World’s oldest ever Olympic champion, Hungary’s Ágnes Keleti hospitalised in critical condition

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Ágnes Keleti, the world’s oldest ever Olympic champion, an athlete and woman all Hungarians can be proud of, has been hospitalised with respiratory difficulties and heart failure. Nemzeti Sport, Hungary’s main sports magazine, learned additional details about her state and what exactly happened from an unnamed source close to the athlete’s family.
According to their article, Keleti’s state is critical and was hospitalised in Budapest’s Honvédkórház (Military Hospital Medical Centre) on Wednesday. Index.hu wrote that she is in a better state now, and there is hope for total recovery.
The Hungarian news outlet could speak with Rafael Bíró-Keleti, the younger son of the Hungarian Olympic champion. He said Ágnes Keleti suffered from pneumonia, and her condition worsened by Wednesday. Phlegm blocked her trachea, so even doctors gave her little chance of surviving.
Thankfully, the medical team managed to suck the phlegm. Therefore, she can breathe and could even smile again. Mr Bíró-Keleti said they were praying for her and hoped she would recover because her spirit was strong. He added that Ágnes Keleti would have her 104th birthday on 9 January, and they would like to celebrate it with the family.

Ágnes Keleti is the most successful Hungarian gymnast, a Holocaust survivor who lost her father in 1944. Only she, her sister and mother survived the death camps. After the war, she focused on gymnastics again. “Injury kept her out of the London Olympics in 1948, so she made her Olympic debut in 1952 in Helsinki at the age of 31, where she earned four medals: gold on floor, silver with the team and bronze in the team portable apparatus event and the uneven bars”, europeangymnastics.com wrote.







Rest in peace.