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Yémi Apithy

Yémi Apithy
Yemi Apithy 2015 WCh SMS-IN t165037.jpg
Personal information
Country represented Benin
Born (1989-04-05) April 5, 1989 (age 28)
Dijon, France
Weapon(s) sabre
Hand right-handed
Height 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 96 kg (212 lb; 15.1 st)
Club ASPTT Dijon
Head coach(es) Jean-Pierre Harbelot
FIE Ranking current ranking

Yémi Geoffrey Apithy (born 5 April 1989) is a French-Beninese sabre fencer representing Benin in international competitions, silver medalist at the 2014 and 2015 African Championships. He bore the flag for Benin at the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Apithy holds a dual French-Beninese citizenship: his father is from Benin, whilst his mother is French. He took up fencing as a child, following the path of his elder brother Boladé, who would become world silver medalist in sabre. He also practiced rugby union before his father made him choose between the two sports.

Both brothers trained at fencing club ASPTT Dijon. Yémi earned a bronze medal in the U13 national championships, then became national champion in the cadet (U17) category. He joined the junior national team for the 2007 Junior European Championships in Prague, where France ranked 4 in the team event. However, he was not chosen for the senior team and gave up competition to focus on his podiatry studies in Belgium. He reconsidered his decision after talking to the president of the freshly created Beninese Fencing Federation.

In the 2010–2011 season he won the team event at the French national championships together with his brother and Nicolas Rousset. That same year, he became the first fencer from Benin to take part in the World Fencing Championships. He qualified to the final table of 64, but was eliminated by future Olympic champion Áron Szilágyi. The next season, he failed to qualify to the 2012 Summer Olympics after he was defeated by Mamadou Keita in the semifinals of the Casablanca pre-olympic tournament.

In the 2013-14 season he won a silver medal at the 2014 African Fencing Championships after losing in the final to Egypt's Ziad Elsissy. The same scenario played out in 2014, when he was eliminated in the final by another Egyptian, Mohamed Amer. At the 2015 World Fencing Championships he reached again the last 64, before losing to Iran's Mojtaba Abedini.


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