Mariya_Lasitskene

Mariya Lasitskene

Mariya Lasitskene

Russian high jumper


Mariya Aleksandrovna Lasitskene (Russian: Мария Александровна Ласицкене, pronounced [mɐˈrʲijə ləsʲɪtsˈkʲenɨ]; née Kuchina; born 14 January 1993) is a Russian athlete who specialises in the high jump. She is the 2020 Olympic champion and three-time world champion (2015, 2017 and 2019). With her victory in Tokyo, Lasitskene became the fourth female high jumper in history (after Stefka Kostadinova, Heike Henkel & Anna Chicherova) to win gold at both the Olympic Games and the World Championships.

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Career

Lasitskene won her first international medal at the 2009 World Youth Championships in Athletics, where she cleared a personal best of 1.85 m to take the silver medal behind Italian Alessia Trost.[3] She was also the silver medallist at the 2009 European Youth Olympic Festival and 2009 Gymnasiade.[4][5]

In the inaugural 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, Lasitskene won a gold medal in the girls' high jump with a clearance of 1.89 m, ahead of Alessia Trost.[6]

She started her 2011 season with a major scalp in the form of Yelena Slesarenko, who she defeated with an indoor best jump of 1.90 m.[7] A greater effort soon followed on the Moravia High Jump Tour meet in Třinec, as she cleared 1.97 m to claim the world junior indoor best which Desislava Aleksandrova had held since 1994.[8]

Lasitskene has also won an ex-aequo gold medal at the 2014 World Indoor Championships and a silver at the 2014 European Championships. At the 2015 European Indoor Championships she won gold as she did later at the 2015 World Championships with a personal best of 2.01 m.

Following her world championships win, she was considered a favorite to win the Olympic title at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. However, she was barred from competing when the CAS upheld their decision to ban the Russian Track and Field Federation from the Games for systematic doping.[9][10] At a domestic competition she jumped a height of 2.00 m—a height that would have easily won gold in Rio. In April 2017, her application to compete as a neutral athlete until Russia is reinstated was accepted; this allows Lasitskene to resume competition despite the Federation's ban. Her first competition back was the third Diamond League in the series at Eugene. She won the women's high jump with a personal best and world leading height of 2.03 m.

She improved to 2.04 m on 11 June 2017 in Hengelo. On 6 July 2017, she set a new personal best at the Diamond League in Lausanne with a height of 2.06 m, a Diamond League record. She followed up her strong performances in the Diamond League competitions by defending her world title later in London on 12 August 2017 with a height of 2.03 m.

Lasitskene wrote on Instagram regarding Russia's ban from international athletics that she was "totally not surprised about this outcome" and planned to compete under a neutral flag. "The only thing that confuses us is that the athletes are alone in their struggle, and the leaders of our sport all this time have been protecting us only in words," Lasitskene said. She denies the existence of state-sponsored doping in Russia, but puts the blame on the Russian officials for "insufficiently defending the Russian athletes against the West."[11]

International competitions

Personal bests

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Winning streak (45)

From 1 July 2016 to 30 June 2018 Lasitskene won 45 competitions in a row. On 13 July 2018, her streak was broken in Rabat, one of the IAAF Diamond League meetings, where she placed third.[12]

