Antonina Ordina

Antonina Ordina (Russian: Антонина Ордина) (born 24 January 1962 in Naryan-Mar) is a former Soviet/Swedish cross-country skier who competed at international level from 1985 to 2002. In Soviet time she trained at Dynamo in Kalinin.[1] She won three medals at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships, with a gold in the 4 × 5 km relay (1987 and bronzes in the 30 km and the 4 × 5 km relay (both 1995).

Antonina Ordina
Country Sweden
Born (1962-01-24) 24 January 1962
Naryan-Mar, Soviet Union
Ski clubSK Tegsnäspojkarna
World Cup career
Seasons19851989, 19941995, 19972001
Individual wins0
Team wins2
Indiv. podiums8
Team podiums5
Indiv. starts74
Team starts19
Overall titles0 – (10th in 1999)
Discipline titles0

Ordina's best individual finish at the Winter Olympics was seventh in the 15 km event at Lillehammer in 1994. She also has nineteen victories at various levels in various distances from 1992 to 2002.

She became a Swedish citizen in 1994.[2] She graduated from the Swedish Police Academy in 2007 and works as a police officer in Karlstad, Värmland County.[3]

Cross-country skiing results

All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).[4]

Olympic Games

 Year   Age   5 km   15 km  Pursuit   30 km  4 × 5 km 
 relay 
1994321079116
199836241919118

World Championships

  • 3 medals – (1 gold, 2 bronze)
 Year   Age   5 km  10 km  15 km  Pursuit  20 km  30 km  4 × 5 km 
 relay 
198725N/AN/A9N/AGold
19953310N/A146N/ABronzeBronze
1997357N/A218N/A189
19993713N/A97N/ADNF8

World Cup

Season standings

 Season   Age 
Overall Long Distance Middle Distance Sprint
19852313N/AN/AN/A
19862433N/AN/AN/A
19872511N/AN/AN/A
19882614N/AN/AN/A
19892722N/AN/AN/A
19943214N/AN/AN/A
19953312N/AN/AN/A
1997351634N/A17
1998361626N/A13
1999371016N/A7
20003831292343
20013985N/AN/A

Individual podiums

  • 8 podiums
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place
1 1984–85 13 December 1984 Val di Sole, Italy5 km IndividualWorld Cup2nd
2 1986–87 28 February 1987 Lahti, Finland5 km Individual FWorld Cup3rd
3 1987–88 16 December 1987 Bohinj, Yugoslavia10 km Individual FWorld Cup3rd
49 January 1988 Leningrad, Soviet Union10 km Individual CWorld Cup3rd
5 1994–95 18 March 1995 Thunder Bay, Canada30 km Individual FWorld Championships[1]3rd
6 1998–99 12 December 1998 Toblach, Italy5 km Individual FWorld Cup2nd
713 December 1998 Toblach, Italy10 km Individual CWorld Cup3rd
85 January 1999 Otepää, Estonia10 km Individual CWorld Cup2nd

Team podiums

  • 2 victories
  • 5 podiums
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place Teammates
11986–8717 February 1987 Oberstdorf, West Germany4 × 5 km Relay FWorld Championships[1]1stGavrylyuk / Lazutina / Reztsova
21 March 1987 Lahti, Finland4 × 5 km Relay C/FWorld Cup1stLazutina / Välbe / Reztsova
3 1993–94 13 March 1994 Falun, Sweden4 × 5 km Relay FWorld Cup3rdFrithioff / Östlund / Frost
4 1994–95 13 March 1994 Thunder Bay, Canada4 × 5 km Relay C/FWorld Championships[1]3rdFrithioff / Östlund / Fanqvist
516 December 2000 Sapporo, Japan4 × 5 km Relay C/FWorld Cup3rdFrithioff / Östlund / Fanqvist

Note: 1 Until the 1999 World Championships and the 1994 Olympics, World Championship and Olympic races were included in the World Cup scoring system.

gollark: <@!426660245738356738> I assume the bad constant issues are due to not writing it to a file in *binary* mode?
gollark: Just include the entire source code of potatOS (except the bits that actually run it), shove your code in the middle somewhere, minify, compile to bytecode, strip debug symbols, and obfuscate the string constants using my thingy maybe.
gollark: You could compress it, I guess. PotatOS has LZW although actually that isn't used much now.
gollark: Well, it's still more efficient to just use uncompiled code.
gollark: I guess you might save a little bit of time on parsing at best.

References

  1. Panorama of the 1986 Sports Year (in Russian). Moscow: Fizkultura i sport. 1987. p. 266.
  2. "Antonina Ordina" (in Swedish). Swedish Olympic Committee. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  3. Kingdahl, Thomas (17 February 2018). "Skidhjältens nya liv – jobbar som polis". Expressen (in Swedish). Retrieved 2 June 2019.
  4. "ORDINA Antonina". FIS-Ski. International Ski Federation. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
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