Maia Weintraub | |
---|---|
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | October 24, 2002
Sport | |
Country | ![]() |
Sport | Fencing |
Weapon | Foil |
Hand | right-handed |
Current ranking | 13 ( FIE World Ranking, women's foil) |
Maia Mei Weintraub (born October 24, 2002) is an American foil fencer. She won the 2019 and 2023 USA Fencing Women's Foil National Championships, was ranked second in the world in 2021 in women's foil in the juniors, and won the 2022 NCAA national women's foil championship. She qualified to represent the U.S. at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Weintraub was born and grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [1] She is Jewish, and the daughter of Elizabeth Surin and Jason Weintraub. [2] Weintraub attended Friends Select School in Philadelphia. [3]
Weintraub fences at the Fencers Club, the Fencing Academy of Philadelphia, and Princeton University. [1] Her coaches are Simon Gershon and Mark Masters. [1]
Her first experience in fencing came at age nine, when she joined the Fencing Academy of Philadelphia at the suggestion of her uncles Adam and Joshua Weintraub, both former college fencers. [2] [4] A foil fencer, she won the foil gold medal at the Junior Olympics tournament in the 2017–18 season. [5]
Weintraub won the U.S. national foil championship in April 2019, becoming the youngest person to accomplish the feat in nine years. [6] Later that year, she placed third at the Junior World Cup, was ranked 8th in the world in foil in the cadets, and was in the top-32 at a Senior World Cup competition. [6] [7] She placed 16th at the 2020 Kazan Senior World Cup. [5] [6] [8]
She was the runner-up at the 2021 U.S. national foil championship, and finished eighth in the individual event at the 2021 Junior World Championships and second in the team event. [5] [6] [8] She traveled to Tokyo, Japan, for the 2020 Summer Olympics (held in 2021) as an alternate for the U.S. team, although she did not compete. [2]
Weintraub was ranked second in the world in the junior category, and 64th in the senior category in August 2021. [8]
She began attending Princeton University in 2021, where she is considering ecology, evolutionary biology, and molecular biology as possible majors. [8] She fenced for the Tigers; that season, as a rookie freshman she won the Ivy League title and the NCAA regional and national foil championships, and was named first-team All-Ivy League and first-team All-American. [8]
She participated at the 2022 Junior and Senior World Championships, and won gold in the junior category in the team event and silver in the team event in the senior category. [5] [9]
In the 2022–23 college fencing season, as a sophomore Weintraub repeated as a first-team All-Ivy League and All-American selection, won the Ivy League title, placed second at the NCAA regional tournament, and was third in the national championship. [8]
In May 2024 she won the gold medal at the Hong Kong, China World Cup, in a 163-fencer event, defeating among others fellow American and reigning Olympic gold medalist Lee Kiefer and former two-time world champion Italian Arianna Errigo. [7] [10]
She won the USA Fencing national championship in 2023. [5] She later qualified to represent the U.S. at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, France, competing in the women's team foil event. [3] As of July 2024 she was ranked 4th among American women, and 13th in the world, in foil. [4]
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cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
Maia Weintraub | |
---|---|
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | October 24, 2002
Sport | |
Country | ![]() |
Sport | Fencing |
Weapon | Foil |
Hand | right-handed |
Current ranking | 13 ( FIE World Ranking, women's foil) |
Maia Mei Weintraub (born October 24, 2002) is an American foil fencer. She won the 2019 and 2023 USA Fencing Women's Foil National Championships, was ranked second in the world in 2021 in women's foil in the juniors, and won the 2022 NCAA national women's foil championship. She qualified to represent the U.S. at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Weintraub was born and grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [1] She is Jewish, and the daughter of Elizabeth Surin and Jason Weintraub. [2] Weintraub attended Friends Select School in Philadelphia. [3]
Weintraub fences at the Fencers Club, the Fencing Academy of Philadelphia, and Princeton University. [1] Her coaches are Simon Gershon and Mark Masters. [1]
Her first experience in fencing came at age nine, when she joined the Fencing Academy of Philadelphia at the suggestion of her uncles Adam and Joshua Weintraub, both former college fencers. [2] [4] A foil fencer, she won the foil gold medal at the Junior Olympics tournament in the 2017–18 season. [5]
Weintraub won the U.S. national foil championship in April 2019, becoming the youngest person to accomplish the feat in nine years. [6] Later that year, she placed third at the Junior World Cup, was ranked 8th in the world in foil in the cadets, and was in the top-32 at a Senior World Cup competition. [6] [7] She placed 16th at the 2020 Kazan Senior World Cup. [5] [6] [8]
She was the runner-up at the 2021 U.S. national foil championship, and finished eighth in the individual event at the 2021 Junior World Championships and second in the team event. [5] [6] [8] She traveled to Tokyo, Japan, for the 2020 Summer Olympics (held in 2021) as an alternate for the U.S. team, although she did not compete. [2]
Weintraub was ranked second in the world in the junior category, and 64th in the senior category in August 2021. [8]
She began attending Princeton University in 2021, where she is considering ecology, evolutionary biology, and molecular biology as possible majors. [8] She fenced for the Tigers; that season, as a rookie freshman she won the Ivy League title and the NCAA regional and national foil championships, and was named first-team All-Ivy League and first-team All-American. [8]
She participated at the 2022 Junior and Senior World Championships, and won gold in the junior category in the team event and silver in the team event in the senior category. [5] [9]
In the 2022–23 college fencing season, as a sophomore Weintraub repeated as a first-team All-Ivy League and All-American selection, won the Ivy League title, placed second at the NCAA regional tournament, and was third in the national championship. [8]
In May 2024 she won the gold medal at the Hong Kong, China World Cup, in a 163-fencer event, defeating among others fellow American and reigning Olympic gold medalist Lee Kiefer and former two-time world champion Italian Arianna Errigo. [7] [10]
She won the USA Fencing national championship in 2023. [5] She later qualified to represent the U.S. at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, France, competing in the women's team foil event. [3] As of July 2024 she was ranked 4th among American women, and 13th in the world, in foil. [4]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)