Tazzjana Schyntar

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tazzjana Schyntar biathlon
Association BelarusBelarus Belarus
birthday 17th May 1983
place of birth Nawahradak,  Soviet UnionSoviet UnionSoviet Union 
Career
job PE teacher
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup 2004
Debut in the World Cup 2005
status active
Medal table
SWM medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
JEM medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
JSWM medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
IBU Summer biathlon world championships
bronze 2006 Ufa Mixed relay
IBU Biathlon Junior European Championships
bronze 2002 Kontiolahti Season
silver 2003 Forni Avoltri Season
IBU Junior Summer Biathlon World Championships
gold 2004 Osrblie sprint
gold 2004 Osrblie persecution
gold 2004 Osrblie Mass start
World Cup balance
last change: January 2, 2012

Tazzjana Schyntar ( Belarusian Таццяна Шынтар , English transcription Tatsiana Shyntar ; born May 17, 1983 in Nawahradak ) is a Belarusian biathlete .

Tazzjana Schyntar is a sports teacher. She lives and trains in her native city of Nawahradak. There she starts for the army sports club CSKA and is looked after by the coaches Kunkevich and Sokolovsky. The Belarusian ran her first international championship at the Biathlon Junior World Championships in 2002 in Ridanna , where she was 40th in the individual, 23rd in the sprint, 24th in the pursuit and fifth in the relay. Shortly thereafter, she also took part in the junior races of the European Biathlon Championships in 2002 in Kontiolahti and was 17th in the individual, 25th in the sprint and 26th in the pursuit. In the relay race she won the bronze medal with Lyudmila Ananka and Lyudmila Kalintschyk behind the representations from Germany and Russia. In 2003 Schyntar started again at the Junior World Championships in Kościelisko and the junior races of the European Championships in Forni Avoltri . In Poland she reached the rank 12 in singles, 36 in the sprint, 26 in the pursuit and five with the season, in Italy it was the 17th of the sprints, Tenth pursuit and missed the fourth place of the function SINGLE only one rank against Delphine Peretto a Medal. Later in the year, Schyntar also took part in the junior races of the 2003 Summer Biathlon World Championships in Forni Avoltri and was 23rd in the sprint, 13th in the pursuit, 17th in the mass start and fifth in the Belarusian relay. In 2004 she also took part in all three competitions. At the Junior World Championships in Haute-Maurienne she again reached the result regions as in her first participations and was 31st in the individual, 19th in the sprint, 25th in the pursuit and tenth in the relay. At the European Championships in Minsk , she placed eighth in the individual and again missed a medal in fourth place with the relay. The last championship among juniors was the 2004 Summer Biathlon World Championships in Osrblie . Schyntar was used in the sprint, pursuit and mass start and won all three titles.

In 2004 Schyntar started in a relay race for the first time in the women's European biathlon cup and finished fifth. From the 2004/05 season she started regularly in the World Cup and the later IBU Cup . In Garmisch-Partenkirchen , she was tenth of an individual in her first season for the first time in the top ten. In 2006 she achieved third place in the relay race in Ridanna with Kalintschyk, Sikunkowa and Ananka. The first international championship for women was the 2005 European Biathlon Championships in Novosibirsk , where Schyntar was 18th in the individual, 22nd in the sprint race and sixth in relay with Volha Lukashevich , Ksenija Sikunkowa and Lyudmila Kalintschyk. Shortly before , she competed in her only race in the Biathlon World Cup in an individual in Antholz and reached 62nd place. Schyntar celebrated her greatest success at the 2006 Summer Biathlon World Championships in Ufa , where she won the bronze medal in the cross-country relay race with Natallja Sakalowa , Aljaksandr Uszinau and Wital Perzau . She finished ninth in the cross-country and roller-ski sprints and tenth in the roller-ski pursuit race.

Web links