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Eli Dershwitz

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Private and Private
Brother of Private and Private

Occupation: Sabre fencer, college student
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
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About Eli Dershwitz

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eli_Dershwitz

Eli Dershwitz (born September 23, 1995) is an American sabre fencer.[16][17] He is ranked #1 in the United States, and #10 in the world, as of the summer of 2016.[18][19] He is the youngest saber fencer among the world’s top 25. Dershwitz will represent the US in fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics, beginning August 10th, and then return to Harvard University as a sophomore.

In 2014, Dershwitz won the US Men's Sabre National Championship, becoming the youngest-ever US senior men's saber champion. Dershwitz then won the 2015 Junior World Fencing Championships in saber, becoming the first American men's saber fencer to win a world title. He is a four-time Pan-American Champion, and the 2015 Pan American Games champion in saber.

Contents [show] Early life and education[edit] Dershwitz is Jewish, and was born and raised in Sherborn, Massachusetts.[20][21][22][23] His parents are Renee Goetzler and Mark Dershwitz.[24][25] His maternal grandparents, both Holocaust survivors, were Ruth (née Schmukler) Goetzler (born in Tarnów, Poland, she survived the Holocaust hidden in a barn by a Polish farmer) and Mark Goetzler (born in Jasło, Poland, he also lived in Samarkand, Uzbekistan).[26][27][28] His paternal parents were Arthur Dershwitz and Tillie (née Segel) Dershwitz.[29][30] He has an older brother (Phil, who fenced for Princeton University) and a twin sister (Sally, who competed in gymnastics and lacrosse).[31][32] He attended the Conservative synagogue Temple Israel of Natick, was bar mitzvah in 2008, and considers himself a "proud member of the Jewish community."[33][34]

Dershwitz played basketball and soccer up until the end of middle school.[35] He attended Dover-Sherborn High School, graduating in 2014.[36][37]

He is a student at Harvard University, where Dershwitz plans to possibly major in either history or government.[38] He is a member of the varsity Harvard Crimson fencing team.[39] As a freshman in 2014-15, he was a First Team All-American, All-Ivy League, and finished third at the NCAA Fencing Championships with a 22-2 record.[40] He will be the seventh Harvard fencer to compete in the Olympics, with the last two having been Emily Cross '09 (Team USA) and Noam Mills '12 (Israel), who both competed in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.[41][42] Dershwitz took off the 2015–16 school year to train full time for the Olympics.[43]

Fencing career[edit] Dershwitz is ranked number 1 in saber in the United States, and number 10 in the world, as of the summer of 2016.[44][45] In March 2016, US Olympic saber coach Zoran Tulum said: "Eli’s world ranking is remarkable... he is the youngest [saber] fencer among the world’s top 25."[46]

He followed his older brother into fencing.[47] Dershwitz has been coached since 2004 when he was 9 years old by Tulum, at the Zeta Fencing club in Natick, Massachusetts.[48][49] Tulum will coach the US men’s saber team in the 2016 Olympics.[50][51][52][53]

In February 2016, Dershwitz beat Russia's 2015 world champion Alexey Yakimenko at the Warsaw World Cup.[54] In March 2016, while winning the gold medal at the Seoul Grand Prix in South Korea, he defeated 2014 world silver medalist Gu Bon-gil of Korea in the quarterfinals, 2014 world champion Nikolay Kovalev of Russia in the semifinals, and Iranian Mojtaba Abedini in the final.[55]

US Championship competitions[edit] In March 2013, Dershwitz was the top-ranked US junior saber fencer.[56] In April 2014, Dershwitz won the US Men's Saber National Championship, becoming the youngest-ever US senior men's saber champion.[57][58][59][60]

World Championship competitions[edit] Dershwitz is a five-time Junior World Fencing Championships and Cadet World Championships team member, and was the 2015 Under-20 World Saber Champion.[61] He is the only American men's saber fencer to win a world title.[62]

He won a silver medal at the 2012 Junior World Championships, a bronze medal at the 2013 Junior World Championships, and the gold medal at the 2015 Junior World Fencing Championships -- the first title for a US men’s saber fencer at the junior world championships.[63][64] In March 2013, Dershwitz was the number-two-ranked world junior saber fencer.[65]

In 2013, Dershwitz fenced in men's sabre at the 2013 World Fencing Championships, where he finished 36th after a 15-12 loss to Matyas Szabo (Germany). He was also the youngest member of the US national team in 2013, at 17 years of age.[66] Dershwitz also competed in men's sabre at the 2014 World Fencing Championships in Kazan, Russia, in men's sabre at the 2015 World Fencing Championships in Moscow, Russia, and in the 2016 Senior Team World Championships in Rio de Janeiro.[67][68]

Pan American Games and Pan American Championships[edit] Dershwitz is a four-time Pan-American Champion. He won individual gold medals at the 2014 Pan American Fencing Championships in San Jose, Costa Rica, and the 2015 Pan American Fencing Championships in Santiago, Chile. He also won team gold medals in the 2013 Pan American Fencing Championships in Cartagena, Colombia, and the 2016 Pan American Fencing Championships in Panama City, Panama.[69]

Dershwitz also won gold medals in both individual and team saber in fencing at the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto, Canada.[70]

Olympics[edit] Dershwitz will represent the United States in fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, beginning August 10th.[71][72] He qualified by being in the top 14 of the FIE adjusted official ranking list, and will be the youngest member of the US Olympic fencing team.[73][74] He said, "I am excited to represent my country, my sport and the Jewish community at a sporting event that brings the entire world together in peace."[75] Commenting on having watched the last Olympics from home as a teenager, Dershwitz said "just to think that in three short years ... it can go from watching on a computer screen ... screaming in my pajamas at 3 in the morning to actually being on the biggest stage in sports, it’s so hard to picture. But now it’s all I think about."[76]

He plans to return to Harvard University as a sophomore six days after the 2016 Summer Olympics closing ceremony.[77]

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Eli Dershwitz's Timeline

1995
September 23, 1995
Sherborn, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States