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Top Athletes

Since 1982, RATP has offered continuous support to around ten elite athletes, giving them the opportunity to pursue their sporting career whilst also entering the business world. It also helps these athletes to prepare for life after sport.

In partnership with the French Government

RATP Top Athletes programme is part of an agreement signed with the French Ministry of Health, Youth and Sport. RATP is committed to hiring athletes recommended by the Ministry, integrating them in the company, following their sporting career and guiding their transition to a new line of work.

RATP has supported this programme since the Top Athletes Agreement was first introduced in 1982. Ten athletes benefit from the programme at any one time. RATP gives priority to elite sportspeople from its own club, US Métro.

Long-term integration

Each sportsperson is assigned to an RATP department. Their working hours are adjusted to allow them to train and compete. A Human Resources team helps them choose a career and undertake the necessary training, in accordance with their profile, skills and aspirations. Former athletes are thus able to become long-term RATP staff members. RATP values the qualities that make these people top sporting performers: competitiveness, self-discipline, a cool head and an ability to share.

RATP Athletes 2011

Ulrich RobeiriSébastien HidalgoAudrey Prieto-Bokhashvili
• Épéiste / Levallois Fencing Club
• IT project manager
• Wrestling / US Métro
• Security Officer
• Wrestling / French Women’s Champion
• Security supervisor
Bruno MerleMarielle Pruvost
Gautier Simounet
• Pentathlete
• Station agent on Line 8
• Judoka
• Geotechnical research engineer
• Disabled sports guide
• Supervisor on RER Line A

 

Hidalgo audrey

Sébastien Hidalgo
Audrey Prieto-Bokhashvili

Ulrich Robeiri, world champion in team fencing: “I’ve found the right balance”

 

Portrait d'Ulrich RobeiriUlrich Robeiri, one of RATP’s top athletes, won his fifth consecutive world team title at the Grand Palais during the championships that took place in Paris in November 2010. He explains how he strikes a balance between sportsmanship and work.

 

How did you become a top athlete?

Some French fencers told me about this status. After the Beijing Games, my priority was to get an agreement. I sent my CV to RATP and was fortunate right from the start to join a highly motivating project: the creation of a database for management control. Today, I’m responsible for its maintenance.

On a daily basis, how do you organise your double life as a fencer and an RATP employee?

As an IT project manager at RATP, I work an average thirty hours per week. I practice once a day at INSEP, either in the morning before starting work at RATP, or late afternoon, after work.

How do you get along with your work colleagues?

I was very quickly accepted for what I am: a top athlete with all the constraints and particularities that come with that. My colleagues support me in my project and career, and encourage me. Some of them came to watch at the Grand Palais. I even get the feeling that they’re proud to be sharing this experience with me from day to day.

Does this job stability have an impact on your sport results?

Definitely. I was looking for a balance; I wanted to learn a profession, something for my future. I’ve found all of that.

Do you feel mentally stronger when you are competing?

I don’t know. But one thing’s for sure: going to the office day after day helps me to put any doubts and failures I might encounter in fencing into perspective. At work, I think of other things and talk about different topics. Also, being in a work environment every day helps you understand what life is like for most people, a reality that high-level sport sometimes tends to let you forget.

  • Gautier Simounet, a disabled sports athlete and Assia El Hannouni’s guide, was crowned Champion of France for the 60 m race

    Gautier Simounet, a disabled sports athlete and Assia El Hannouni’s guide, was crowned Champion of France for the 60 m race

    On the same occasion, Gautier Simounet and Assia El Hannouni also beat the French and European records in 8"20. Licensed to US Metro, Gautier joined the RATP Top Athletes Team in October 2011. He is currently working as a supervisor on the RER A line. Upcoming events include the open air French Championship on 16 June as well as the Paralympic Games in London (from 29 August to 9 September), where they will represent France in the 100 m and 200 m races.

  • Epéiste

    In January 2009, Ulrich Robeiri, Team Epée Champion at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, joined the RATP’s Top Athletes team. A member of Levallois fencing club and a graduate of the Polytech'Paris-UPMC Engineering School, Ulrich has joined the Information and Telecommunications Technology department of RATP as an IT project manager. Having won the French Championship in June 2009, Ulrich added yet another honour to his already brilliant record by finishing as runner-up in the European Championship in August 2009. This was the second individual international medal of the 26-year-old’s career, after his bronze at the Havana World Championships in 2003.

    Epéiste
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