Aleksandra Chudina
Aleksandra Georgievna Chudina (Russian: Александра Георгиевна Чудина; 6 November 1923 – 28 October 1990) was a Soviet athlete who excelled in field hockey, volleyball, and various track and field events.[2]
Field hockey
[edit | edit source]Chudina took a wide range of sports and excelled first in field hockey, where she started playing as a defender in 1937 and later changed to a forward. With her team Dynamo Moscow she won several major tournaments at the city and national levels between 1937 and 1947.[3]
Athletics
[edit | edit source]Chudina then changed to athletics, and had a first international success in 1946, when she finished second in the high jump at the European championships. At the 1952 Summer Olympics she won silver medals in the javelin throw and long jump and a bronze in the high jump.[4] On 22 May 1954, she set a new world record in the high jump at 1.73 meters.[5] The same year she won two European medals in the pentathlon and long jump, but finished only sixth in the high jump.[4]
Volleyball
[edit | edit source]Between 1947 and 1963 Chudina was also a member, and often the captain, of the Dynamo and national volleyball teams. With the national teams she won world championships in 1952, 1956 and 1960,[6] and European championships in 1949, 1950, 1951 and 1958, finishing second in 1955.[7]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Chudina was one of the most popular Soviet sportspersons of the 1950s, and was then used by the Soviet media as an example of superiority of the national sport programs. She was a colorful person who had a coarse low voice, enjoyed alcohol drinking and playing cards in a company, and was a careless car driver. After retiring from competitions (as she was suspected in being an Intersex person)[8][9][10] she worked as a sports administrator and was soon forgotten. She had developed tuberculosis and lost one leg due to gangrene. A chain smoker through much of her life, she died of a stomach cancer, aged 66.[11]
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Чудина Александра Георгиевна in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (in Russian) – via Great Scientific Library
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- ^ Чудина Александра Георгиевна (1923-1990) Archived 29 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine. sport-necropol.narod.ru
- ^ a b Aleksandra Chudina. sports-reference.com
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- ^ Boris Valiev (12 October 2002) Супервершины Александры Чудиной. sovsport.ru
External links
[edit | edit source]- Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
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- 1923 births
- 1990 deaths
- People from Tula Oblast
- Soviet women's volleyball players
- Soviet pentathletes
- Soviet women javelin throwers
- Soviet women high jumpers
- Soviet women long jumpers
- Olympic athletes for the Soviet Union
- Olympic silver medalists for the Soviet Union
- Olympic bronze medalists for the Soviet Union
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1952 Summer Olympics
- European Athletics Championships medalists
- Dynamo Sports Club sportspeople
- Recipients of the Order of Lenin
- Honoured Masters of Sport of the USSR
- Deaths from stomach cancer in Russia
- Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery
- Medalists at the 1952 Summer Olympics
- Olympic silver medalists in athletics
- Olympic bronze medalists in athletics
- Deaths from cancer in the Soviet Union
- Soviet female field hockey players