Andrei Gennadjewitsch Dundukow

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Andrei Dundukov Nordic combination
Full name Andrei Gennadjewitsch Dundukow
Russian Андрей Геннадьевич Дундуков
nation Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union CIS
Commonwealth of Independent States 
birthday November 12, 1966
place of birth Yuzhno-SakhalinskRussian SFSRRussia Soviet Federal Socialist RepublicRussian SFSR 
size 170 cm
Weight 60 kg
Career
society CSKA Moscow
status resigned
End of career 1992
Medal table
World Cup medals 0 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
JWM medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships
bronze 1987 Oberstdorf 3 × 10 km team (NH)
silver 1989 Lahti Single (NH)
FIS Nordic Junior Ski World Championships
gold 1986 Lake Placid Single (NH)
silver 1986 Lake Placid 3 × 10 km team (NH)
Placements in the World Cup
 Debut in the World Cup February 23, 1985
 World Cup victories (individual) 1 ( details )
 Overall World Cup 8. ( 1988/89 , 1989/90 )
 Podium placements 1. 2. 3.
 singles 1 1 10
 

Andrei Gennadjewitsch Dundukow ( Russian Андрей Геннадьевич Дундуков ; born November 12, 1966 in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk ) is a former Soviet Nordic combined skier . He was active from 1985 to 1992. It started for the Soviet Union until it collapsed , then finally for the CIS .

Career

Dundukow made his international debut on February 23, 1985 as part of the Nordic Combined World Cup in Leningrad . With seventh place, he jumped straight into the top ten and won his first World Cup points.

At the Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in 1986 in Lake Placid , Dundukow won the gold medal in the individual ahead of the Austrian Günter Csar and the Choslovak František Řepka . Together with Wassili Sawin and Sergej Nikiforov , he won silver in the team competition behind the team from Norway .

At the beginning of the 1985/87 season Dundukow succeeded in Oberwiesenthal again a point success with rank 14, although this was his weakest World Cup in the sequence. At the Nordic World Ski Championships in 1987 in Oberstdorf , he ended up only on a disappointing 14th place in the individual. Only with the team did he show his qualities and together with Sergei Tscherwjakow and Allar Levandi won the bronze medal behind the teams from Germany and Norway.

In the World Cups after the World Cup, he again achieved top 10 places in Lahti, Falun and Leningrad before finishing the season with 12th place in Oslo . In the 1987/88 season he did not start at the beginning. Nevertheless, he was part of the roster for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary . There he reached rank 12 in the individual race. With the team he retired after only two starters in the jumping.

After Dundukow narrowly missed his first World Cup podium in March in Falun in fourth, he finally managed to jump on it in third in Rovaniemi . At his next World Cup in January 1989 in Schonach in the Black Forest , he was now able to climb onto the podium again as second. At the Nordic World Ski Championships in Lahti in 1989 , he surprisingly won the individual silver medal. With the team, however, in fourth place, he narrowly missed a defense of the bronze medal of the 1987 World Cup. He finally finished the season after three more top 10 results in eighth place overall.

In the 1989/90 season started Dundukow with a very good fourth place in St. Moritz . During the season, however, he did not appear in all World Cups. In his fourth season World Cup in Oslo, he achieved his first and only World Cup victory. Despite the exuberant World Cups, he again defended eighth place overall.

In the 1990/91 season and in the 1991/92 season , he only started in one World Cup. Despite a fourth place in Trondheim and seventh place in Štrbské Pleso , these two starts remained for him. The reason for this was the upheaval in the team after the collapse of the Soviet Union .

Although there were few chances for him due to the lack of World Cup starts, Dundukow belonged to the Commonwealth of Independent States at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville . In the individual as well as with the team, however, he only reached 11th place.

successes

World Cup Statistics

The table shows the placements achieved in detail.

  • 1st – 3rd place: Number of podium placements
  • Top 10: Number of places in the top ten
  • Points ranks: Number of placements within the point ranks
  • Starts: Number of races run in the respective discipline
placement Single a sprint Mass start team total
sprint Season
1st place 1 1
2nd place 1 1
3rd place 1 1
Top 10 15th 15th
Scoring 18th 18th
Starts 18th         18th
Status: end of career
a including individual races and Gundersen individual starts

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ FIS Junior World Ski Championships 1986 - Men's Gundersen K86 / 10.0 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  2. ^ FIS Junior World Ski Championships 1986 - Men's Team K86 / 3x10 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  3. World Ski Championships 1987 - Men's Gundersen K90 / 15.0 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  4. World Ski Championships 1987 - Men's Team K90 / 3x10 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  5. World Ski Championships 1989 - Men's Gundersen K90 / 15.0 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.
  6. World Ski Championships 1989 - Men's Team K90 / 3x10 km ( English ) FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved November 30, 2013.