词条 | Kristina Gadschiew | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Kristina Gadschiew (born 3 July 1984) is a German pole vaulter who has competed at the World Championship-level. She has also reached the podium at the Summer Universiade on two occasions – 2007 and 2009. She has a personal best vault of 4.66 m indoor. Gadschiew represents the sports club LAZ Zweibrücken. BiographyBorn in Vassilyevka, Saratov Oblast, Soviet Union, she moved to Germany as a child (as the other pole vaulter Lisa Ryzih). She started competing in pole vault competitions as a teenager and was third in the German cup in athletics in 1999. She failed to build upon this early success and her athletics career stalled. A switch to train with Andrei Tivontchik gave impetus for greater performances and she re-emerged in 2005.[1] She cleared over four metres for the first time and improved her best to 4.35 m in 2006.[2] She began studying chemistry and sports at the Kaiserslautern University of Technology.[1] The 2007 Summer Universiade provided her with her first international competition and she took the silver medal with a personal best clearance of 4.40 m, finishing as runner-up by count-back behind Aleksandra Kiryashova.[3] She became the German university champion in 2008 and was fourth at the German senior championships later that year.[1] A personal best vault of 4.50 m at the 2009 German Indoor Championships in Leipzig earned her a place on the German team for the 2009 European Athletics Indoor Championships. She finished in fifth place behind her teammates, Silke Spiegelburg and Anna Battke, who both set personal bests.[4] A second-place finish at the German Outdoor Championships entitled her to her first World Championships appearance.[1] She retained her university title and recorded 4.50 m for the bronze medal at the 2009 Summer Universiade.[5] A few weeks later she made her first appearance on the major European circuit, and set a new best of 4.58 m for third at the London Grand Prix, beaten only by Yelena Isinbayeva and Anna Rogowska.[6] She scraped through the qualifiers of the 2009 World Championships, but did not perform as well in the pole vault final, taking three attempts to clear 4.40 m and finishing in tenth place.[7] She set a new indoor best of 4.60 m in February the following year and competed at the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships, reaching the final and finishing seventh overall. In late June she set an outdoor best of 4.60 m to win in Reims on the Alma Athlé Tour.[8] Personal bests
Competition record
See also
References1. ^1 2 3 Athletenportrait Kristina Gadschiew. Laz Zweibruecken. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 2. ^Biography Gadschiew Kristina. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 3. ^{{cite news |first=Javier Clavelo |last=Robinson |title=Rypakova leaps 6.85m - World University Games day 2 |url=http://www.iaaf.org/news/Kind=2/newsId=40208.html |work=IAAF.org |date=2007-08-11 |accessdate=2010-06-30 }} 4. ^Golubchikova steps out of the shadows. European Athletics. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 5. ^van Kuijen, Hans (2009-07-11). World Champion Heidler hammers 75.83m, as Games' records highlight World University Games - Day 4. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 6. ^Aviva London Grand Prix Jul 24, 2009. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 7. ^2009 World Championships Pole vault results. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-06-30. 8. ^Vazel, Pierre-Vazel (2010-07-01). 2000m Steeple World best falls again, this time to Mekhissi-Benabbad in Reims; Robles hurdles 13.09. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-07-01. External links
6 : 1984 births|Living people|People from Marksovsky District|German female pole vaulters|Universiade medalists in athletics (track and field)|Russian emigrants to Germany |
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