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Olympic shooter Nino Salukvadze is retiring after 10 Olympic Games

Georgia's Nino Salukvadze competes in the 25m pistol rapid women's qualification round at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 2, 2024, in Chateauroux, France.
Georgia's Nino Salukvadze competes in the 25m pistol rapid women's qualification round at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 2, 2024, in Chateauroux, France. Copyright Manish Swarup/Copyright 2024 The AP. All rights reserved
Copyright Manish Swarup/Copyright 2024 The AP. All rights reserved
By Euronews with AP
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At the 2024 Olympics, she became the first female athlete ever to compete at the Games 10 times.

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After being the first woman ever to compete in ten Olympic Games, Olympic athlete Nino Salukvadze says she's putting away her pistol.

The shooter from Georgia has attended every Summer Olympic games since Seoul 1988, when she competed for what was still the Soviet Union.

In that time, the 55-year-old has seen the Games become bigger, more professionalised and says the competition is tougher than ever.

Salukvadze considered retiring after her first Olympics 36 years ago, after she'd won gold and silver medals as a 19-year-old.

She nearly walked away in the 1990s, when she struggled to support her family financially in newly independent Georgia.

She announced her retirement after the Tokyo Games in 2021.

This time, though, she says she is done “for sure."

In this Monday, June 25, 2012, photo Georgian Olympic winner Nino Salukvadze shoots during her training in Tbilisi, Georgia.
In this Monday, June 25, 2012, photo Georgian Olympic winner Nino Salukvadze shoots during her training in Tbilisi, Georgia.Shakh Aivazov/AP

Coming to the Paris Olympics was about honouring her father Vakhtang, who was also her coach.

After the pandemic-delayed Olympics in Tokyo in 2021, he talked her out of retirement for one last push.

“He was my mentor not only in sports, but also in life. He was a wise man,” she told The Associated Press in the city of Chateauroux, near the Olympic shooting range, on Friday after her last competition.

“‘If you quit sports, you can’t come back. Just try,'” she recalls her father saying.

"It was the only favour he asked me for his whole life. I thought he perhaps wouldn’t be able to ask again. I gathered all my strength, for his sake.”

Salukvadze's father died earlier this year at the age of 93, but lived to see his daughter qualify for a Paris Olympic spot for Georgia.

Nino Salukvadze, of Georgia, competes in the women's 10-meter air pistol at the Asaka Shooting Range in the 2020 Summer Olympics, July 25, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.
Nino Salukvadze, of Georgia, competes in the women's 10-meter air pistol at the Asaka Shooting Range in the 2020 Summer Olympics, July 25, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.Alex Brandon/Copyright 2021 The AP. All rights reserved

From her 10 Olympics, Salukvadze has three medals: one gold, one silver and one bronze.

At the 2024 Olympics, she placed 38th in the 10-meter air pistol event and 40th in the 25-meter pistol, meaning she didn't reach a televised final.

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Salukvadze's last Olympic medal — and her first for an independent Georgia — was in Beijing in 2008.

At the time, Georgia was at war with neighbouring Russia.

Salukvadze won bronze and embraced Russian silver medalist Natalia Paderina on the podium in what was widely seen as a gesture for peace.

Salukvadze may not be totally done with the Olympics yet. She's a coach at her own shooting club back home in Georgia, and is a vice-president of the national Olympic committee.

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