Anne-Elizabeth Stone

Anne-Elizabeth Stone
Personal information
Full name Anne-Elizabeth Leigh Stone
Born (1990-12-31) December 31, 1990
Chicago, Illinois
Weapon(s) Sabre
Hand right-handed
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight 73 kg (161 lb)
National coach(es) Ed Korfanty
Club Princeton University
FIE ranking current ranking

Anne-Elizabeth Stone, commonly known as Eliza Stone, (born December 31, 1990) is an American sabre fencer. Her results include an individual bronze medal at the 2018 World Fencing Championships and a team gold medal in the 2014 World Championships.

Career

Stone was born in 1990, the eldest of three children. She first took ballet lessons. She switched to fencing at the age of ten after her father saw a flier for a fencing club at a pizza parlor and thought it would be a good sport for his children.[1] All three ended up fencing for Princeton.

Stone joined the US national team in the 2012–13 season, during which she took the silver medal in the Pan American Championships after being defeated in the final by two-time Olympic champion Mariel Zagunis. In the 2013 World Championships at Budapest, she was stopped in the second round by Matylda Ostojska of Poland. In the team event, the United States defeated Belarus and Azerbaijan before being stopped in the semi-finals by Russia. They then topped Italy to earn the bronze medal.

The next season, Stone climbed her first World Cup podium in Dakar.[2] A second bronze followed in the Moscow Grand Prix. In the 2014 World Championships at Kazan, Stone was stopped in the third round by Poland's Aleksandra Socha. In the team event, the United States prevailed over Kazakhstan, China, then Ukraine and met France in the final. They won 45-39 to take the gold medal.[3]

At the 2018 World Fencing Championships in Wuxi, Stone finished with a bronze medal for her best individual result to date, falling in the semi-finals to eventual champion Sofia Pozdniakova.[4]

In 2013 Stone obtained a BA in political science from Princeton University.

References

  1. Philip Hersh (May 3, 2013). "Saber-rattling fits the family Stone". The Chicago Tribune.
  2. US Fencing (ed.). "Eliza Stone wins first Individual medal at Dakar senior World Cup".
  3. Philip Hersh (July 21, 2014). "Chicago fencer Stone wins world team gold". The Chicago Tribune.
  4. "Eliza Stone wins first U.S. Women's Individual Sabre World Championship Medal since 2014".
  • Profile at the US Fencing Federation
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