128:"Csaba believed in me and worked me like a dog, goading me, inspiring me, always pushing me beyond what I thought I could or would do. I was lucky to have had 8 years with Csaba in his prime before his stroke in 1980. The stroke paralyzed his right hand so he taught w/his left until he recovered some use in his right. Csaba came to love New York and his life here in the U.S., he went back to Hungary every year on vacation to visit his daughters from his first wife and family, but New York was his home. He never lost that formality between us, just the one time (May 1977) when he punctured my throat by accident, the only time I have ever seen him cry or drop his formality with me."
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Personal courage and disregard for discomfort were also part of the formula; for very advanced students, Elthes sometimes gave lessons without a mask, and nearly all serious students were disciplined by being hit with a sabre, sometimes hard enough to draw blood; Danny
Bukantz' son Jeff, a student
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Elthes and
Santelli were largely (but not solely) responsible for making the New York City area the center of US sabre fencing for most of their careers; Elthes was a US Olympic coach from 1964 to 1984, and as late as 1992, the entire US Olympic sabre team was based at NYC salles and clubs. Elthes
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The
Hungarian school of instruction practiced by Elthes was famed for discipline, sarcasm and competitiveness, but always making it clear that there was respect between teacher and student (as exemplified by Elthes frequently calling students "Mr. Sir" (pronounced "Meester Sore" due to his heavy
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In 1980, the United States boycotted the
Olympic Games in Moscow. Elthes and the US Fencing team instead went on a state department sponsored trip to China, spending 3 weeks traveling through 4 different provinces competing against China's top teams. Later that year, Elthes suffered a stroke,
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In his teaching, Elthes stressed balance and footwork, and treated fencing as an intellectual pursuit as well as an athletic one. When teaching, he often gave very few verbal instructions, indicating that the student should attempt to strike by exposing a potential target, or illustrating the
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Peter
Westbrook quit working with Elthes after three months in 1972, unwilling to tolerate the maestro's teaching style. The following year, Westbrook began working with Elthes again, and Elthes no longer struck him, coaching him to his first of 13 US National Sabre titles in 1974.
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Determining that he would not be able to find work as a lawyer in the United States, he decided that fencing might be a good way to make a living. Investigating the competitions of the time, he realized that while
American foil fencing was already at a fairly high level (he cited
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Students got more instructor time the better their performance. Former student and longtime friend of Elthes, Robert Blum noted "Occasional verbal insults were received as gratuities!"
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paralyzing his right hand, but he learned to teach with his left until he had recovered some use of the right, and switched hands as needed for the rest of his career.
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master who emigrated to the U.S. Elthes trained many
Olympic competitors in the 1960s through 1980s, including the only U.S. Olympic fencing medalist of the period,
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from the 1970s, notes "I think I may have been the only student that Csaba didn't hit. I always thought it might have been because my father was his dentist".
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In 1981, his student
Michael Lofton becomes US Junior Olympic sabre champion, beginning a very successful career as one of the United States' top fencers.
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His passion for fencing and competition never wavered; in 1994, he convinced Peter
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in 1995 when visiting his home city of
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in particular), there were opportunities in sabre and epee, and he quickly found employment at the salle of maestro
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Among Elthes' students are US Olympic competitors Marty Lang,
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weakness of a student's attack with a well-placed stop-cut.
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Giorgio Santelli and Csaba Elthes - 2 Great Fencing Masters
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Hungarian accent), which tended to create fierce loyalty.
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25:(March 10, 1912 – November 8, 1995) was a
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137:Elthes was inducted into the
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