Valentina Stenina
Personal information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Born |
Babruysk, Soviet Union | 29 December 1934||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.54 m (5 ft 1⁄2 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 52 kg (115 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Country | Soviet Union | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Speed skating | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Valentina Sergeyevna Stenina (Russian: Валентина Серге́евна Стенина; born 29 December 1934) is a former speed skater who competed for the Soviet Union.
Born Valentina Miloslavova in Babruysk (which is now part of Belarus), she fled to Sverdlovsk – taken by her mother – in 1941 because of World War II. In Sverdlovsk, she took up speed skating, training at VSS Trud, and met and married fellow skater Boris Stenin.
In 1959, Stenina participated in her first World Allround Championships, held in her home town of Sverdlovsk, and she won silver. The next year, 1960, was a very good year for Stenina: her husband Boris became Soviet Allround Champion, then Boris won silver at the European Allround Championships, then she herself became World Allround Champion, then Boris became World Allround Champion, and then at the 1960 Winter Olympics of Squaw Valley, she won silver on the 3,000 m behind Lidia Skoblikova, while Boris won bronze on the 1,500 m. In addition, Boris received the Oscar Mathisen Award that year. Valentina was not even considered for that award since women were not eligible to win it until 1987.
The following year (1961), Stenina successfully defended her World Champion title in a grand way with victories in three distances and a second place in the fourth. Later that month, she won the Soviet National Championships – a title she would win a total number of four times in her career (in 1961, 1965, 1966, and 1967). Stenina did not compete in 1962 but returned in 1963, winning bronze at the World Championships. At the 1964 Winter Olympics of Innsbruck, she won another silver medal on the 3,000 m, again behind Skoblikova. Another silver medal at the World Championships would follow in 1965 and she became World Champion for the third and final time in 1966, this time not winning any of the four distances.
For her accomplishments, Stenina was awarded the title of Honorable Citizen of Sverdlovsk in 1967 – the year she won her third consecutive (and fourth total) Soviet National Championships title. In 1968, she ended her career as a speed skater. Stenina currently lives in Yekaterinburg (which is the name that Sverdlovsk was changed back to in 1991). Her husband Boris died in 2001.
Medals
An overview of medals won by Stenina at important championships she participated in, listing the years in which she won each:
Championships | Gold medal | Silver medal | Bronze medal |
---|---|---|---|
Winter Olympics | – | 1960 (3,000 m) 1964 (3,000 m) | – |
World Allround | 1960 1961 1966 | 1959 1965 | 1963 |
Soviet Allround | 1961 1965 1966 1967 | 1963 | – |
Personal records
To put these personal records in perspective, the WR column lists the official world records on the dates that Stenina skated her personal records.
Event | Result | Date | Venue | WR |
---|---|---|---|---|
500 m | 46.0 | 11 January 1964 | Chelyabinsk | 44.9 |
1,000 m | 1:33.5 | 6 January 1964 | Chelyabinsk | 1:31.8 |
1,500 m | 2:23.5 | 21 February 1963 | Karuizawa | 2:19.0 |
3,000 m | 5:06.3 | 12 January 1964 | Chelyabinsk | 5:06.0 |
External links
- Valentina Stenina at Sports Reference
- Valentina Stenina at SkateResults.com
- Valentina Stenina. Deutsche Eisschnelllauf Gemeinschaft e.V. (German Skating Association).
- Results of Championships of Russia and the USSR from SpeedSkating.ru
- Historical World Records. International Skating Union.