldo moved to
Hollywood where he worked in the film industry.
After his Antwerp Olympic victories Nadi turned
professional and took up
coaching at the
Buenos Aires Jockey Club. He returned to
Rome some years later and was reinstated as an
amateur. From 1935 to his death in January 1940 he served as president of the Italian Fencing Federation.