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MASSIALAS Alexander |
NOC |
United States
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Gender | Men |
Born |
20 Apr 1994
in San Francisco, CA, USA
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Height | 1.88 m |
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General Interest |
Hobbies |
Spending time with friends, going to the beach, watching TV. (alexandermassialas.com, 23 Jan 2021) |
Memorable sporting achievement |
Winning two medals at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. (digitaljournal.com, 07 Dec 2019) |
Hero / Idol |
US fencer Gerek Meinhardt. (Instagram profile, 04 Sep 2019) |
Ambitions |
To win gold at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. (nbcbayarea.com, 24 Jan 2024) |
Further Personal Information |
Residence |
San Francisco, CA, USA |
Sport Specific Information |
Club / Team |
Massialas Foundation: San Francisco, CA, USA |
General Interest |
Famous relatives |
His father Greg competed in foil fencing at the 1984 and 1988 Olympic Games. He has also coached the US men's national foil team and was a fencing referee at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. His younger sister Sabrina represented the United States of America in team foil at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. (sports.yahoo.com, 14 May 2020; SportsDeskOnline, 16 May 2024; thenationalherald.com, 14 Aug 2016; fencingusa.com, 01 Jan 2014) |
Sport Specific Information |
Why this sport? |
"My father was an Olympian in fencing. When he set up his own club, I wanted to start right away." |
General Interest |
Most influential person in career |
His father Greg, and coach Dean Hinton. (usafencing.org, 11 Oct 2017; Athlete, 28 Nov 2011) |
Sport Specific Information |
Name of coach |
Greg Massialas [club, national, father], USA |
Handedness |
Right |
When and where did you begin this sport? |
He began fencing at age seven at his father's club in San Francisco, CA, United States of America. |
Further Personal Information |
Languages |
English, Mandarin |
General Interest |
Nicknames |
Alex (fencing.net, 18 May 2011) |
Sporting philosophy / motto |
"I don't like losing in anything and that means board games, video games, and fencing." (digitaljournal.com, 07 Dec 2019) |
Other information |
HERITAGE His father was born in Crete, Greece, and moved to the United States of America at age 10. His mother Chen Chwan-Hui grew up in Chinese Taipei. His Chinese name is Chen Hai-Hsiang. (Instagram profile, 02 Jun 2019; teamusa.org, 17 Aug 2014; mercurynews.com, 21 Sep 2012)
OTHER ACTIVITIES In 2022 he launched the Massialas Fencing Tour, offering clinics on fencing skills and character development for youngsters. "A personal goal of mine has been to reach more young athletes and find unique ways to inspire the next generation of fencers." In 2022 he was also elected as a member of the Athletes Commission of the International Fencing Federation [FIE]. "I wanted to join the Athletes Commission because I think it's important that the athletes have a seat at the decision-making table. I believe I am well-positioned to advocate for the needs of the athletes." (usafencing.org, 29 Jul 2022; prnewswire.com, 21 Apr 2022) |
Further Personal Information |
Higher education |
Mechanical Engineering - Stanford University: United States |
Occupation |
Athlete |
General Interest |
Awards and honours |
In 2018 he was presented with the Alumni Achievement Award by the Chinese American International School. (cais.org, 12 Jun 2018) |
Milestones |
Along with Race Imboden, Gerek Meinhardt, and Miles Chamley-Watson, he was part of the first US men's foil team to win gold at the world championships. They claimed victory at the 2019 edition of the tournament in Budapest, Hungary. (SportsDeskOnline, 09 Mar 2021; alexandermassialas.com, 23 Jan 2021)
At age 18 years and 96 days on the first day of competition, he was the youngest male US athlete in any sport to compete at the 2012 Olympic Games in London. (SportsDeskOnline, 09 Jun 2020; teamusa.org, 22 Aug 2016) |
Injuries |
A positive COVID-19 test prevented him from competing at the 2022 World Cup event in Cairo, Egypt. (pianetascherma.com, 24 Feb 2022)
He sustained a wrist injury and missed some training in the build-up to the 2016 Olympic Games. (olympics.nbcsports.com, 14 May 2020) |
Olympic Games |
2020 |
3 |
Team Foil |
Tokyo, Japan |
2016 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
2016 |
3 |
Team Foil |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
2012 |
4 |
Team Foil |
London, England |
World Championships |
2023 |
4 |
Team Foil |
Milan, Italy |
2022 |
2 |
Team Foil |
Cairo, Egypt |
2019 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Budapest, Hungary |
2018 |
2 |
Team Foil |
Wuxi, China |
2017 |
2 |
Team Foil |
Leipzig, Germany |
2017 |
5 |
Individual Foil |
Leipzig, Germany |
2015 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Moscow, Russia |
Pan American Championships |
2024 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Lima, Peru |
2024 |
3 |
Individual Foil |
Lima, Peru |
2023 |
3 |
Individual Foil |
Lima, Peru |
2022 |
1 |
Individual Foil |
Asunción, Paraguay |
2022 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Asunción, Paraguay |
2019 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Toronto, Canada |
2019 |
3 |
Individual Foil |
Toronto, Canada |
2018 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Havana, Cuba |
2018 |
3 |
Individual Foil |
Havana, Cuba |
2017 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Montreal, Canada |
2017 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Montreal, Canada |
2016 |
1 |
Individual Foil |
Panama, Panama |
2016 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Panama, Panama |
2015 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Santiago, Chile |
2015 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Santiago, Chile |
2014 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
San José, Costa Rica |
2013 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Cartagena, Colombia |
2013 |
5 |
Individual Foil |
Cartagena, Colombia |
2012 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Cancún, Mexico |
2011 |
1 |
Team Foil |
Reno, NV, United States |
2011 |
2 |
Individual Foil |
Reno, NV, United States |
2010 |
1 |
Team Foil |
San José, Costa Rica |
2010 |
3 |
Individual Foil |
, |
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