Tatiana Ivanova

Tatiana Ivanovna Ivanova (Russian: Татьяна Ивановна Иванова; born 16 February 1991) is a Russian luger who has competed since 2000. She won the women's singles event at the FIL European Luge Championships in 2010, 2012, 2018 and 2020. Ivanova debuted in the World Cup in the 2008–09 season, finishing 17th.

Tatiana Ivanova
Ivanova in 2016
Personal information
Full nameTatiana Ivanovna Ivanova
NationalityRussian
Born (1991-02-16) 16 February 1991
Chusovoy, Russia
Height1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight65 kg (143 lb)
Sport
CountryRussia
SportLuge
Event(s)Singles

Career

She competed at her first Olympics in Vancouver, where she finished fourth. The same year Ivanova won the European Championships in Sigulda. Two years later the Russian finished second in the World Championships in Altenberg and successfully defended her title at the European Championships in Paramonovo.

At the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, originally Ivanova, together with Albert Demchenko, Alexander Denisyev, and Vladislav Antonov won the silver medal in the team relay.[1] In December 2017, she 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. Her results at the Olympics were annulled.[2]. In January 2018, she successfully appealed against the lifetime ban as well as annulment of result at the court of arbitration for sport.[3]

World Cup podiums

Season Date Location Discipline Place
2010–1116 January 2011 Oberhof, GermanyTeam Relay2nd
23 January 2011 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay2nd
20 February 2011 Sigulda, LatviaSingles2nd
20 February 2011 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay1st
2011–1227 November 2011 Innsbruck, AustriaTeam Relay3rd
10 December 2011 Whistler, CanadaSingles3rd
10 December 2011 Whistler, CanadaTeam Relay3rd
17 December 2011 Calgary, CanadaSingles3rd
6 January 2012 Königssee, GermanyTeam Relay3rd
26 February 2012 Paramonovo, RussiaSingles1st
2012–139 December 2012 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay3rd
16 December 2012 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
16 December 2012 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay3rd
24 February 2013 Sochi, RussiaTeam Relay2nd
2013–1417 November 2012 Lillehammer, NorwaySingles2nd
19 January 2013 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay1st
2014–1518 January 2015 Oberhof, GermanyTeam Relay3rd
1 February 2015 Lillehammer, NorwaySingles1st
1 February 2015 Lillehammer, NorwayTeam Relay2nd
1 March 2015 Sochi, RussiaSingles3rd
1 March 2015 Sochi, RussiaTeam Relay2nd
2015–165 December 2015 Lake Placid, United StatesTeam Relay3rd
19 December 2015 Calgary, CanadaSingles (sprint)3rd
10 January 2016 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
10 January 2016 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay3rd
7 February 2016 Sochi, RussiaSingles1st
7 February 2016 Sochi, RussiaTeam Relay1st
14 February 2016 Altenberg, GermanySingles3rd
21 February 2016 Winterberg, GermanySingles3rd
21 February 2016 Winterberg, GermanyTeam Relay2nd
2016–176 January 2017 Königssee, GermanySingles2nd
14 January 2017 Sigulda, LatviaSingles3rd
15 January 2017 Sigulda, LatviaSingles (sprint)1st
15 January 2017 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay1st
5 February 2017 Oberhof, GermanySingles3rd
5 February 2017 Oberhof, GermanyMixed Relay2nd
18 February 2017 Pyeongchang, South KoreaSingles1st
2017–1828 January 2018 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
28 January 2018 Sigulda, LatviaSingles (sprint)1st
28 January 2018 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay1st
2018–191 December 2018 Whistler, CanadaTeam Relay1st
12 January 2019 Sigulda, LatviaSingles1st
13 January 2019 Sigulda, LatviaTeam Relay2nd
2019–2023 November 2019 Innsbruck, AustriaSingles1st
13 December 2019 Whistler, CanadaSingles1st
14 December 2019 Whistler, CanadaSingles (sprint)1st
12 January 2020 Altenberg, GermanySingles2nd
12 January 2020 Altenberg, GermanyTeam Relay1st
18 January 2020 Lillehammer, NorwaySingles1st
25 January 2020 Sigulda, LatviaSingles2nd
26 January 2020 Sigulda, LatviaSingles (sprint)3rd
2 February 2020 Oberhof, GermanySingles2nd
22 February 2020 Winterberg, GermanySingles2nd
23 February 2020 Winterberg, GermanyTeam Relay1st
gollark: Bred one!
gollark: MOOOO!
gollark: `(10/62)^5` - 10 is the number of numeric digits, 62 the total number of code-able characters, and codes are 5 chars long, so the chance of getting a single digit must be multiplied by itself 5 times for an all-number.
gollark: 0.01091544768% of codes are all-number, I *think*.
gollark: I wonder why people put `DM me` in their IOU trades in <#334633989115609098>.

References

  1. "Team Relay Competition". Organizing Committee of the XXII Olympic Winter Games and XI Paralympic Winter Games of 2014 in Sochi. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  2. "Russian doping: IOC bans 11 Winter Olympic athletes". BBC Sport. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  3. "The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) delivers its decisions in the matter of 39 Russian athletes v/the IOC: 28 appeals upheld, 11 partially upheld" (PDF). Court of Arbitration for Sport. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
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