Albert Demchenko

Albert Mikhailovich Demchenko (Russian: Альберт Михайлович Демченко; born 27 November 1971) is a Russian luger who competed from 1992 to 2014. He is currently coaching the Russian luge team.[1] His daughter Victoria Demchenko is also a luger.

Albert Demchenko
Vladimir Putin and Albert Demchenko 24 February 2014
Personal information
Native nameАльберт Михайлович Демченко
Full nameAlbert Mikhailovich Demchenko
NationalityRussian
Born (1971-11-27) 27 November 1971
Chusovoy, Perm Oblast, RSFSR, Soviet Union
Height1.98 m (6 ft 6 in)
Weight98 kg (216 lb; 15.4 st)
Sport
Country Russia
SportLuge
Event(s)Men's singles

Career

A seven-time Winter Olympian, he finally won his first medal at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin with a silver in the men's singles event. He competed in his sixth Olympics at the 2010 Winter Olympics, coming fourth.

Demchenko also won eight medals at the FIL European Luge Championships with four golds (Men's singles: 2006, 2010; Mixed team: 2012, 2014), two silvers (Men's singles: 1996, 2008), and two bronzes (Men's doubles: 1996; Mixed team: 2013).

He was overall Luge World Cup champion in men's singles in 2004–05.

In December 2017, he was one of eleven Russian athletes who were banned for life from the Olympics by the International Olympic Committee, after doping offences at the 2014 Winter Olympics.[2] In January 2018, he and Tatyana Ivanova successfully appealed against the lifetime ban as well as decision to strip his medals from Sochi Olympics at the court of arbitration for sport.[3] As a result, both his medals were reinstated.

World Cup podiums

Season Date Location Discipline Place
1997–9822 November 1997 Sigulda, LatviaSingles2nd
2002–0318 November 2002 Park City, United StatesSingles3rd
2 December 2002 Oberhof, GermanySingles1st
20 January 2003 Igls, AustriaSingles3rd
2004–058 November 2004 Altenberg, GermanySingles2nd
15 November 2004 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
6 December 2004 Calgary, CanadaSingles3rd
27 December 2004 Oberhof, GermanySingles1st
3 January 2005 Königssee, GermanySingles1st
17 January 2005 Altenberg, GermanySingles1st
2005–064 November 2005 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
19 November 2005 Cesana, ItalySingles2nd
9 December 2005 Calgary, CanadaSingles1st
16 December 2005 Lake Placid, United StatesSingles3rd
28 January 2006 Oberhof, GermanySingles3rd
2006–0718 November 2006 Cesana, ItalySingles2nd
16 December 2006 Nagano, JapanSingles2nd
6 January 2007 Königssee, GermanySingles1st
10 February 2007 Winterberg, GermanySingles3rd
10 February 2007 Winterberg, GermanyTeam Relay2nd
17 February 2007 Sigulda, LatviaSingles3rd
2007–085 January 2008 Königssee, GermanySingles1st
2 February 2008 Altenberg, GermanySingles3rd
14 February 2008 Sigulda, LatviaSingles2nd
16 February 2008 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
2008–096 December 2008 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
13 February 2009 Calgary, CanadaSingles3rd
2009–1020 November 2009 Calgary, CanadaSingles3rd
5 December 2009 Altenberg, GermanySingles3rd
12 December 2009 Lillehammer, NorwaySingles1st
2 January 2010 Königssee, GermanySingles1st
9 January 2010 Winterberg, GermanySingles2nd
2010–115 January 2011 Königssee, GermanySingles2nd
22 January 2011 Altenberg, GermanySingles3rd
22 January 2011 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay2nd
12 February 2011 Paramonovo, RussiaSingles1st
19 February 2011 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay2nd
19 February 2011 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay1st
2011–1226 November 2011 Igls, AustriaTeam Relay3rd
9 December 2011 Whistler, CanadaTeam Relay3rd
5 January 2012 Königssee, GermanyTeam Relay3rd
2012–138 December 2012 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay3rd
15 December 2012 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
15 December 2012 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay3rd
5 January 2013 Königssee, GermanySingles2nd
23 February 2013 Sochi, RussiaSingles2nd
23 February 2013 Sochi, RussiaTeam Relay2nd
2013–1418 January 2014 Altenberg, GermanySingles2nd
18 January 2014 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay1st

Season titles

  • 1 titles – (1 singles)
 Season  Discipline
2005Men's singles
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: Idea: ... binary... tree... esolang?
gollark: Do whaT?
gollark: Evidently you should write Haskell, which has good functoroids.
gollark: Yes, modern networking standards *are* fairly good.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.