Leonid Yakovlevich Arkayev (born June 3, 1940, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) is a Russian gymnastics coach whose athletes dominated the sport. From 1980 to 2004 his Olympic teams won more than 80 medals, including 37 gold.
Arkayev was the youngest of three children; his father died in 1943 while serving in World War II. In 1954, helped by the sister of Olympic champion Yekaterina Kalinchuk, Arkayev was admitted to the gymnastics section of the Stroyitel (“builder”) sport society. He was named master of sport of the U.S.S.R. in 1958 and from 1959 to 1969 was a member of the national team. Interested in training, he became a coach for the Soviet team following its disastrous showing at the 1972 world championships in Ljubljana, Yugos. (now in Slovenia). Arkayev, who eventually became the head coach, restructured the country’s gymnastic program, using Japan, then the world leader in the sport, as a model. In particular, he stressed continuity in training, allowing a gymnast’s original coach to remain involved in the athlete’s development after his or her selection to the national team. In 1975 the country’s elite gymnasts began training at the Krugloye Ozero Sport Base, practicing two to three times a day, six days a week.
Though Arkayev never competed on the Olympic level, it was there that his athletes shone, not only dominating the sport but also providing historic performances. At the 1980 Games in Moscow, which were boycotted by the U.S. and Japan, among others, Aleksandr Dityatin became both the first athlete to win eight medals in a single Olympics and the first male gymnast to receive a perfect score of 10. Moreover, the Soviet team captured a total of nine gold medals. After boycotting the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, the Soviets competed in the 1988 Seoul Games, winning 19 medals, 11 of which were gold. Following the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Unified Team was formed, consisting of the Commonwealth of Independent States and Georgia. At the 1992 Games in Barcelona, Vitaly Sherbo won six gold medals in the most successful gymnastics performance in Olympic history. In addition, the women won the team competition, their third successive victory in the event. At the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Arkayev led the Russian men to yet another team gold. Moreover, Russia’s strong gymnastic performance—eight medals, including the women’s team silver—came amid the departure of former stars who had gone on to compete for their respective homelands in the wake of the Soviet Union breakup.
At the 2000 Games in Sydney, the Russian team won 15 medals, 5 of which were gold. However, after a poor showing at the 2004 Olympics in Athens—Russian men failed to medal, and the women won only 3 medals—Arkayev was forced out as head of the Russian team. He cowrote Gymnastics: How to Create Champions (2004).