Anna Anatolyevna Kondrashova

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anna Levandi figure skating
Anna Kondraschowa (2010)
Anna Kondraschowa as a trainer at the Cup of Russia 2010
Full name Anna Anatolyevna
Kondrashova
nation Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union
birthday June 30, 1965
place of birth Moscow
size 163 cm
Weight 50 kg
Career
discipline Single run
society Trud Moscow
status resigned
End of career 1988
Medal table
World Cup medals 0 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
EM medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 4 × bronze
ISU World figure skating championships
silver Ottawa 1984 Ladies
ISU European figure skating championships
bronze Budapest 1984 Ladies
bronze Copenhagen 1986 Ladies
bronze Sarajevo 1987 Ladies
bronze Prague 1988 Ladies
 

Anna Anatoljewna Kondraschowa , married. Levandi ( Russian Анна Анатольевна Кондрашова ., English transcription Anna Kondrashova * 30th June 1965 in Moscow ) is a former Russian figure skater who for the Soviet Union in the individual race started. Today she works as a trainer.

Kondrashova was the Soviet champion in figure skating for women from 1985 to 1987. From 1983 to 1988 she took part in European championships . She won her first medal there in 1984 in Budapest behind Katarina Witt and Manuela Ruben . At the European Championships in 1986 , 1987 and 1988 she won bronze again, always behind Witt and her compatriot Kira Iwanowa . From 1983 to 1987 Kondrashova took part in world championships . She won her only medal there in 1984 in Ottawa , where she was vice world champion behind Katarina Witt. Kondrashova represented the Soviet Union at two Olympic Games . In 1984 in Sarajevo she finished fifth and in 1988 in Calgary she was eighth.

Kondrashova married the Estonian Nordic combined skier Allar Levandi in 1989 . and after the end of her active figure skating career went to Estonia to work as a trainer. Among other things, she trained the multiple Estonian champion Jelena Glebova , Eva-Lotta Kiibus .

Results

Competition / year 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988
winter Olympics 5. 8th.
World championships 5. 2. 4th 7th 9.
European championships 5. 3. 5. 3. 3. 3.
Soviet championships 3. 2. 1. 1. 1.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. Riina Reinvelt: Integration, Multinational Estonia and Estonian-language press ( Memento of 10 June 2007 at the Internet Archive ) (PDF, 153 kB), page 14
  2. ^ ISU, Eva-Lotta KIIBUS, Coach: Anna Levandi