Tatiana Viktorovna Lysenko

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Tatiana Lysenko athletics

Tatiana Lyssenko (2011)
Lyssenko at the 2011 World Championships

Full name Tatiana Viktorovna Lysenko
nation RussiaRussia Russia
birthday October 9, 1983
place of birth Bataisk
size 186 cm
Weight 81 kg
Career
discipline Hammer throw
Best performance 78.80 nm
status blocked
Medal table
World championships 2 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
European championships 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
IAAF logo World championships
gold Daegu 2011 77.13 meters
gold Moscow 2013 78.80 meters
EAA logo European championships
gold 2006 Gothenburg 76.67 meters
last change: October 11, 2016

Tatiana Viktorovna Beloborodowa , b. Lyssenko , ( Russian Татьяна Викторовна Лысенко , English transcription Tatyana Lysenko; born October 9, 1983 in Bataisk ) is a Russian hammer thrower .

Career

At the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens , she was eliminated in qualification. The following summer she achieved her breakthrough to the top of the world. On July 15, 2005 she improved the six-year-old world record of the Romanian Mihaela Melinte by 99 centimeters to 77.06 m in Moscow . A month and a half later, she won the bronze medal at the World Championships in Helsinki . Since the original winner Olga Kusenkowa was stripped of the title because of doping, Lysenko moved up to the silver rank.

On June 24, 2006, she won the world record from Gulfija Chanafejewa in Zhukovsky with 77.41 m . Shortly after she had won the European Championships in Gothenburg with the width of 76.67 m, she improved her own world record to 77.80 m on August 15, 2006 in Tallinn . On May 26, 2007, at a national sports festival in Sochi, she increased her previous best by 81 centimeters to a width of 78.61 m. This distance, which was originally considered a world record, was canceled as part of its doping ban.

First doping case

On May 9, 2007, she was tested positive for the aromatase inhibitor 6-alpha-methyl-androstenedione during a doping control . After not opening the B sample, there was a two-year ban for doping until July 14, 2009 and the last world record was withdrawn.

Shortly after the suspension expired, she achieved a width of 76.41 m and thus qualified for the World Championships in Berlin , where she came in sixth with 72.22 m. In 2010 she won silver at the European Championships in Barcelona and won the Athletics Continental Cup in Split . At the 2011 World Athletics Championships , she won gold with 77.13 m. In 2013 she defended her title at the World Championships in Moscow with the Russian record of 78.80 m.

Renewed doping sins

In 2016 she was again banned by the IAAF for doping. According to Russian media reports, samples from the 2005 World Cup had been re-examined. There was also a follow-up examination of the samples from the 2012 Olympic Games in London, in which Lyssenko had also been doped. The Olympic victory was revoked .

Based on the McLaren Report , Lyssenko was retrospectively banned by the International Court of Justice for doping in 2019 . The suspension lasts eight years beginning July 2, 2016. In addition, all results between July 16, 2012 and July 16, 2016 were canceled.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ IAAF: Lysenko demolishes Melinte's World record with 77.06m . July 16, 2005
  2. ^ IAAF: Lysenko regains World Hammer Throw Record - 77.41m at Znamenskiy Memorial . June 24, 2006
  3. ^ IAAF: Lysenko again! - 77.80 World record in Tallinn . August 15, 2006
  4. ^ IAAF: Lysenko yet again! 78.61 World Record in the Hammer Throw . May 27, 2007
  5. Hammer thrower Lysenko dispenses with B-sample . In: Handelsblatt . August 9, 2007
  6. ^ IAAF: Doping Rule Violation . May 19, 2008
  7. ^ IAAF: Event Report - Women's Hammer Throw . September 5, 2010
  8. ^ IAAF: Women's Hammer Throw - Final - Lysenko upsets World record holder Heidler . 4th September 2011
  9. ^ IAAF: Consistency the key for Lysenko . 4th September 2011
  10. ^ IAAF: Lysenko completes impressive hat-trick of global titles . August 16, 2013
  11. Olympic hammer champion Beloborodova of Russia suspended dailymail.co.uk April 5, 2016
  12. IOC sanctions Tatyana Lysenko for failing anti-doping test at London 2012. International Olympic Committee , October 11, 2016, accessed on April 22, 2018 .
  13. Twelve Russian athletes banned for doping
  14. THE COURT OF ARBITRATION FOR SPORT (CAS) ISSUES DECISIONS IN 12 FIRST-INSTANCE DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES CONCERNING RUSSIAN TRACK AND FIELD ATHLETES