On June 9, 1973, Sovetsky Sport published a report on the recent “Druzhba” tournament — an annual competition among socialist nations that Soviet gymnastics had come to regard as its reliable proving ground. The women’s team had won comfortably. The men’s team had collapsed. And an 11-year-old Romanian gymnast named Nadia Comăneci had, in the words of the report, been the “sensation of the tournament.” The editors titled the piece with a phrase that acknowledged the moment’s gravity: “Worth Reflecting On, and Worth Worrying About.”
What follows in the article, however, is not worry. Senior coach Lidia Ivanova is measured and collegial, praising Comăneci’s “unique” talent while assuring readers that Soviet girls are more than capable of meeting the challenge. Yuri Titov, head of gymnastics at the USSR Sports Committee, is blunter: the emergence of Comăneci “causes no alarm.” The officials quoted throughout are performing composure — the studied, institutional calm of people who understand that public anxiety is its own kind of defeat. But given the article’s title, the reassurances are not quite convincing.
The headline, then, is the honest part. Three years before Montréal, before Comăneci’s perfect tens rewrote what the sport was understood to be, Soviet gymnastics had already seen enough to know that something had changed in the sport’s hierarchy. The piece translated here is an early document of that recognition — the moment when the worry began and was dressed up as confidence. (In 1975, the Soviet Union could no longer dismiss growing concerns.)








