Sofiya Aleksandrovna Velikaya (Russian: Софья Александровна Великая, IPA: [ˈsofʲjəvʲɪˈlʲikəjə]; born 8 June 1985) is a Russian sabre fencer.

Velikaya is a former European champion (four-time individual, six-time team), world champion (two-time individual, six-time team), and two-time Olympic team champion. She competed in the 2008, 2012, 2016, and 2020 Olympics, and is a three-time individual silver medalist.

She dedicated her team's 2016 Olympic gold medal to those Russians who had been banned for doping. In January 2024, Velikaya was included in the list of proxies of presidential candidate Vladimir Putin in the 2024 Russian presidential election.

Career

Velikaya receives the Order of Friendship from Vladimir Putin in 2021

Velikaya is a Russian Armed Forces captain. Her fencing clubs are the Russian Central Sports Army Club and MGFSO.

2008–15

She placed fourth in the 2008 Beijing Games, after losing to American Sada Jacobson 11–15 in the semifinals, and then losing to American Rebecca Ward 14–15 in the bronze medal match. On 12 October 2011, she became the world champion after beating two-time Olympic champion American Mariel Zagunis in the final. One year after, she took part in the Summer Olympics in London, where she advanced to finals after defeating Olga Kharlan of Ukraine. Velikaya lost however to South Korea's Kim Ji-yeon, 9–15, and received silver.

Velikaya then took a break in her career. She gave birth to a son, with Olympic wrestler Aleksey Mishin. She came back to international competition in March 2014 at the Antalya World Cup, where she was defeated in the second round by Hungary's Anna Várhelyi. At the European Championships in Strasbourg, she was stopped in the second round again, this time by Italy's Rossella Gregorio. In the team event, Russia met France in the final, and won the gold medal. At the World Championships in Kazan Velikaya made her way to the quarter-finals, where she met reigning World champion Olga Kharlan of Ukraine. Velikaya was defeated 9–15. In the team event, Russia met France in the quarter-finals. Russia suffered a shock 41–45 defeat.

In the 2014–15 season, Velikaya won the first event in Cancún after defeating France's Charlotte Lembach in the final. She placed second with Russia in the team event.[citation needed] In Orléans, she put an end to the invincibility of the world no.1 Olga Kharlan, who had not taken part in the Cancún tournament. Velikaya proceeded to the final where she defeated Italy's Rossella Gregorio and earned her second gold medal in a row. In the team event, Russia saw off the United States in the final to win team gold. Velikaya reached again the final in the New York Grand Prix. She met Kharlan, who defeated her 15–12, dooming her the silver medal. The same scenario played out in Athens at the first World Cup event of 2015, Velikaya losing by a single hit that time. In the team event, Russia fenced Ukraine in the final. Russia lost ground in the penultimate relay, which ended on 33–40. Velikaya lost 2–5 the final relay against Kharlan and came away with a second silver medal. At the Ghent World Cup, she defeated Kharlan 15–3 in the semi-finals, then Zagunis 15–10 in the final, to take her third gold medal of the season.

2016–19

Velikaya qualified for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. In women's sabre in the table of 32 she defeated Bogna Jóźwiak from Poland. In the table of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals, she prevailed over Charlotte Lembach, Cécilia Berder and Manon Brunet of France, respectively. She eventually lost 14–15 to her teammate Yana Egorian in the finals, winning her second consecutive silver medal at the Olympics in the individual women's sabre. Velikaya finally managed to claim Olympic gold a few days later in the team event. Russia defeated Mexico (45–31) in the quarter-finals, prevailed over the USA (45–42) in the semi-finals and met the Ukrainians in the final. Velikaya and her teammates came away with the gold medal, defeating Ukraine 45–30.

Velikaya dedicated her squad's 2016 Olympic gold medal to those Russians who had been banned for doping.

On 17 November 2016, Velikaya was elected the head of the Russian Olympic Committee Athletes' Commission.

2020–present

In April 2022, she said she would boycott the Olympics if she is not allowed to compete under the Russian flag and anthem. Velikaya was not among the Russian athletes reinstated by the FIE in May 2023, due to her ties with the Russian Army.

In January 2024, the Russian state-owned new agency TASS reported that Velikaya was included in the list of proxies of presidential candidate Vladimir Putin in the 2024 Russian presidential election. By law, self-nominated candidates such as Putin are allowed to have proxies who campaign in their favor.

In February 2024, Velikaya commented on three fellow Russian Olympic fencers who had escaped from Russia to the United States, Tokyo Olympics épée silver medalist Sergey Bida, his wife Violetta Bida, and sabre fencer Konstantin Lokhanov. She said: "This is absolutely their right, this is their life. I'm sitting at home."

