Daniel Plaza
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born |
3 July 1966 Barcelona, Spain |
| Height | 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in) |
| Weight | 64 kg (141 lb) |
| Sport | |
| Sport | Race walking |
| Club | Valencia CA; Sideco; CEMA Prat; La Seda |
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Plaza and the second or maternal family name is Montero.
Daniel Plaza Montero (born 3 July 1966) is a Spanish former race walker who competed in the 20 km event at the 1988, 1992 and 1996 Olympics. He won a gold medal in 1992 in his native Barcelona, becoming the first Spanish track & field athlete ever to win an Olympic gold medal.[1]
| Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Representing | |||||
| 1988 | Ibero-American Championships | Ciudad de México, México | 3rd | 20 km | 1:27:23.0 A |
| Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | 12th | 20 km | 1:21:53 | |
| 1989 | World Race Walking Cup | L'Hospitalet, Spain | 11th | 20 km | 1:22:09 |
| 1990 | European Championships | Split, Yugoslavia | 2nd | 20 km | 1:22:22 |
| Ibero-American Championships | Manaus, Brazil | — | 20 km | DQ | |
| 1991 | World Race Walking Cup | San Jose, United States | 4th | 20 km | 1:21:00 |
| 1992 | Olympic Games | Barcelona, Spain | 1st | 20 km | 1:21:45 |
| 1993 | World Race Walking Cup | Monterrey, Mexico | 6th | 20 km | 1:24:52 |
| World Championships | Stuttgart, Germany | 3rd | 20 km | 1:23:18 | |
| 1994 | European Championships | Helsinki, Finland | — | 20 km | DQ |
| 1996 | European Race Walking Cup | La Coruña, Spain | 2nd | 20 km | 1:21:47 |
| Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | 11th | 20 km | 1:22:05 | |
Overturned drugs ban
In 2006 Plaza was cleared of a Nandrolone related drug ban by Spain's Supreme Court[2][3]
References
- ↑ Daniel Plaza. sports-reference.com. Retrieved 26 January 2014
- ↑ Plaza overturns 10-year-old ban. BBC Sport (10 July 2006). Retrieved 26 January 2014
- ↑ Matthew Moore (30 September 2010). Sporting drugs test failures: eight most unusual explanations, from veal to Vicks inhalers. The Telegraph Retrieved 26 January 2014
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