The Women's
Sabre event was being contested for the first time at the
2004 Summer Olympics. Zagunis did not directly qualify to fence in the tournament. However,
Nigeria decided not to send their qualifying fencer to the tournament, and as the next highest seeded fencer in the world, Zagunis was selected to represent the
United States at the 2004 Summer Olympics. She received one of eight byes offered in the first round, entering the tournament in the
Round of 16, where she defeated
Japanese fencer
Madoka Hisagae, 15–13. In the quarterfinals, she defeated
Elena Jemayeva of
Azerbaijan, 15–11. In the semifinals, Zagunis clinched at least a silver medal by defeating
Romania's
Cătălina Gheorghițoaia, 15–10. Zagunis faced
Chinese fencer
Xue Tan in the finals, defeating her 15–9 and becoming the first American to win an Olympic fencing gold medal in 100 years. Previously the only American Olympic fencing gold medalist was
Albertson Van Zo Post. In the
1904 Summer Olympics he had been the gold medalist in the individual
singlestick event and in the team foil event, where he had joined two
Cuban fencers to make up a combined Cuba/U.S. team. Because fellow American
Sada Jacobson had become the first U.S. woman to be ranked #1 in the world in women's sabre (in 2003), she was considered a favorite. Zagunis' win as the underdog surprised the elite in the fencing world. (Jacobson earned the bronze medal at the 2004 Olympics.) ==2008 Beijing Olympics==