Mariya Shubina
Mariya Shubina
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Personal information |
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Born |
12 May 1930 (1930-05-12) (age 85) Protasovo, Ichalkovsky District, Russia |
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Height |
1.67 m (5 ft 6 in) |
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Weight |
65 kg (143 lb) |
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Sport |
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Sport |
Canoe sprint |
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Club |
Spartak Vladivostok |
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Mariya Timofeyevna Shubina (Russian: Мария Тимофеевна Шубина, born 12 May 1930) is a Soviet sprint canoer who competed from the late 1950s to the late 1960s. She won the K-2 500 m gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. Shubina also won six medals at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships with four golds (K-1 500 m: 1963, K-2 500 m: 1958, K-4 500 m: 1963, 1966) and two silvers (K-2 500 m: 1963, 1966).[1][2][3]
Shubina was born in a family of a phone communications engineer in Mordovia. In 1944 she enrolled to a gynecology school, and after graduating worked at a regional hospital. A keen cross-country skier and runner, she used to ski or run to work. In 1950 she enrolled to Kazan State Medical University, where she continued training and competing in ski and athletics. Her first canoe race was accidental – she was asked to replace a missing teammate; she did not even know how to swim. A canoe coach noticed her then and convinced to start training.[4]
In 1956 Shubina graduated from the Kazan University, and later studied sport medicine in Saint Petersburg. Since 1964 she lives in Volgograd, together with her husband and sons Konstantin and Mikhail. In 1975 she defended a PhD in medicine.[5][4]
References
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- 1960: Soviet Union (Mariya Shubina, Antonina Seredina)
- 1964: Germany (Roswitha Esser, Annemarie Zimmermann)
- 1968: West Germany (Roswitha Esser, Annemarie Zimmermann)
- 1972: Soviet Union (Lyudmila Pinayeva, Kateryna Koryshko)
- 1976: Soviet Union (Nina Gopova, Galina Kreft)
- 1980: East Germany (Carsta Genäuß, Martina Bischof)
- 1984: Sweden (Agneta Andersson, Anna Olsson)
- 1988: East Germany (Birgit Fischer, Anke Nothnagel)
- 1992: Germany (Ramona Portwich, Anke von Seck)
- 1996: Sweden (Susanne Gunnarsson, Agneta Andersson)
- 2000: Germany (Birgit Fischer, Katrin Wagner-Augustin)
- 2004 – 2008: Hungary (Katalin Kovács, Nataša Janić)
- 2012: Germany (Franziska Weber, Tina Dietze)
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- 1963: Soviet Union
- 1966: Soviet Union
- 1970: Soviet Union
- 1971: Soviet Union
- 1973: Soviet Union
- 1974: East Germany
- 1975: East Germany
- 1977: Bulgaria
- 1978: East Germany
- 1979: East Germany
- 1981: East Germany
- 1982: East Germany
- 1983: East Germany
- 1985: East Germany
- 1986: Hungary
- 1987: East Germany
- 1989: East Germany
- 1990: East Germany
- 1991: Germany
- 1993: Germany
- 1994: Germany
- 1995: Germany
- 1997: Germany
- 1998: Germany
- 1999: Hungary
- 2001: Hungary
- 2002: Hungary
- 2003: Hungary
- 2005: Germany
- 2006: Hungary
- 2007: Germany
- 2009: Hungary
- 2010: Hungary
- 2011: Hungary
- 2013: Hungary
- 2014: Hungary
- 2015: Belarus
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