sport.wikisort.org - AthleteYevgeniya Viktorovna Estes (Russian: Евге́ния Ви́кторовна Э́стес, born 17 July 1975 in Sverdlovsk), née Artamonova (Артамонова), is a Russian volleyball player, who was a member of the national team and one of only two volleyball players (along with Sergey Tetyukhin) that competed consecutively in six Olympic Games and took the silver medals at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, and the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.
Russian volleyball player
Yevgeniya Estes |
---|
|
Full name | Yevgeniya Artamonova Estes |
---|
Born | Yevgeniya Artamonova (1975-07-17) 17 July 1975 (age 47) Sverdlovsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
---|
|
Years | Teams |
1991—1995 1995—1999 1999—2000 2000—2001 2001—2002 2002—2004 2004—2006 2006—2007 2007—2012 | Uralochka Ekaterinburgo
Okisu Toyobo
Eczacıbaşı Istanbul
Virtus Reggio Calabria
Uralochka-NTMK
Takefuji Bamboo
Volero Zurich
Takefuji Bamboo
Uralochka-NTMK |
|
|
1991 1992 1993—2012 | Soviet Union
Unified Team
Russia |
|
|
She also won the Most Beautiful Women Volleyball Player Award, which was held on the occasion of FIVB World Grand Champions Cup 1993 and sponsored by Japanese Monthly Volleyball Magazine. As a member of TOYOBO, she won the first runner-up of "Miss V-League".
Honors
- 1991 World Under-20 Championship — 1st place
- 1991 World Cup — 3rd place
- 1992 European Junior Championship — 1st place
- 1992 Olympic Games — 2nd place
- 1993 FIVB World Grand Prix — 3rd place
- 1993 European Championship — 1st place
- 1993 World Grand Champions Cup — 3rd place
- 1994 Goodwill Games — 1st place
- 1994 World Championship — 3rd place
- 1995 World Under-20 Championship — 3rd place
- 1995 European Championship — 3rd place
- 1996 FIVB World Grand Prix — 3rd place
- 1996 Olympic Games — 4th place
- 1997 FIVB World Grand Prix — 1st place
- 1997 European Championship — 1st place
- 1997 World Grand Champions Cup — 1st place
- 1998 FIVB World Grand Prix — 2nd place
- 1998 World Championship — 3rd place
- 1999 FIVB World Grand Prix — 1st place
- 1999 European Championship — 1st place
- 1999 World Cup — 2nd place
- 2000 FIVB World Grand Prix — 2nd place
- 2000 Olympic Games — 2nd place
- 2001 FIVB World Grand Prix — 3rd place
- 2001 European Championship — 1st place
- 2001 World Grand Champions Cup — 2nd place
- 2002 FIVB World Grand Prix — 1st place
- 2002 World Championship — 3rd place
- 2003 FIVB World Grand Prix — 2nd place
- 2004 Olympic Games — 2nd place
- 2008 Olympic Games — 5th place
- 2012 Olympic Games — 5th place
Trivia
Aru-chan (Evguenia's nickname in Japan)
On the court, she rarely shows her feelings, which made Japanese media nickname her “Ice doll”.
During the Russia-Japan game of the World Grand Prix 1995 she fell down because of a knee injury. The knee was operated unsuccessfully on the previous year.
