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Venus ascending

Anandhi Gopinath
Anandhi Gopinath • 7 min read
Venus ascending
SINGAPORE (Jan 28): Swiss watchmaker Richard Mille has announced an excellent start to 2019 by unveiling three new partners — Ester Ledecká, Nafi Thiam and Yuliya Levchenko, all skilled female athletes set to take the world by storm with their passion,
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SINGAPORE (Jan 28): Swiss watchmaker Richard Mille has announced an excellent start to 2019 by unveiling three new partners — Ester Ledecká, Nafi Thiam and Yuliya Levchenko, all skilled female athletes set to take the world by storm with their passion, dedication and stamina. Although not traditionally a watchmaker associated with sporting watches for women, Richard Mille’s timepiece portfolio is soon set to change with this new collaboration, which is already making waves in the sporting world.

Ester Ledecká — snowboarder and alpine skier

The 23-year-old Czech native, whom Richard Mille welcomed into the brand’s family of women sports partners last year, is the only person ever to forge an international career in both snowboarding and alpine skiing at the highest level.

Ledecká is from a family of athletes and artists: Her grandfather was a World Cup ice hockey champion and her mother was a figure skater. Her father is a renowned composer and her brother is a recognised comic-book artist, who also happened to design her racing suit.

When she was five years old, she won the first race she ever entered in the Milca Cup series and she has remained a winner since. In 2013, she was a two-time gold medallist at the World Junior Championships and won the parallel giant slalom at the 2014 World Cup, her first professional career success. She is a two-time snowboard world champion, with victories in 2015 and 2017.

Being a champion is a habit she has found hard to break, most recently winning double gold in skiing and snowboarding at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, where she surprised everyone by winning the Super-G. Even before winning her medals, Ledecká had already taken up a challenge: qualifying for the Olympics in two different sports.

With this victory, Ledecká became the first female athlete to achieve such a performance in a single winter Olympics. “From the beginning, people told me: ‘You can’t do both, you have to specialise, otherwise you’ll never reach the top level.’ Since I was 14, I have had this discussion with my coaches. I would say, ‘No, I want to practice both, and if it bothers you, I’ll find another coach because that’s how I’ll do it’.”

Ledecká is, however, living proof that having success in your genes is not enough. You need real determination, expertise, passion, genius and, above all, guts to make it work. Ledecká has already been road-testing the RM 007 Titanium and soon she will wear a prototype of the RM 67-02 Automatic Extra Flat.

Yuliya Levchenko — high jumper

A specialist in the high jump, Yuliya Levchenko has catapulted to stardom. In just four years, she has gone from clearing 1.7m to 2.01m at the latest World Championships in London, which earned her a silver medal. The youngest of Richard Mille’s partners, Levchenko will certainly find a place next to Mutaz Essa Barshim, the undisputed king of the high jump.

At just 20 years old, the lithe Slav — whose beauty is exceeded only by her performance — is already shattering expectations. Born in Kiev, Levchenko trains indefatigably to become the best.

“It has taken me seven years to reach this level, which is both a lot of time and no time at all. Everyone tells me that my progress has been extremely quick. Many female athletes take 15 years or more to clear over two metres! So far, I am quite pleased that I have managed to outdo myself at each major international event. I think I must be a born competitor. I love feeling the tension of the big competitions, overcoming my stress and pushing myself to the limit. In my experience, there is nothing better than the feeling of satisfaction after clearing a height that you have never reached before.”

The young woman attracted attention at the age of 17, with a personal record of 1.83m at the Youth Olympic Games. She would go on to win the Olympic title, besting herself yet again by clearing the bar at 1.89m. From then, her career really took off. After winning a bronze medal at the 2016 World Junior Athletics Championships, she claimed gold in the U23 European Championships, followed by two silver medals at the 2017 Diamond League and World Athletics Championships. A born competitor, who constantly strives to surpass herself, Levchenko has improved on her personal best with every event. This remarkable feat earned her the title of best female athlete 2017 in her homeland, Ukraine.

Richard Mille relishes working with such high-performance athletes. His very personal relationship with the brand’s partners, which finds form in watchmaking developments, is reinforced by a shared desire for ever greater performance. The high jump especially requires absolute precision, perfect technique and a superlative power-to-weight ratio.

“I used to think of watches mostly as fashion accessories,” confides ­Levchenko. “What I like about Richard Mille is the idea of bringing together the ‘friends of the brand’. It is like a team. Some are sportsmen and women but others are not. There are also artists and actors. I love this vision — it is almost as if I have joined a new family. Everyone knows that sport brings people together — and it seems as though Richard Mille does so too.”

With his keen eye for spotting young talent — such as Alexander Zverev, the world’s current No 3 tennis player, who was No 38 on the ATP Tour in 2016, when he joined the Richard Mille family, or racing driver Charles Leclerc, Alpine ski racer Alexis Pinturault and so many others — Mille will support the young Ukrainian athlete in her endeavours. On the field, she will leap for the gold sporting an RM 07-01 Automatic Ladies in Carbon TPT.

Nafi Thiam — heptathlete

A specialist in combined events, victorious in the 2017 World Championships and 2016 Rio Olympics, Nafi Thiam is the first woman track-and-field star to join the Richard Mille team, alongside high jumper Mutaz Essa Barshim and sprinters Yohan Blake and Wayde van Niekerk. At only 23 years old, her list of achievements makes her one of the world leaders in athletics.

European junior champion in 2013 and European indoor runner-up in 2015, the Belgian athlete won the gold medal in the heptathlon in Rio. She was voted rising star by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 2016 and female athlete of the year in 2017, alongside her Richard Mille partner, Barshim, who was the male athlete of the year. At the 2017 Hypo-meeting in Götzis, Austria, Thiam shot to third in the world all-time heptathlon list by scoring 7,013 points and won the gold medal at the World Championships in London.

But Thiam prefers to talk about her objectives for the future rather than medals won in the past. It was for this reason that she chose not to compete in last year’s World Indoor Championships but to concentrate on the European Championship in Berlin. “There won’t be an ­Indoor Championship for me ... I want to remain 100% focused on my No 1 objective, which is the European Championships! I’m training hard and my sights are set on Berlin. I prefer to concentrate on my general progression rather than medals and victories,” she said at the time.

Thiam is certain that by working continuously to improve her personal records, good results and high scores will inevitably follow. Mille was immediately drawn to the determination and capacity of this young athlete, as the heptathlon is one of the most complex disciplines in athletics and heptathletes are considered the most complete athletes.

“What enticed me to work with Thiam was her vision and her approach to performance. She has a strong analytical sense and does not rush herself,” Mille says. “I endorse the idea that it is most important to look for ways to surpass yourself in order to become the best and accept the time that this might take.”

Thiam will wear an automatic lightweight and water-resistant watch. “I am proud of my partnership with Richard Mille and to work with this extraordinary team, with whom I share the same desire to always aim higher and push to the limits,” she says. In the same way that Mille developed the RM 67-02 Automatic in Quartz TPT with Barshim and van Niekerk, the watchmaker is currently thinking about a sports watch for women.

This article appeared in Issue 866 (Jan 28) of The Edge Singapore.

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Anandhi Gopinath is an assistant editor with Options at The Edge Malaysia

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