  1. V All-Russian Summer Universiade – Smolensk, Russia (1.90 m)
  2. Russian Cup – Zhukovsky, Russia (2.00 m)
  3. Stars of 2016 – Moscow, Russia (1.88 m)
  4. Y. Lukashevich and V. Seredkin Memorial – Chelyabinsk, Russia (1.94 m, indoors)
  5. N. G. Ozolin and V. M. Dyachkov Memorial – Moscow, Russia (2.00 m, indoors)
  6. Governor Cup – Volgograd, Russia (1.95 m, indoors)
  7. Russian Winter Meeting – Moscow, Russia (1.91 m, indoors)
  8. Merited Master of the USSR V. I. Alekseev Memorial – Saint Petersburg, Russia (1.96 m, indoors)
  9. 2017 Russian Indoor Athletics Championships – Moscow, Russia (2.03 m, indoors)
  10. Prefontaine ClassicEugene, USA (2.03 m)
  11. 12th Opole Festival of Jumpers – Opole, Poland (2.00 m)
  12. Golden Gala Pietro MenneaRome, Italy (2.00)
  13. FBK Games – Hengelo, Netherlands (2.04 m)
  14. Paavo Nurmi Games – Turku, Finland (1.95 m)
  15. V. M. Evstratov Memorial – Zhukovsky, Russia (1.97 m)
  16. Bauhaus-GalanStockholm, Sweden (2.00 m)
  17. Moscow Oblast Championships – Zhukovsky, Russia (2.00 m)
  18. Brothers Znamensky Memorial – Zhukovsky, Russia (1.95 m)
  19. AthletissimaLausanne, Switzerland (2.06 m)
  20. Anniversary GamesLondon, Great Britain (2.00 m)
  21. Russian Cup – Yerino, Russia (2.01 m)
  22. Atletica Mondiale – Padova, Italy (2.00 m)
  23. Herculis – Monaco (2.05 m)
  24. 2017 Russian Athletics Championships – Zhukovsky, Russia (1.96 m)
  25. 2017 World Athletics Championships – London, Great Britain (2.03 m)
  26. Kamila Skolimowska Memorial – Warsaw, Poland (1.95 m)
  27. Memorial Van DammeBrussels, Belgium (2.02 m)
  28. Christmas Starts – Minsk, Belarus (2.00 m, indoors)
  29. Y. Lukashevich and V. Seredkin Memorial – Chelyabinsk, Russia (1.95 m, indoors)
  30. N. G. Ozolin and V. M. Dyachkov Memorial – Moscow, Russia (2.01 m, indoors)
  31. Battle of the Sexes – Moscow, Russia (1.99 m, indoors)
  32. Stalingrad Cup – Volgograd, Russia (2.04 m, indoors)
  33. Banskobystricka latka – Banska Bystrica, Slovakia (2.02 m, indoors)
  34. Madrid Indoor – Madrid, Spain (2.00 m, indoors)
  35. 2018 Russian Indoor Athletics Championships – Moscow, Russia (1.88 m, indoors)
  36. Copernicus Cup – Torun, Poland (2.00 m, indoors)
  37. Muller Indoor Grand Prix Glasgow – Glasgow, Scotland (1.95 m, indoors)
  38. 2018 World Indoor Athletics ChampionshipsBirmingham, Great Britain (2.01 m, indoors)
  39. Shanghai Golden Grand Prix – Shanghai, China (1.97 m)
  40. Golden Gala Pietro MenneaRome, Italy (2.02 m)
  41. FBK Games – Hengelo, Netherlands (2.03 m)
  42. Bauhaus-GalanStockholm, Sweden (2.00 m)
  43. Opole Festival of Jumpers – Opole, Poland (1.94 m)
  44. V. M. Evstratov Memorial – Zhukovsky, Russia (2.01 m)
  45. Meeting de ParisParis, France (2.04 m)

Personal life

Lasitskene was awarded the rank of senior lieutenant of the Russian Armed Forces after winning the 2017 IAAF World Championships.[13]

Mariya married Russian sports journalist and Eurosport commentator of Lithuanian descent Vladas "Tashev" Lasitskas on 17 March 2017.[14] She then took her husband's family name.

See also


References

  1. "Mariya KUCHINA". european-athletics.org. European Athletics Association. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  2. "KUCHINA Maria". universiade2013.sportresult.com. Kazan2013.ru. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  3. European Youth Olympic Festival 2009 Archived 31 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine. WJAH. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  4. Qatar Embraces Gold in Doha 2009 Gymnasiade Archived 14 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Qatar Athletic Association (10 December 2009). Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  5. "2010 Summer Youth Olympics – Girls high jump results (final)" (PDF). Atos Origin. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 December 2010. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
  6. Nickolai Dolgopolov and Rostislav Orlov (23 January 2011). Kuchina foils Slesarenko’s comeback in Volgograd. IAAF. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  7. Juck Alfons & Ramsak, Bob (27 January 2011). Kuchina clears 1.97 m World junior best in Trinec. IAAF. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  8. Khurshudyan, Isabelle. "Russia calls Olympics ban 'anti-Russia hysteria' and politically motivated". Washington Post. Archived from the original on 9 December 2019. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  9. Statistics Archived 10 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine, 30 June 2018
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