Individual awards
- 1997 World Grand Champions Cup "Most Valuable Player"
- 1999 European Championship "Most Valuable Player"
- 2002 World Grand Prix "Most Valuable Player"
References
External links
Awards |
Preceded by |
Most Valuable Player of FIVB World Grand Prix 1997 2002 |
Succeeded by |
Soviet Union squad – 1991 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup – Bronze medal |
---|
| |
Unified Team women's volleyball squad – 1992 Summer Olympics – Silver medal |
---|
| |
Russia squad – 1994 FIVB Women's World Championship – Bronze medal |
---|
| |
Russia women's volleyball squad – 1996 Summer Olympics – 4th place |
---|
| |
Russia squad – 1998 FIVB Women's World Championship – Bronze medal |
---|
| |
Russia squad – 1999 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup – Silver medal |
---|
| |
Russia women's volleyball squad – 2000 Summer Olympics – Silver medal |
---|
| |
Russia squad – 2002 FIVB Women's World Championship – Bronze medal |
---|
| |
Russia women's volleyball squad – 2004 Summer Olympics – Silver medal |
---|
| |
Russia women's volleyball squad – 2008 Summer Olympics – 6th place |
---|
| |
Russia women's volleyball squad – 2012 Summer Olympics – 5th place |
---|
- 1 Maria Borodakova
- 3 Maria Perepelkina
- 4 Yevgeniya Estes
- 5 Lyubov Sokolova
- 6 Anna Matiyenko
- 7 Svetlana Valentinovna Kryuchkova
- 8 Nataliya Obmochaeva
- 11 Yekaterina Gamova
- 13 Yevgeniya Startseva
- 14 Ekaterina Ulanova
- 15 Tatiana Kosheleva
- 16 Yulia Merkulova
- Coach: Sergei Ovchinnikov
| |
Members of the Volleyball Hall of Fame |
---|
Players (men) | |
---|
Players (women) | |
---|
Coaches |
- Harry Wilson
- Doug Beal
- Edward DeGroot
- James Coleman
- Al Scates
- Marv Dunphy
- Arie Selinger
- Don Shondell
- Andy Banachowski
- Yasutaka Matsudaira [ja]
- Hirofumi Daimatsu
- Viacheslav Platonov
- Givi Akhvlediani
- Julio Velasco
- Eugenio George Lafita
- Shigeo Yamada
- Yuan Weimin
- Nikolay Karpol
- Gabriella Kotsis
- Hubert Wagner
- Joop Alberda
- Bebeto de Freitas
- Park Man-bok
- Anders Kristiansson
- Hugh McCutcheon
- Vasil Simov
- Bernardo Rezende
|
---|
Officials |
- Glen Davies
- Alton Fish
- George J. Fisher
- Catalino Ignacio
- Merton H. Kennedy
- C.L. Miller
- Endre Holvay
- Paul Libaud
|
---|
Leaders |
- William G. Morgan
- Harold T. Friermood
- Leonard Gibson
- George J. Fisher
- John Koch
- Robert L. Lindsey
- Albert Monaco Jr.
- Bill Baird
- Wilber H. Peck
- Dr. Endre Holvay
- Carlos Arthur Nuzman
- Sinan Erdem
- Vladimir Savvine
- Frantisek Stibitz
- Miloslav Ejem
- Jizhong Wei
- Hiroshi Toyoda
- André Meyer
- Pieter Joon
- Peter Murphy
|
---|
На других языках
[de] Jewgenija Wiktorowna Artamonowa-Estes
Jewgenija Wiktorowna Artamonowa-Estes (russisch Евгения Викторовна Артамонова-Эстес, englische Transkription: Yevgeniya Viktorovna Artamonova-Estes; * 17. Juli 1975 in Swerdlowsk als Jewgenija Wiktorowna Artamonowa) ist eine russische Volleyballspielerin. Sie spielte schon zur Zeiten der Sowjetunion in der Nationalmannschaft. Bei sechs Teilnahmen an Olympischen Spielen gewann sie drei Silbermedaillen. Außerdem wurde sie viermal Europameisterin. Mit ihren Vereinen gewann sie zweimal die Champions League und zahlreiche Meistertitel in verschiedenen Ländern.
- [en] Yevgeniya Estes
[it] Evgenija Artamonova
Evgenija Viktorovna Artamonova-Estes (in russo: Евгения Викторовна Эстес?; Ekaterinburg, 17 luglio 1975) è un'ex pallavolista russa.
[ru] Эстес, Евгения Викторовна
Евге́ния Ви́кторовна Э́стес (до 2005 — Артамо́нова; род. 17 июля 1975, Свердловск) — советская и российская волейболистка, нападающая, заслуженный мастер спорта России (2000). Лучшая волейболистка Европы 1998 года. Единственная в мире волейболистка, принимавшая участие в шести Олимпийских играх.
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии