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Erki Nool
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Erki Nool (born 25 June 1970) is an Estonian retired decathlete and former politician.
Key Information
Life and career
[edit]Nool was born on 25 June 1970 in Võru. He grew up in an impoverished environment in the southern part of Võru. His father was a worker in a furniture factory and his mother was in charge of the finances of a school. There were six children, with Erki the third youngest. When he was 13, from the suggestion of his father he moved to a sports-focused boarding school, where he could eat a free warm meal three times a day.[1]
In those days the economy was in a poor condition. When traveling to over-seas competitions, they didn't get their own cabin in the cruise ship, but instead just slept in the hallways and then competed and trained the next day. They also didn't have indoor athletics training facilities for winter. Nool was brought to tears when he was gifted a new, pristine pair of sneakers. [1]
After Estonia became independent on 20 August 1991, Nool was vocal about his dream of competing in the Olympics as part of the Estonian team. He took part in the Barcelona 1992 Summer Olympics decathlon but he ended up having to stop and pull out.[1] Little by little he developed and by the mid-1990s he was among the top athletes in decathlon.[1] In September 1997 he founded his own sports club and in 1998–2009 he organized international decathlon competition "Reval Hotels Cup".[2]
When he won gold for decathlon at the 1998 Budapest European Championships, he became a sports hero. Two years later, when he won the gold medal for decathlon in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, he became a national hero.[1] Although Nool did not place first in any individual event, his total score was the highest. There was a dramatic moment in discus throw, but luckily the competition referee decided to over-rule a judge, who had red-flagged his last and only valid attempt due to alleged step-out. The reinstatement of his 43.66-metre third throw sparked unsuccessful counter-protests from other teams. Nool took gold ahead of the Czech Roman Šebrle and American Chris Huffins.[3][4]
He has been voted as Estonia's sexiest man and in the 2000s the most popular Estonian.[1] In 2006, Nool participated as a celebrity contestant on the first season of Tantsud tähtedega, an Estonian version of Dancing with the Stars. His professional dancing partner was Ave Vardja.[5]
In 2005–2017, Erki Nool was the Vice Chairman of the EOC Athletes Commission and 2007–2011 member of the European Athletics Development Committee. 2008–2012, he was also member of the executive committee of the Estonian Olympic Committee.[2]
On 4 March 2007, Nool was elected to the Estonian Parliament, the Riigikogu, representing the Union of Pro Patria and Res Publica.[6] He has since left politics and now focuses on his real estate business and athletics school, with 450 students.[1]
His son Robin Nool (born in 1998) competed in pole vault with a record of 5.40 m.[1][7]
Achievements
[edit]Personal bests
[edit]Information from World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.
- As of May 26, 2024
| Event | Performance | Location | Date | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decathlon | 8,815 points | Edmonton | August 7, 2001 | 8,815 points |
| 100 meters | 10.34 (+3.2 m/s) w | Haapsalu | August 16, 1997 | 1,013 points |
| Long jump | 8.22 m (26 ft 11+1⁄2 in) (+3.0 m/s) w | Tallinn | June 15, 1996 | 1,117 points |
| Shot put | 15.11 m (49 ft 6+3⁄4 in) | Sydney | September 27, 2000 | 796 points |
| High jump | 2.05 m (6 ft 8+1⁄2 in) | Lipetsk | February 9, 1991 | 850 points |
| 400 meters | 46.23 | Edmonton | August 6, 2001 | 997 points |
| 110 meters hurdles | 14.37 (-0.1 m/s) | Götzis | June 4, 2000 | 927 points |
| Discus throw | 45.28 m (148 ft 6+1⁄2 in) | Arles | June 8, 2003 | 773 points |
| Pole vault | 5.60 m (18 ft 4+1⁄4 in) | Tallinn | July 5, 1998 | 1100 points |
| Javelin throw | 71.91 m (235 ft 11 in) | New York City | July 20, 1998 | 919 points |
| 1500 meters | 4:29.48 | Sydney | September 28, 2000 | 748 points |
| Virtual Best Performance | 9,240 points | |||
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i Silvennoinen, Santtu (25 June 2020). "Kun köyhä Erki rantautui Suomeen, KGB oli kintereillä – tamperelaisen rakennusmestarin upea teko sai itkun silmään: "Virolaisia luultiin varkaiksi"". Iltalehti. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
- ^ a b "Erki Nool's sports biography". esbl.ee.
- ^ "Täna 20 aastat tagasi tuli Erki Nool Sydney olümpiavõitjaks". ERR. 28 September 2020.
- ^ "Täna 20 aastat tagasi: Erki Nool tuli Sydney olümpiavõitjaks". Eesti Kergejõustikuliit. 28 September 2020.
- ^ "Nool ja Vardja langesid tantsusaatest välja". Postimees. 20 November 2006.
- ^ "Erki Nool politician career on Riigikogu.ee". Riigikogu.
- ^ "Robin Nool". World Athletics. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
External links
[edit]- Erki Nool at World Athletics
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Erki Nool". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
Erki Nool
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Birth, Family, and Upbringing in Soviet Estonia
Erki Nool was born on 25 June 1970 in Võru, a small town in southern Estonia then incorporated into the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic as part of the Soviet Union.[2][8] He was the son of Lembit Nool (1946–2013) and an unnamed mother, growing up in an eight-member household that included his parents, four sisters, and one brother, all sharing a cramped two-room apartment typical of proletarian living standards under Soviet central planning.[8][9][10] Nool's early years in Soviet-occupied Võru were characterized by rough-and-tumble play common to children in rural Estonian towns of the era, including daily chases in tag games and impromptu fights behind the local church during school recesses.[11] He has described harboring an initial ambition to pursue boxing as a youth, reflecting a draw toward combative sports amid the physicality of his environment.[12] These formative experiences unfolded against the backdrop of Soviet Estonia's regimented society, where state-controlled education and youth organizations emphasized discipline and collective labor, though personal accounts highlight Nool's independent, resilient streak fostered by familial and communal hardships.[13]Education and Initial Athletic Training
Erki Nool received his secondary education at the Estonian Sports Gymnasium in Tallinn, a specialized institution that integrated rigorous athletic training with academic coursework to develop young athletes in various disciplines.[14] This environment laid the groundwork for his multi-event specialization, exposing him to track and field fundamentals amid the structured sports system of Soviet Estonia, where youth training emphasized technical proficiency across sprints, jumps, throws, and endurance events.[14] Following secondary school, Nool pursued higher education at Tallinn University, balancing continued athletic development with studies likely oriented toward physical education or related fields, though specific degree details remain undocumented in primary records.[14] His initial decathlon-oriented training during this period focused on building versatility and resilience, drawing from the era's emphasis on comprehensive physical conditioning to prepare competitors for international multi-event demands, prior to Estonia's independence in 1991.[15]Athletic Career
Emergence in Post-Independence Competitions (1991–1995)
Following Estonia's declaration of independence from the Soviet Union on August 20, 1991, Erki Nool transitioned to representing his nation in international athletics, marking the start of his competitive emergence on the global stage.[16] His debut for Estonia came at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, where he entered the men's decathlon but did not finish after completing the first five events.[1][3] In 1994, Nool demonstrated progressive improvement by placing fifth in the men's heptathlon at the European Indoor Championships in Paris with 5945 points.[17] Outdoors, he competed at the European Championships in Helsinki, finishing tenth in the decathlon with a score of 7953 points, which highlighted his developing versatility across the ten events despite challenges in the pole vault (5.20 m) and 1500 m (4:43.91).[18] Nool's breakthrough arrived in 1995, beginning with a victory at the prestigious Hypo-Meeting in Götzis, Austria, on May 27–28, where he scored 8575 points to edge out Eduard Hämäläinen by 156 points and establish a personal best.[19][20] Later that year, at the World Championships in Gothenburg, Sweden, on August 5–6, he secured fourth place with 8268 points, finishing behind gold medalist Dan O'Brien and confirming his status as an emerging elite decathlete amid Estonia's post-independence athletic revival.[4]Major International Breakthroughs and Olympics (1996–2004)
