Russia’s European Championship win lifts doping gloom

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(AFP) Russia capitalized on home conditions in Cheboksary to win the European Teams Championship on Sunday, lifting the doping gloom which has descended on the country’s track and field set-up.

Russia have now won four of the six editions of the tournament since it replaced the European Nations Cup in 2009.
The hosts finished the two days of competition on 368.5 points with Germany, the 2009 and 2014 champions, on 346.5 and France on 319.5.
Joy at the home win was particularly welcome for national coach Yury Borzakovsky, the 2004 Olympic champion in the 800m, who had taken on the job with a host of athletes sidelined by doping controversies.
On Saturday, the Russian men had shone with four wins in five.
On Sunday, however, it was the turn of the women to see Russia over the finish line.
Daria Klishina (6.95m in the long jump) and Mariya Kuchina (1.99m in the high jump) illustrated their world class credentials.
Anna Shchagina (1500m) and the 4x400m relay squad also secured top points.
“I am exhausted. I felt a lot of pressure because we were at home,” said Kuchina.
Borzakovsky took over as national coach in April from Valentin Maslakov who stepped down following a rash of positive doping tests involving top Russian athletes.
Russia has been accused of using widespread doping in sport and is under investigation by track and field’s governing body, the IAAF, and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
Elsewhere on the track on Sunday, Russia’s Sergey Shubenkov clinched the 110m hurdles in 13.22sec ahead of French favourite Pascal Martinot-Lagarde.
Poland celebrated a double hammer win as Anita Wlodarczyk took the women’s event with a 78.28m throw which was far off the world record of 79.58m.
On Saturday, Pawel Fadjek had won the men’s with 81.64m.
France’s Olympic and world record holder Renaud Lavillenie won the polevault for the fifth time with a clearance of 5.85m.
The French star, who has the world record of 6.16m, tried and failed to clear 6.02m.
Finland’s Tero Pitkamaki claimed victory in the men’s javelin but his 84.44m best was never going to be improved upon with the competition taking place into a fierce wind.
Sweden, Finland and Norway were relegated from the top division in the tournament.
Once the championships takes a break in 2016 due to the Olympics, they will be replaced in the 2017 edition by the Czech Republic, Greece and the Netherlands.

Men

200 m (wind -0.9 m/s): 1. Serhiy Smelyk (UKR) 20.45 , 2. Danny Talbot (GBR) 20.62 , 3. Enrico Demonte (ITA) 20.67
800 m:1. Giordano Benedetti (ITA) 1:45.11, 2. Pierre-Ambroise Bosse (FRA) 1:45.14, 3. Adam Kszczot (POL) 1:45.84
3000 m: 1. Richard Ringer (GER) 8:34.35, 2. Roberto Alaiz (ESP) 8:35.07, 3. Andrew Butchart (GBR) 8:35.75
3000 m steeplechase: 1. Krystian Zalewski (POL) 8:37.512. Nikolay Chavkin (RUS) 8:39.39, 3. Yuri Floriani (ITA) 8:40.47
110 m hurdles: 1. Sergey Shubenkov (RUS) 13.22, 2. Pascal Martinot-Lagarde (FRA) 13.42, 3. Lawrence Clarke (POL) 13.64
4×400 m: 1. France 3:00.47 , 2. Great Britain 3:00.54, 3. Poland 3:01.24
Triple jump: 1. Fabrizio Donato (ITA) 17.11 m , 2. Aleksey Fyodorov (RUS) 16.92 , 3. Simo Lipsanen (FIN) 16.62
Polevault: 1. Renaud Lavillenie (FRA) 5.85 m, 2. Raphael Holdzeppe (GER) 5.85 , 3. Piotr Lisek (POL) 5.80
Discus: 1. Robert Urbanek (POL) 63.03 m, 2. Martin Wierig (GER) 60.23, 3. Frank Casanas (ESP) 60.01
Javelin: 1. Tero Pitkämäki (FIN) 84.44 m, 2. Johannes Vetter (GER) 78.97, 3. Valeriy Iordan (RUS) 78.32

Women

200 m (+0.5 m/s): 1. Nataliya Pohrebnyak (UKR) 22.76, 2. Bianca Williams (GBR) 23.16 , 3. Yekaterina Smirnova (RUS) 23.29
1500 m: 1. Anna Shchagina (RUS) 4:15.22, 2. Karoline Bjerkeli Grovdal (NOR) 4:16.22, 3. Rhianwedd Price (GBR) 4:16.59
5000 m: 1. Renata Plis (POL) 15:49.29, 2. Volha Mazuronak (BLR) 15:51.89 , 3. Clémence Calvin (FRA) 15:53.28
100 m hurdles (wind +0.4 m/s): 1. Alina Talay (BLR) 12.80 , 2. Nina Morozova (RUS) 12.85, 3. Cindy Roleder (GER) 12.92
4×400 m: 1. Russia , 2. France, 3. Romania
Long jump: 1. Darya Klishina (RUS) 6.95 m, 2. Volha Sudareva (BLR) 6.86 , 3. Taroum Sosthene Moguenara (GER) 6.79
High jump: 1. Mariya Kuchina (RUS) 1.99 m, 2. Ruth Beitia (ESP) 1.97 , 3. Kamila Licwinko (POL) 1.97
Hammer: 1. Anita Wlodarczyk (POL)78.28 m, 2. Betty Heidler (GER)75.73 . Alexandra Tavernier (FRA)74.05
Shot: 1. Christina Schwanitz (GER) 19.82, 2. Irina Tarasova (RUS 18.51, 3. Alina Dubitskaya (BLR) 18.38

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