Medal record

Olympic Games

YearLocationEventPosition
2012United Kingdom London, United KingdomIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2016Brazil Rio de Janeiro, BrazilIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2016Brazil Rio de Janeiro, BrazilTeam Women's Sabre1st
2021Japan Tokyo, JapanIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2021Japan Tokyo, JapanTeam Women's Sabre1st

World Championship

YearLocationEventPosition
2004United States New York, New YorkTeam Women's Sabre1st
2005Germany Leipzig, GermanyIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2005Germany Leipzig, GermanyTeam Women's Sabre2nd
2006Italy Turin, ItalyTeam Women's Sabre3rd
2007Russia St. Petersburg, RussiaTeam Women's Sabre3rd
2010France Paris, FranceIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2010France Paris, FranceTeam Women's Sabre1st
2011Italy Catania, ItalyIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2011Italy Catania, ItalyTeam Women's Sabre1st
2012Ukraine Kyiv, UkraineTeam Women's Sabre1st
2015Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2015Russia Moscow, RussiaTeam Women's Sabre1st
2018China Wuxi, ChinaIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2018China Wuxi, ChinaTeam Women's Sabre2nd
2019Hungary Budapest, HungaryIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2019Hungary Budapest, HungaryTeam Women's Sabre1st

European Championship

YearLocationEventPosition
2007Belgium Ghent, BelgiumIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2007Belgium Ghent, BelgiumTeam Women's Sabre3rd
2008Ukraine Kyiv, UkraineIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2009Bulgaria Plovdiv, BulgariaTeam Women's Sabre2nd
2010Germany Leipzig, GermanyIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2010Germany Leipzig, GermanyTeam Women's Sabre2nd
2011United Kingdom Sheffield, United KingdomTeam Women's Sabre3rd
2012Italy Legnano, ItalyTeam Women's Sabre1st
2014France Strasbourg, FranceTeam Women's Sabre1st
2015Switzerland Montreux, SwitzerlandIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2015Switzerland Montreux, SwitzerlandTeam Women's Sabre1st
2016Poland Toruń, PolandIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2016Poland Toruń, PolandTeam Women's Sabre1st
2018Serbia Novi Sad, SerbiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2018Serbia Novi Sad, SerbiaTeam Women's Sabre1st
2019Germany Düsseldorf, GermanyIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2019Germany Düsseldorf, GermanyTeam Women's Sabre1st

Grand Prix

DateLocationEventPosition
2003-03-14Italy Foggia, ItalyIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2004-03-20Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2004-06-12United States New York, New YorkIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2005-03-18Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2006-02-24Hungary Budapest, HungaryIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2006-03-17Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2009-02-06France Orléans, FranceIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2009-02-15Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2009-05-29China Tianjin, ChinaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2010-02-14Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2010-03-19Tunisia Tunis, TunisiaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2011-02-11France Orléans, FranceIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2011-03-26Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2012-02-10France Orléans, FranceIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2012-03-16Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2013-03-22Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2014-12-13United States New York, New YorkIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2015-03-28South Korea Seoul, South KoreaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2015-05-29Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2015-12-12United States Boston, MassachusettsIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2016-03-25South Korea Seoul, South KoreaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2018-05-12Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2019-02-22Egypt Cairo, EgyptIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2019-05-24Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st

World Cup

DateLocationEventPosition
2006-05-13Belgium Ghent, BelgiumIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2008-02-16Russia Moscow, RussiaIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2010-06-18United States New York, New YorkIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2011-02-25United Kingdom London, United KingdomIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2011-06-24United States New York, New YorkIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2012-02-24United Kingdom London, United KingdomIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2012-05-04Italy Bologna, ItalyIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2014-11-01Venezuela Margarita Island, VenezuelaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2014-11-21France Orléans, FranceIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2015-01-30Greece Athens, GreeceIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2015-02-20Belgium Ghent, BelgiumIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2015-05-01China Beijing, ChinaIndividual Women's Sabre1st
2016-01-29Greece Athens, GreeceIndividual Women's Sabre2nd
2016-02-19Belgium Sint-Niklaas, BelgiumIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2019-01-25United States Salt Lake City, UtahIndividual Women's Sabre3rd
2019-05-10Tunisia Tunis, TunisiaIndividual Women's Sabre1st

Honours and awards

  • Russian Order of Merit for the Fatherland 1st class (13 August 2012) – for outstanding contribution to the development of physical culture and sports, high achievements at the 30th Olympic Games in London, United Kingdom.
  • Russian Athlete of the Year (2015)
  • Russian Order of Honour (25 August 2016) – for high achievements at the 31st Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the will to win and goal-oriented approach.
  • Russian Medal of Military Valour (2016) – 1st class.

Personal life

At the age of 15, Velikaya moved from the city of Almaty in Kazakhstan to Moscow to train in fencing.

Velikaya is married to 2004 Olympic champion wrestler Aleksey Mishin. They have two children together: a son named Oleg, born on 30 November 2013, and a daughter named Zoya, born in 2018.

External links

Olympic Games
Preceded bySergey Tetyukhin (for Russia)Flagbearer for ROC (with Maksim Mikhaylov) Tokyo 2020Succeeded byIncumbent