Erki Nool achieved his initial international breakthrough at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, finishing sixth in the decathlon with a score of 8,543 points.[21] This performance marked his entry into the global elite, surpassing his previous national-level successes.[22] The following year, at the 1997 World Championships in Athletics in Athens, Nool placed sixth again with 8,413 points, demonstrating consistency amid strong competition from athletes like Dan O'Brien and Eduard Hämäläinen.[23] Nool secured his first major international title at the 1998 European Athletics Championships in Budapest, winning gold in the decathlon.[4] This victory elevated his status in Europe and set the stage for further accomplishments. In 1999, he competed at the World Championships in Seville but finished 14th, affected by inconsistent performances across events. Undeterred, Nool peaked at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, claiming the decathlon gold medal with 8,641 points despite not leading after the first day and facing tight competition from Roman Šebrle, who scored 8,606.[24] The win, Estonia's first Olympic gold in athletics, sparked national celebration, though it drew scrutiny over a disputed javelin throw measurement where Nool's throw was deemed superior to Šebrle's by officials despite initial perceptions of a tie.[25] Post-Olympic, Nool earned silver at the 2001 World Championships in Edmonton, finishing behind Tomáš Dvořák with a personal best of 8,815 points.[2] He added another silver at the 2002 European Championships in Munich, trailing Šebrle by 94 points. At the 2003 World Championships in Paris, Nool did not finish due to injury or fatigue.[26] Closing the period, he placed eighth at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens with 8,235 points, defending his title unsuccessfully amid a field led by Šebrle.[27] These results solidified Nool's reputation as a resilient competitor in the demanding decathlon discipline.[2]Training Philosophy and Technical Strengths
Erki Nool's training philosophy centered on relentless hard work and unwavering dedication, viewing success in the demanding decathlon as a direct result of superior effort rather than innate talent alone. Influenced by British decathlete Daley Thompson, Nool adopted the principle that "the winner is the one who trained the hardest," applying this to his preparation by maintaining intense regimens even amid injuries or setbacks. He often trained without sufficient recovery periods, prompting concern from his coach Josef Schmidl, who noted Nool's insatiable drive: "Sometimes I’m afraid he wants it too much." This approach extended to treating major competitions, such as his 2004 Athens Olympic defense, as potentially his last, compelling him to deliver "a hundred percent" in every session.[15] Nool's regimen emphasized technical refinement and competitive simulation, including winter heptathlons like the 2004 Reval Hotels Cup in Tallinn where he scored 6123 points to sharpen multi-event skills. He frequently relocated to high-altitude or warm-weather sites, such as Lanzarote, Spain, for focused blocks with Schmidl and Austrian teammate Thomas Tebbich, prioritizing consistency over volume alone. Technical adjustments were integral; in October 2003, Nool overhauled his discus technique under American coach Dave Wollman to address a relative weakness, recognizing that "if you really want to get better we’ve got to change your technique." This iterative process reflected a pragmatic focus on addressing deficiencies while leveraging established proficiencies.[15] In terms of technical strengths, Nool excelled in speed-based and explosive events, particularly the sprints and long jump, which formed the foundation of his competitive edge. His personal bests included a 10.34-second 100m in Haapsalu on August 16, 1997, and a 46.23-second 400m in Edmonton on August 7, 2001, enabling strong Day 1 performances in decathlons. The long jump stood out with an 8.22m leap in Tallinn on June 15, 1996, a mark that ranked among elite levels and contributed significantly to totals like his 8815-point personal best in Edmonton. His javelin throw reached 71.91m in Uniondale on June 20, 1998, providing crucial late points in two-day formats. These capabilities, honed through drills emphasizing rhythm and power transfer, compensated for more modest outputs in pole vault (5.60m best in Tallinn, 1998) and high jump (2.05m in Lipetsk, 1991), allowing balanced scoring across the ten events.[4][2]Key Achievements and Records
Olympic and World Championship Results
Erki Nool competed in the decathlon at four consecutive Summer Olympics, representing Estonia. At the 1992 Games in Barcelona, he did not finish the competition.[3] He placed sixth at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta with a score of 8543 points.[22] Nool achieved his career highlight by winning the gold medal at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, tallying 8641 points ahead of silver medalist Roman Šebrle.[24] [2] At the 2004 Olympics in Athens, he finished eighth with 8225 points.[28] In World Championships, Nool's standout performance came at the 2001 edition in Edmonton, where he secured the silver medal with a national record score of 8815 points, finishing behind gold medalist Tomáš Dvořák.[2] [29] He did not medal in other World Championship appearances.[2]| Competition | Year | Venue | Position | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olympic Games | 1992 | Barcelona | DNF | — |
