- Olga Rypakova
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Medal record
Olga Rypakova during 2010 Memorial Van DammeCompetitor for Kazakhstan Women’s athletics World Championship Silver 2011 Daegu Triple jump World Indoor Championships Gold 2010 Doha Triple jump Asian Games Gold 2010 Guangzhou Triple jump Silver 2010 Guangzhou Long jump Gold 2006 Doha Heptathlon Bronze 2006 Doha Long jump Asian Indoor Games Gold 2005 Pattaya Pentathlon Gold 2009 Hanoi Long jump Gold 2009 Hanoi Triple jump Continental Cup Gold 2010 Split Triple jump Bronze 2010 Split Long jump Olga Rypakova (born Olga Alekseyeva 30 November 1984) is a Kazakhstani track and field athlete. Originally a heptathlete, she switched to focus on the long jump and began to compete in the triple jump after 2007. Her first successes came in the combined events at Asian competitions – she won the women's pentathlon at the 2005 Asian Indoor Games and took the heptathlon gold at the 2006 Asian Games the following year.
She competed in both jumping events at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and finished fourth in the triple jump with an Asian record of 15.11 metres. Rypakova has represented Kazakhstan at the 2007 and 2009 World Championships in Athletics. She reached the world podium for the first time at the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships, where she took gold with an Asian indoor record jump of 15.14 m.
Contents
Career
Early career
Born in Ust-Kamenogorsk, she entered her first world junior competition at the age of sixteen and finished eleventh in the long jump qualifying round of the 2000 World Junior Championships in Athletics. She was more successful in the heptathlon: she finished fourth at the 2001 World Youth Championships in Athletics and went on to take the silver at the following year's World Junior Championships behind the emerging Carolina Klüft. Rypakova also became Kazakhstan's national heptathlon champion that year.[1] She persisted with combined events and started competing on the international circuit, finishing fifth with a season's best at the Multistars competition in 2003,[2] and she became the national indoor champion in the women's pentathlon in 2004.[1]
Rypakova's first major championships appearances came in 2005: in September she took part in the long jump at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships in Incheon, finishing in fourth place. Two months later she won her first gold, topping the podium in the indoor pentathlon at the 2005 Asian Indoor Games. Continuing in the pentathlon, she went on to win the gold at the 2006 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships setting an Asian and championships record of 4582 points for the event. Reaching the indoor world stage for the first time, she attended the 2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships but she did not improve further and took seventh place with 4368 points.
She represented Asia for the first time at the 2006 IAAF World Cup team competition, although she managed only 6.21 m in the long jump competition, finishing in eighth. She made improvements, however, in the weeks following the World Cup by jumping 6.63 m (a new personal best) for second place at the Colorful Daegu Athletics Meeting.[3] She pushed herself beyond the normal seven events at the 2006 Asian Games by winning the heptathlon gold medal with 5955 points, and then participating in the individual long jump competition.[4] She won the long jump bronze medal a day after topping the podium in the heptathlon competition.[5]
Major championship gold
A quick succession of major competitions defined her 2007 season. She began by scoring two golds in the horizontal jumps at the 2007 Asian Athletics Championships in July, which included a championship record and national record of 14.69 m in the triple jump.[6] In August at the 2007 Summer Universiade, she brought her country its first ever athletics gold medal at the competition with a personal best of 6.85 m in the long jump.[7]
Three weeks later, she took part in her first ever World Championships in Athletics: she opted to contest the triple jump and she finished fourth in the qualifying. However, she could not match that performance in the final round and finished in eleventh overall. She intended to close the year with an appearance at the 2007 Asian Indoor Games but she withdrew from the competition.
Her 2008 season began with further indoor success: she won her second gold and set her second championship record at the 2008 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships, this time in the triple jump with a mark of 14.23 m. The 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships followed shortly and she came close to the podium in the triple jump competition but while her jump of 14.58 m was enough to set an indoor Asian record, it was not enough to push Marija Šestak out of the bronze medal position.[8] Similar bitter-sweet results awaited her at the 2008 Summer Olympics, her first time representing Kazakhstan at the Summer Olympics. She entered both the horizontal jump competitions and recorded a new Asian record of 15.11 m in the Olympic triple jump contest. In spite of this, she remained some ten centimetres behind the bronze medallist Hrysopiyi Devetzi of Greece. Her Olympics came to a close after a modest set of jumps in the qualifiers of the long jump competition left her out of the final.
She took part in her second outdoor world championships the following year, but she could not match her previous form at finished in tenth place overall in the 2009 women's triple jump competition with a best mark of 13.91 m. Despite this lacklustre performance on the world stage, she remained dominant in continental competition and won both the long jump and triple jump gold medals at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games (setting two Games records and helping Kazakhstan top the athletics medal table in the process).[9] Competing at her final championships of that year, she retained her triple jump title at the 2009 Asian Athletics Championships, beating Xu Tingting and Irina Litvinenko with a jump of 14.53 m.
