Jitka Harazimova

Jitka Harazimova (née Cervenkova) (May 23, 1975) is a Czech professional bodybuilder.[1]

Jitka Harazimova[1]
Bodybuilder
Personal info
NicknameThe Loose Cannon[2]
Born (1975-05-23) May 23, 1975[1]
Prague, Czech Socialist Republic, Czechoslovak Socialist Republic[1]
Height5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)[1]
WeightIn Season: 145 lb (66 kg)[3]
Professional career
Pro-debut
Best win
  • IFBB Charlotte Pro overall and heavyweight champion[4]
  • 2005[4]
PredecessorNone[4]
SuccessorNone[4]

Early life and education

Jitka Harazimova (born Cervenkova) was born 1975 in Prague, Czech Republic. In school, she played volleyball, and took gymnastics.[1]

Bodybuilding career

Amateur career

In 1993, Jitka attended her first bodybuilding competition, the Jr. Czech, which she won.[1]

Professional career

In 1997, she attended her first pro show at the 1997 Ms. International where she placed 4th. Between 1999 and 2005, she took a break from competing and had two children during that time. Prior to break from competing, she was considered a future flag bearer for women's bodybuilding and a potential Ms. Olympia. In 2005, she returned to bodybuilding and won the 2005 Charlotte Pro heavyweight class. At the 2005 Ms. Olympia, she placed 4th, the best in her performance.[4][5][6]

Competition history

  • 1993 Jr. Czech - 1st
  • 1993 Czech Nationals - 1st (MW and overall)
  • 1994 Czech Nationals - 2nd (MW)
  • 1997 IFBB Ms. International - 4th
  • 1997 IFBB Ms. Olympia - 6th
  • 1998 IFBB Ms. International - 5th
  • 1998 IFBB Ms. Olympia - 7th
  • 1999 IFBB Ms. International - 10th
  • 2005 IFBB Charlotte Pro Championships - 1st (HW and overall)
  • 2005 IFBB Ms. Olympia - 4th
  • 2006 IFBB Ms. International - 4th
  • 2006 IFBB Ms. Olympia - 10th[1][4]

Personal life

Jitka currently lives in Prague, Czech Republic. She currently owns Gym Hara where she is a personal trainer. She is the youngest of six children (three boys / three girls). She currently has four kids (two boy / two girl).[1][6][7]

gollark: It would probably have a microcontroller in it, and those typically run C.
gollark: There's probably some way to rewrite them as a bunch of equations, say, then solve those - you know the amount of X atom/ion on the left is equal to the amount on the right, and you know the amount on the left is equal to (moles of reactant A * 3 + moles of reactant B * 2) and so on.
gollark: I think what humans do is randomly guess a bit, tweak the numbers so they match better, then infer the rest when they reach something consistent.
gollark: Oh, hmm, I'm not really sure how you would do that. Did you try looking it up on the interwebs?
gollark: What specifically do you want to do?

References

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