| Olympic Games | 1996 | Atlanta | 6th | 8543 |
| Olympic Games | 2000 | Sydney | 1st | 8641 |
| Olympic Games | 2004 | Athens | 8th | 8225 |
| World Championships | 2001 | Edmonton | 2nd | 8815 |
European and National Titles
Erki Nool won the gold medal in the men's decathlon at the 1998 European Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, scoring 8,667 points across the ten events.[30] This performance edged out Finland's Eduard Hämäläinen (8,587 points) and Russia's Lev Lobodin (8,571 points), marking Nool's breakthrough as a top European multi-event athlete.[30] At the 2002 European Athletics Championships in Munich, Germany, Nool secured silver in the decathlon with 8,438 points, placing second behind Czech competitor Roman Šebrle.[31] Nool also claimed gold in the men's heptathlon at the 1996 European Indoor Championships, demonstrating versatility in indoor multi-events.[32]| Year | Competition | Event | Medal | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | European Indoor Championships | Heptathlon | Gold | Not specified in sources |
| 1998 | European Championships | Decathlon | Gold | 8,667 |
| 2002 | European Championships | Decathlon | Silver | 8,438 |
Personal Bests Across Decathlon Events
Erki Nool's personal best performances in the decathlon's ten events reflect his technical proficiency, particularly in jumping and throwing disciplines, accumulated over his competitive career from the early 1990s to the mid-2000s. These marks, often set in non-decathlon-specific competitions, contributed to his overall scoring potential, with his peak total of 8815 points (national record) achieved at the 2001 World Championships in Edmonton.[2][4] The following table summarizes his verified lifetime bests in each event:| Event | Performance | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 m | 10.34 (+3.4 m/s) | 1997 | Haapsalu |
| Long jump | 8.22 (+3.0 m/s) | 1996 | Tallinn |
| Shot put | 15.11 m | 2000 | Sydney |
| High jump | 2.05 m | 1991 | Lipetsk |
| 400 m | 46.23 | 2001 | Edmonton |
| 110 m hurdles | 14.37 (-0.1 m/s) | 2000 | Götzis |
| Discus throw | 45.28 m | 2003 | Arles |
| Pole vault | 5.60 m | 1998 | Tallinn |
| Javelin throw | 71.91 m | 1998 | Uniondale |
| 1500 m | 4:29.48 | 2000 | Sydney |
Political Involvement
Entry into Estonian Politics
Erki Nool transitioned from athletics to politics after retiring from competitive decathlon, capitalizing on his status as Estonia's 2000 Olympic champion to enter public service. He joined the center-right Union of Pro Patria and Res Publica (Res Publica/Pro Patria Union), a merger of conservative and liberal parties formed in 2006, ahead of the 2007 parliamentary elections.[6][33] In the Riigikogu elections held on March 4, 2007, Nool secured a seat representing the party's list in the Harju and Rapla counties electoral district, contributing to the party's 19 seats in the 101-member parliament.[33][7] The election saw the party form a coalition government with the Reform Party and Social Democratic Party, positioning Nool within the ruling majority initially.[34] Nool's entry aligned with his prior public advocacy for sports development, as evidenced by his earlier considerations for European Parliament candidacy around 2004, though he focused domestically in 2007.[15] His athletic discipline and national hero status were cited by party leaders as assets for promoting Estonian interests in parliament.[35]Parliamentary Roles and Contributions
Erki Nool was elected to the Riigikogu, Estonia's unicameral parliament, on March 4, 2007, as a representative of the Union of Pro Patria and Res Publica (later rebranded as the Estonian Reform Party's coalition partner IRL). He served during the XI and XII convocations, focusing primarily on environmental and interparliamentary affairs.[36] Nool chaired the Environment Committee, a key parliamentary body overseeing environmental policy, legislation, and related state investments.[37] In this role, he contributed to discussions on security policy intersections with environmental issues and reported on bills such as the Spatial Information Bill during its second reading in February 2017.[38] Additionally, the Riigikogu extended his authority as a member of the Supervisory Board of the Environmental Investment Centre, enabling him to influence funding and implementation of environmental projects.[39] As a member of the Estonian Interparliamentary Union Group, Nool participated in fostering bilateral relations through parliamentary diplomacy.[40] He engaged in debates on topics including financial policy, work capacity reform, and the Cohabitation Bill, where he addressed the floor during proceedings.[41] Nool also served on select committees and contributed to the formation of investigative bodies, reflecting his involvement in legislative oversight.[42] Nool's parliamentary tenure emphasized practical contributions to environmental governance, leveraging his public profile from athletics to advocate for sustainable development initiatives, though he eventually transitioned out of active politics by the mid-2010s.[7]Post-Retirement Activities and Legacy