World indoor champion
She became the long and triple jump national indoor champion at the beginning of 2010,[1] and she opted to compete in the triple jump at the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships. She completed a series of personal best jumps in the final, battling against the defending champion Yargelis Savigne for the gold medal. Having sealed first place with a fourth round jump of 14.93 m and being relieved of the competitive pressure, her final jump saw her reach a new level: she jumped 15.14 m – a result that placed her as the third longest jumper indoors after former world champions Ashia Hansen and Tatyana Lebedeva.[10]
Achievements
Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes 2005 Asian Championships Incheon, South Korea 4th Long jump 2006 World Indoor Championships Moscow, Russia 7th Pentathlon World Cup Athens, Greece 8th Long jump Asian Games Doha, Qatar 1st Heptathlon 3rd Long jump 2007 Asian Championships Amman, Jordan 1st Long jump 1st Triple jump 14.69 CR Universiade Bangkok, Thailand 1st Long jump 6.85 PB World Championships Osaka, Japan 11th Triple jump 2008 World Indoor Championships Valencia, Spain 4th Triple jump Olympic Games Beijing, China 4th Triple jump 15.11 29th Long jump 2009 World Championships Berlin, Germany 11th Triple jump 13.91 2010 World Indoor Championships Doha, Qatar 1st Triple jump 15.14 AR Continental Cup Split, Croatia 1st Triple jump 15.25 AR CR 2011 World Championships Daegu, South Korea 2nd Triple jump 14.89 Personal bests
Her personal best long jump is 6.85 metres, achieved at the 2007 Universiade in Bangkok. In the triple jump she has a best of 15.25 metres, achieved at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup in Split; this is the Asian record for the event. She also holds the current Asian indoor record in the triple jump with a mark of 15.14 m, achieved at the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships. Her best of 4582 points in the indoor pentathlon is also an Asian indoor record. She has a heptathlon best of 6113 points, set in Almaty in 2006.
References
- ^ a b c Rypakova Olga. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Multistars 2003. Multistars. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Jalava, Mirko & Turner, Chris (2006-09-29). UPDATED – Spearmon blasts to 19.65 in Daegu to become the third quickest 200m runner all-time. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ [Negash, Elshadai (2006-12-09). Jamal on course for double, while track debutant takes 10,000m title – Asian Games, Day Three. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Negash, Elshadai (2006-12-10). Ramzi and Simpson defeated in Doha – Asian Games, Day Four. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Asian Championships Review – China’s “B” team prevails. IAAF (2007-07-31). Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Clavelo Robinson, Javier (2007-08-11). Rypakova leaps 6.85m – World University Games day 2. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Turner, Chris (2008-03-08). Savigne secures last round gold with 15.05m. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Ramsak, Bob & Krishnan, Ram. Murali (2009-11-02). Andreyev's 5.60m vault the highlight as Asian Indoor Games conclude in Hanoi. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
- ^ Ramsak, Bob (2010-03-13). EVENT REPORT – WOMEN's Triple Jump Final. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-03-16.
External links
- IAAF profile for Olga Rypakova
Summer Universiade champions in women's triple jump 1991: Li Huirong (CHN) • 1993: Niurka Montalvo (CUB) • 1995: Šárka Kašpárková (CZE) • 1997 – 1999: Olena Hovorova (UKR) •
2001: Tatyana Lebedeva (RUS) • 2003: Oksana Rogova (RUS) • 2005: Wang Ying (CHN) • 2007: Olga Rypakova (KAZ) • 2009: Yarianna Martínez (CUB) • 2011: Ekaterina Koneva (RUS)1993: Inessa Kravets (UKR) • 1995: Iolanda Chen (RUS) • 1997: Inna Lasovskaya (RUS) • 1999: Ashia Hansen (GBR) • 2001: Tereza Marinova (BUL) • 2003: Ashia Hansen (GBR) • 2004 – 2006: Tatyana Lebedeva (RUS) • 2008: Yargelis Savigne (CUB) • 2010: Olga Rypakova (KAZ)
1992: Li Huirong (CHN) • 1994: Anna Biryukova (RUS) • 1998: Olga Vasdeki (GRE) • 2002: Françoise Mbango Etone (CMR) • 2006: Tatyana Lebedeva (RUS) • 2010: Olga Rypakova (KAZ)
Categories:- 1984 births
- Living people
- Heptathletes
- Long jumpers
- Triple jumpers
- Kazakhstani athletes
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer Olympics
- Olympic athletes of Kazakhstan
- Asian Games medalists in athletics (track and field)
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