2010 European Athletics Championships – Women's marathon

Doping

Živilė Balčiūnaitė of Lithuania originally won the marathon and was awarded the gold medal, but was disqualified for doping after she tested positive for testosterone.[1][2] Nailiya Yulamanova of Russia originally came second, and was set to be upgraded to gold winner after Živilė Balčiūnaitė was disqualified. However, in July 2012, Yulamanova was also disqualified for doping, as her results from 20 August 2009 onwards were annulled due to abnormalities in her biological passport profile.[3]

Anna Incerti (gold), Tetyana Filonyuk (silver) and Isabellah Andersson (bronze) received the medals by mail.

Medalists

Gold Anna Incerti
Italy (ITA)[4]
Silver Tetyana Filonyuk
Ukraine (UKR)
Bronze Isabellah Andersson
Sweden (SWE)

Records

Standing records prior to the 2010 European Athletics Championships
World record  Paula Radcliffe (GBR) 2:15:25 London, United Kingdom 13 April 2003
European record  Paula Radcliffe (GBR) 2:15:25 London, United Kingdom 13 April 2003
Championship record  Maria Guida (ITA) 2:26:05 Munich, Germany 10 August 2002
World Leading  Liliya Shobukhova (RUS) 2:22:00 London, United Kingdom 25 April 2010
European Leading  Liliya Shobukhova (RUS) 2:22:00 London, United Kingdom 25 April 2010

Schedule

Date Time Round
31 July 201010:05Final

Results

RankAthleteNationalityTimeNotes
DQŽivilė Balčiūnaitė Lithuania (LTU)2:31:14 Doping
DQNailya Yulamanova Russia (RUS)2:32:15 Doping
Anna Incerti Italy (ITA)2:32:48
Tetyana Filonyuk Ukraine (UKR)2:33:57
Isabellah Andersson Sweden (SWE)2:34:43
4Olivera Jevtić Serbia (SRB)2:34:56
5Alessandra Aguilar Spain (ESP)2:35:04
6Marisa Barros Portugal (POR)2:35:43
DQIrina Timofeyeva Russia (RUS)2:35:53 Doping
7Rosaria Console Italy (ITA)2:36:20
8Silviya Skvortsova Russia (RUS)2:36:31
9Lidia Simon Romania (ROM)2:36:52
10Deborah Toniolo Italy (ITA)2:37:10
11Michelle Ross-Cope Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:38:45
12Rasa Drazdauskaitė Lithuania (LTU)2:38:55
13Susan Partridge Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:39:07
14Beatriz Ros Spain (ESP)2:40:10
15Ana Dias Portugal (POR)2:41:02
16Kirsten Melkevik Otterbu Norway (NOR)2:42:24
17Holly Rush Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:42:44
18Helen Decker Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:43:00
19Svitlana Stanko-Klymenko Ukraine (UKR)2:43:35
20Anna von Schenck Sweden (SWE)2:43:36
21Rebecca Robinson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:44:06
22Jo WIlkinson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)2:44:11
23Kjersti Karoline Danielsen Norway (NOR)2:45:00
24Maja Neuenschwander Switzerland (SUI)2:45:17
25Yevgeniya Danilova Russia (RUS)2:46:21
26Margarita Plaksina Russia (RUS)2:47:26
27Christina Bus Holth Norway (NOR)2:48:15
28Olena Biloshchuk Ukraine (UKR)2:51:21
29Gezashign Safarova Azerbaijan (AZE)2:51:59
30Lena Gavelin Sweden (SWE)2:53:13
31Remalda Kergytė Lithuania (LTU)2:55:12
32Daneja Grandovec Slovenia (SLO)3:07:51
33Vira Ovcharuk Ukraine (UKR)3:09:27
Sladjana Perunović Montenegro (MNE)DNF
Tatyana Pushkareva Russia (RUS)DNF
Patricia Morceli Switzerland (SUI)DNF
Mónica Rosa Portugal (POR)DNF
Daniela Cârlan Romania (ROM)DNF
Fernanda Ribeiro Portugal (POR)DNF
Karolina Jarzyńska Poland (POL)DNF
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gollark: Yes. The situation now is that browsers will happily send requests from one origin to another, but only if it's a GET or POST request, not allow custom headers with it, and, critically, do bizarre insane stuff to avoid letting code see the *response*.
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gollark: API coherency: drop stuff like XMLHttpRequest which is obsoleted by cleaner things like `fetch`, actually have a module system and don't just randomly scatter objects and functions in the global scope, don't have a weird mix of callbacks, events and promises everywhere.
gollark: Alternatively, cross-origin stuff is allowed but runs with separate cookies, caches, etc. to first-party requests, and comes with a "requested from this origin" header.

See also

References

  1. European marathon champion Balciunaite given doping ban, bbc.com, 5 April 2011
  2. Associated Press: Zivile Balciunaite loses appeal, espn.com, 4 February 2012
  3. London 2012 Olympics: Russian athletics trio banned for doping offences. Daily Telegraph (3 July 2012). Retrieved on 17 July 2014
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