Vladimir Anatolyevich Evtyukov

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Vladimir Yevtyukov biathlon
Full name Vladimir Anatolyevich Evtyukov
Association RussiaRussia Russia
birthday 1983
place of birth Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union
Career
status resigned
Medal table
BWM medals 0 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
BEM medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
BJM medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
Archery biathlon world championshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2005 Forni Avoltri Season
silver 2007 Moscow persecution
bronze 2007 Moscow Mass start
Archery biathlon world championshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
silver 2008 Moscow sprint
bronze 2008 Moscow Mass start
Archery biathlon JWMTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2004 Pokljuka Season
bronze 2004 Pokljuka Mass start
World Cup balance
last change: end of career

Wladimir Anatoljewitsch Evtjukow ( Russian Владимир Анатольевич Евтюков , * 1983) is a Russian archery biathlete .

Vladimir Evtjukov won the junior races of the World Archery Championships 2004 in Pokljuka with the Russian relay. In the mass start race he won the bronze medal, in sprint and pursuit he narrowly missed further medals as fourth place. In the men's archery biathlon world championships in 2005 , he was first used at an international championship and was world champion in the last relay competition held alongside Pavel Borodin , Igor Samoilow and Maxim Menshikov . Two years later he won the chase behind in MoscowHiroyuki Urano the silver medal, in the mass start race bronze behind Konstantin Pogorelow and Vid Vončina . Another year later, Yevtyukov was again successful at the last international championships held in the sport, the 2008 European Archery Championships in Khimki , winning the bronze medal in the mass start race behind Kirill Malzew and Pavel Borodin, and silver in the sprint behind Andrei Mikhailov . In the pursuit he missed another medal in fourth and just under eleven seconds behind third Borodin. Together with Malzew, he was named the best archer of the championships with only 25% missed targets.

Web links

supporting documents

  1. Official result lists ( Memento from August 12, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 464 kB)