Natallja Permjakawa

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Natalia Permiakova biathlon
Full name Наталья Львовна Пермякова
Association BelarusBelarus Belarus
birthday May 22, 1970
place of birth Apatity,  Soviet UnionSoviet Union 1955Soviet Union 
Career
society SKA Minsk
Admission to the
national team
1992
Debut in the World Cup 1992
status resigned
End of career 2000
Medal table
World Cup medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
EM medals 0 × gold 2 × silver 1 × bronze
SWM medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
IBU Biathlon world championships
silver 1993 Borowetz team
gold 1994 Canmore team
IBU European biathlon championships
bronze 1996 Ridnaun Season
silver 1998 Minsk singles
silver 1998 Minsk sprint
IBU Summer biathlon world championships
gold 1997 Krakow Season
silver 1999 Minsk Season
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 24. ( 1994/95 )
 

Natalia Permiakowa (Belarusian: Наталья Львовна Пермякова; born May 22, 1970 in Apatity ) is a former Belarusian biathlete .

Natalia Permiakowa lives in Minsk and started for SKA Minsk . After the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the founding of their own national associations in the successor states, the sports soldier Permiakowa moved up to the new Belarusian national squad in 1992. At the start of the 1992/93 season , she made her debut in the Biathlon World Cup in Pokljuka, where she immediately won points as 13th and in the following sprint as eighth for the first time among the top ten. The high point of the season was the Biathlon World Championships in 1993 in Borovets , where the Belarusian finished fifth as the starting runner with Natalja Sycheva , Natallja Ryschankowa and Svetlana Paramygina . In the sprint she was 55th, in the individual 15. In the same line-up as in the relay, she started in the team race and won the silver medal behind France. The following year she took part in the Winter Olympics and ran to ranks seven in the individual, 38 in the sprint and with Irina Kokuyeva , Ryschankawa and Paramygina sixth place in the relay race. At the Biathlon World Championships in Canmore in 1994 , where the non-Olympic team competitions were held, she won the title with Ryschankowa, Kokuyeva and Paramygina.

In the post-Olympic season, Permiakowa achieved his best result in this ranking with 24th place in the overall ranking of the World Cup. At the season highlight in Antholz , the 1995 World Championships , she was 19th in the individual and eighth of the sprint and with Natalja Baschinskaja , Lyudmila Arlouskaja and Paramygina eleventh in the relay race. At the 1996 World Cup in Ruhpolding , she was 50th of the individual, 28th of the sprint, with Ryschenkowa, Swetlana Belan and Paramygina sixth in the relay and just missed a medal with Arlouskaja, Paramygina and Ryschenkowa in fourth with the team. Shortly after the World Cup she achieved her best World Cup placement in Pokljuka behind Tetjana Wodopjanowa with second place. At the European Championships in Ridnaun in 1996 , she won the relay bronze with Ryschenkowa and Paramygina. In Osrblie , Permiakowa came 23rd in the individual race at the 1997 Biathlon World Championships , 52nd in the sprint, was eighth in the relay race with Ryschenkowa, Belan and Paramygina and tenth in the team competition with Natalia Murschtschakina , Irina Tananaiko and Belan. At the 1997 Summer Biathlon World Championships in Kraków , Permiakowa won the relay race title with Tananaiko, Natalia Moroz and Paramygina. In 1998 she started again at the Olympic Games and was used in singles, where she was 41st. The 1998 European Biathlon Championships in Minsk were more successful , where the Belarusian won the silver medal behind Nadezhda Talanova in both the individual and the sprint. The 1999 summer biathlon world championships in Minsk, Germany, brought them silver medals with Inna Scheschkil , Permijakowa and Tananaiko in the relay race. The last major event was the 2000 Biathlon World Championships in Holmenkollen in Oslo . Permiakowa was 58th in the individual and 68th in the sprint. After the season she ended her career.

Biathlon World Cup placements

The table shows all placements (depending on the year, including the Olympic Games and World Championships).

  • 1st - 3rd Place: Number of podium placements
  • Top 10: Number of placements in the top ten (including podium)
  • Points ranks: Number of placements within the point ranks (including podium and top 10)
  • Starts: Number of races run in the respective discipline
  • Relay: including mixed relays
placement singles sprint persecution Mass start Season total
1st place  
2nd place 1 1 2
3rd place  
Top 10 3 2 4th 7th 16
Scoring 13 12 4th 10 39
Starts 38 46 8th 4th 12 108
Status: end of career, data probably not complete

Web links