Involvement in Sports Development and Events
Following his retirement from competitive athletics in 2004, Nool established and led SK Elite, an Estonian athletics club founded in 1996 that operates the Erki Nool Athletics School, which currently develops approximately 400 young athletes through structured training programs aimed at talent nurturing and multi-event specialization.[43] The club's participation in international youth competitions, such as the Dynamic New Athletics (DNA) Clash of the Clubs U20 series—including the 2025 event in Leiria, Portugal—promotes competitive exposure and skill progression for emerging talents.[44] In 2011, Nool co-organized and presented at the inaugural European Decathlon Conference in Tallinn, Estonia, where he shared insights on training-competition disparities, emphasizing technique optimization in events like the long jump and detailing his own pre-competition preparation routines that yielded personal bests such as an 8.10-meter long jump and 21.03-second 200 meters in early-season testing.[45] His session highlighted empirical challenges, noting that about 70% of decathletes report dissatisfaction with long jump results in meets despite stronger training performances, advocating for abbreviated approach drills to build consistency.[45] Nool has also engaged in high-level coaching, taking on Finnish multi-event athlete Saga Vanninen as a trainee starting in 2024; under his guidance, she secured gold in the women's pentathlon at the 2025 World Indoor Championships with a championship-record performance and repeated as European U23 heptathlon champion in 2025, achieving a championship-record 6563 points.[46][47] His coaching extends Estonian expertise internationally, focusing on technical refinement across disciplines.[46] In 2016, Nool campaigned for the presidency of the Estonian Olympic Committee, underscoring his commitment to national sports governance and infrastructure development, though he did not secure the position.[6] These efforts collectively aim to sustain Estonia's decathlon tradition, building on his legacy to foster systematic athlete progression amid limited resources in a small nation.[6]Recent Recognition and Influence on Estonian Athletics
Following his retirement from competitive athletics, Erki Nool has sustained influence on Estonian athletics through coaching and organizational involvement. He operates the Erki Nool Athletics School, which hosts annual competitions fostering youth participation, including its 28th anniversary event scheduled for November 30, 2025, in Tallinn.[48] This initiative builds on his legacy as Estonia's pioneering Olympic decathlon champion, emphasizing technical development in multi-event disciplines.[4] Nool serves as a coach for Estonian talents, notably pole vaulter Inkeri Moser, whose near-medal performance at major international meets in 2025 prompted Nool to assess the nation's athletics infrastructure as "above average" compared to global peers, crediting sustained investment in facilities and talent pipelines.[49] His expertise extends internationally, as evidenced by Finnish heptathlete Saga Vanninen's gold medal in the women's pentathlon at the 2025 World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China, on March 22, underscoring Nool's ongoing contributions to combined-events training methodologies.[46] Nool's broader impact manifests in the resurgence of Estonian decathletes, with Johannes Erm securing European Championships gold in Rome on June 13, 2024, with 8764 points—explicitly framed as succeeding Nool's 1998 Budapest title and 2000 Olympic victory, which established national benchmarks for endurance and versatility in the event.[50] As a board member of the Estonian Olympic Committee elected in October 2024, Nool advocates for strategic sports development, drawing from his experience to support federations amid Estonia's small-nation challenges in producing elite performers.[51] In February 2023, he presented awards to Tallinn's top young athletes, reinforcing his role in talent recognition and motivation.[52] These efforts affirm Nool's enduring status as a foundational figure, with his 8815-point national decathlon record from 2001 still standing as of 2025, inspiring rigorous preparation amid records occasionally challenged by emerging athletes.[53]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Erki_Nool
