Yana Nekrasova

Yana Anatolyevna Nekrasova (Russian: Я́на Анато́льевна Некра́сова; born February 10, 1976, in Leningrad, USSR) is a Russian curler[1], a 2010 World mixed doubles champion, a 2003 Winter Universiade champion and a four-time Russian women's champion (1996, 1997, 1998, 2000)[2].

Yana Nekrasova
 
Born (1976-02-10) February 10, 1976
Leningrad, USSR
Team
Curling clubCSKA, Saint Petersburg
Career
Member Association Russia
World Championship
appearances
4 (2001, 2002, 2003, 2005)
World Mixed Doubles Championship
appearances
2 (2010, 2013)
European Championship
appearances
8 (1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)
Olympic
appearances
2 (2002, 2006)
Other appearancesEuropean Mixed Championship: 2 (2008, 2009),
Winter Universiade: 1 (2003)

She played at the 2002 Winter Olympics, where the Russian team finished in tenth place, and at the 2006 Winter Olympics, where the Russian team finished in fifth place.

Teams

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternate
Coach
Events
1996–97Tatiana SmirnovaIrina KolesnikovaYana NekrasovaMarina TcherepanovaECC 1996 (13th)
1998–99Tatiana SmirnovaIrina KolesnikovaYana NekrasovaMarina TcherepanovaECC 1998 (11th)
1999–00Olga Jarkova
(4th)
Nina Golovtchenko
(skip)
Yana NekrasovaIrina KolesnikovaTatiana Smirnova
Olga Andrianova
ECC 1999 (8th)
2000–01Olga Jarkova
(4th)
Nina Golovtchenko
(skip)
Anastassia SkoultanNkeiruka EzekhYana Nekrasova
Olga Andrianova
ECC 2000 (7th)
2000–01Nina GolovtchenkoOlga JarkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaAnastassia Skoultan
Olga Andrianova
WCC 2001 (9th)
2001–02Olga JarkovaYana NekrasovaNkeiruka EzekhAngela TuvaevaOlga AndrianovaECC 2001 (7th)
2001–02Olga JarkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaAnastassia SkoultanAngela Tuvaeva
Olga Andrianova
WOG 2002 (10th)
WCC 2002 (7th)
2002–03Olga JarkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaAnastassia SkoultanLudmila Privivkova
(ECC, WCC)
Anna Rubtsova (WUG)
Olga Andrianova
ECC 2002 (4th)
WUG 2003
WCC 2003 (6th)
2003–04Olga JarkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaLudmila PrivivkovaAngela Tuvaeva
Olga Andrianova
ECC 2003 (8th)
2004–05Olga JarkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaEkaterina GalkinaLudmila Privivkova
Olga Andrianova
ECC 2004 (4th)
2004–05Ludmila PrivivkovaNkeiruka EzekhYana NekrasovaEkaterina GalkinaOlga Jarkova
Olga Andrianova
WCC 2005 (5th)
2005–06Ludmila PrivivkovaNkeiruka EzekhOlga JarkovaEkaterina GalkinaYana Nekrasova
Olga Andrianova,
Yory Andrianov
WOG 2006 (5th)
2018–19Sophia OrazalinaYana NekrasovaIrina BelyayevaMariia ArkhipovaMarina MaleevaRWCC 2019 (10th)
Mixed curling
2008–09Alexander KirikovYana NekrasovaPetr DronGalina ArsenkinaVictor Kornev,
Anna Sidorova
EMxCC 2008 (4th)
2009–10Yana NekrasovaRoman KutuzovDaria KozlovaAlexander KozyrevVictor Kornev,
Alexandra Saitova
EMxCC 2009 (6th)
Mixed doubles curling
2009–10Petr DronYana NekrasovaIrina KolesnikovaWMDCC 2010
2011–12Alexey KamnevYana NekrasovaRMDCC 2012
2012–13Alexey KamnevYana NekrasovaIrina Kolesnikova (WMDCC)RMDCC 2013
WMDCC 2013 (9th)
gollark: C+=2?
gollark: What language *is* this?
gollark: Idea: N-dimensional arrays where N is a power of two, via abuse of complex numbers and generalizations such as quaternions.
gollark: small brain: 0-indexed arraysmedium brain: 1-indexed arrayslarge brain: -1-indexed arraystranscendent galaxy brain: 0.7-indexed arrays
gollark: No, I mean the general "you".

References

  1. Yana Nekrasova on the World Curling Federation database
  2. История | Керлинг в России (CurlingRussia)(in Russian) (History of Curling in Russia; look at "РЕЗУЛЬТАТЫ ЧЕМПИОНАТОВ РОССИИ ПО КЕРЛИНГУ (ЖЕНЩИНЫ)" – Results of Women's Championships)


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