Alexander Shatilov was born in Tashkent, Soviet Uzbekistan, in a family of Russian-Jewish descent.[3] He began his gymnastics training in Uzbekistan at the age of 5. He immigratedtoIsrael with his family in 2002.
He is unusually tall for a gymnast, at 183 cm or 6 ft.
Shatilov represented Israel at the 2008 Summer Olympics. In the qualifying stage, he placed 8th on the floor apparatus and qualified for the final. He placed 29th overall, and just missed the cut for the all-around final. In the floor final he failed to improve his ranking and placed last of the eight finalists, which was still the best ever achievement in artistic gymnastics for an Israeli gymnast.
He won four gold medals and two silver medals at the 2009 Maccabiah Games in gymnastics.[5] He suffered a serious knee injury in the spring of 2010, and missed the European championships, but recovered in time to place fourth at the 2010 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. Shatilov was awarded the title of Athlete of the Year in Israel in 2009[6] and 2013.[7]
His achievement qualified him to compete for Israel at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Shatilov tied for 4th on floor and placed 12th overall, qualifying for the finals in both events. In the men's floor final, Shatilov scored 15.333, and tied with American Jacob Dalton, but was placed beneath him because Dalton's execution points were higher. In the end, Shatilov placed 6th out of eight athletes.[10]
In April 2013, Shatilov won a gold medal at the European Championship in Gymnastics in Moscow, Russia. He received a 15.333 score, and shared first place with British gymnast Max Whitlock. Shatilov is the first Israeli gymnast to win the European Championship.[2]
In May 2016 he won the bronze medal in the floor exercise at the European Artistic Gymnastics ChampionshipsinBern, Switzerland.[11] In June 2016 he won a gold medal in the floor final at the World Challenge Cup competition in Anadia, Portugal, with a score of 15.100 after qualifying with a 15.350.[12]
He competed for Israel at the 2016 Summer Olympics, in his third Olympic Games.[13] He did not pass the qualifying round, after scoring a 14.066 in the men's horizontal bar and a 13.5 in his floor exercise.[14]
He was chosen to represent Israel at the 2020 Summer Olympics.[16] However, with a 13.5, he did not qualify for the final of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.