Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna Dymchenko
Lyudmila Dymchenko | |||||||||||||
Full name | Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna Dymchenko | ||||||||||||
nation | Russia | ||||||||||||
birthday | March 3, 1977 | ||||||||||||
place of birth | Moscow, Soviet Union | ||||||||||||
size | 158 cm | ||||||||||||
Weight | 43 kg | ||||||||||||
Career | |||||||||||||
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discipline | Moguls, dual moguls | ||||||||||||
society | SKA Moscow / МГФСО (MGSPhO) | ||||||||||||
status | resigned | ||||||||||||
Placements in the Freestyle Skiing World Cup | |||||||||||||
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last change: March 9, 2015 |
Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna Dymtschenko (born March 3, 1977 in Moscow , Russian Людмила Вячеславовна Дымченко ) is a former Russian freestyle skier in the discipline Dual Moguls , the parallel race on the moguls .
She was a member of the Russian national team from 1993 to 2007.
Your first trainer was Anton Alexejewitsch Gawwa.
After her World Cup debut in the 1992/93 season , she reached 23rd place at the Freestyle Skiing World Championships in 1993 in Altenmarkt-Zauchensee . Her first World Cup victory in the following World Cup season . After two second and one first place in the World Cup races of the 1994/95 season , she did not achieve another podium place for years.
At the World Championships in 1995 and 1997 , she reached the top 10. At the World Championships in 2001 at Whistler Mountain , she faced both the individual competition and the dual competition and was 19th and 17th respectively. In 2003 , she again achieved a place in the individual the ten best and narrowly missed a medal in the dual ranking. When she last participated in the World Cup in 2007 , she was only 26th in the individual and 16th in the dual competition.
In 2004 she won the Russian championship in the Dual Moguls and was runner-up in the Dual Moguls in 2001 and 2005 and in the Moguls in 2004. She took part in the Olympic Games four times. At the Olympic Winter Games in Lillehammer in 1994 and in Nagano in 1998 , she qualified for the final round and finished 12th and 15th, respectively. At the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City and 2006 in Turin , she missed the final round with placings of 23rd and 21st place .
She joined the teams of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation and the Moscow City Sports Association ( Russian Московского городского физкультурно-спортивного объединения (МГФСО) ) an. After the 2006/07 season she ended her sporting career.
For her achievements she was honored with the highest athletic award in Russia, the title of Master of Sports of Russia in the international class .
World Cup results
World Cup season | placement |
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1992/93 | 79. |
1993/94 | 29 |
1994/95 | 16. |
1995/96 | 25th |
1996/97 | 38. |
1997/98 | 51. |
1998/99 | 49. |
2000/01 | 44. |
2003/04 | 43. |
2004/05 | 39. |
2005/06 | 67. |
2006/07 | 50. |
Web links
- Lyudmila Dymtschenko in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
- Lyudmila Dymchenko in the database of the International Ski Federation (English)
- Profile of Lyudmila Dymchenko on the website «Спортивная Россия» (Sporty Russia)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Dymchenko, Lyudmila Vyacheslavovna |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Дымченко, Людмила Вячеславовна (Russian) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian freestyle skier |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 3, 1977 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Moscow , Russian SFSR , Soviet Union |