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	<title>KitSports &#187; Mariya Kuchina</title>
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		<title>Russia’s European Championship win lifts doping gloom</title>
		<link>https://kitsports.com/?p=2206</link>
		<comments>https://kitsports.com/?p=2206#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2015 01:07:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[kit-sports editor]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Athletic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2004 Olympic champion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2015 European Team Championships]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daria Klishina]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mariya Kuchina]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russia’s European Championship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yury Borzakovsky]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[(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&#8217;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 [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>(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&#8217;s track and field set-up.</p>
<p>Russia have now won four of the six editions of the tournament since it replaced the European Nations Cup in 2009.<br />
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.<br />
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.<br />
On Saturday, the Russian men had shone with four wins in five.<br />
On Sunday, however, it was the turn of the women to see Russia over the finish line.<br />
Daria Klishina (6.95m in the long jump) and Mariya Kuchina (1.99m in the high jump) illustrated their world class credentials.<br />
Anna Shchagina (1500m) and the 4x400m relay squad also secured top points.<br />
&#8220;I am exhausted. I felt a lot of pressure because we were at home,&#8221; said Kuchina.<br />
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.<br />
Russia has been accused of using widespread doping in sport and is under investigation by track and field&#8217;s governing body, the IAAF, and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).<br />
Elsewhere on the track on Sunday, Russia&#8217;s Sergey Shubenkov clinched the 110m hurdles in 13.22sec ahead of French favourite Pascal Martinot-Lagarde.<br />
Poland celebrated a double hammer win as Anita Wlodarczyk took the women&#8217;s event with a 78.28m throw which was far off the world record of 79.58m.<br />
On Saturday, Pawel Fadjek had won the men&#8217;s with 81.64m.<br />
France&#8217;s Olympic and world record holder Renaud Lavillenie won the polevault for the fifth time with a clearance of 5.85m.<br />
The French star, who has the world record of 6.16m, tried and failed to clear 6.02m.<br />
Finland&#8217;s Tero Pitkamaki claimed victory in the men&#8217;s javelin but his 84.44m best was never going to be improved upon with the competition taking place into a fierce wind.<br />
Sweden, Finland and Norway were relegated from the top division in the tournament.<br />
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.</p>
<p>Men</p>
<p>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<br />
800 m:1. Giordano Benedetti (ITA) 1:45.11, 2. Pierre-Ambroise Bosse (FRA) 1:45.14, 3. Adam Kszczot (POL) 1:45.84<br />
3000 m: 1. Richard Ringer (GER) 8:34.35, 2. Roberto Alaiz (ESP) 8:35.07, 3. Andrew Butchart (GBR) 8:35.75<br />
3000 m steeplechase: 1. Krystian Zalewski (POL) 8:37.512. Nikolay Chavkin (RUS) 8:39.39, 3. Yuri Floriani (ITA) 8:40.47<br />
110 m hurdles: 1. Sergey Shubenkov (RUS) 13.22, 2. Pascal Martinot-Lagarde (FRA) 13.42, 3. Lawrence Clarke (POL) 13.64<br />
4&#215;400 m: 1. France 3:00.47 , 2. Great Britain 3:00.54, 3. Poland 3:01.24<br />
Triple jump: 1. Fabrizio Donato (ITA) 17.11 m , 2. Aleksey Fyodorov (RUS) 16.92 , 3. Simo Lipsanen (FIN) 16.62<br />
Polevault: 1. Renaud Lavillenie (FRA) 5.85 m, 2. Raphael Holdzeppe (GER) 5.85 , 3. Piotr Lisek (POL) 5.80<br />
Discus: 1. Robert Urbanek (POL) 63.03 m, 2. Martin Wierig (GER) 60.23, 3. Frank Casanas (ESP) 60.01<br />
Javelin: 1. Tero Pitkämäki (FIN) 84.44 m, 2. Johannes Vetter (GER) 78.97, 3. Valeriy Iordan (RUS) 78.32</p>
<p>Women</p>
<p>200 m (+0.5 m/s): 1. Nataliya Pohrebnyak (UKR) 22.76, 2. Bianca Williams (GBR) 23.16 , 3. Yekaterina Smirnova (RUS) 23.29<br />
1500 m: 1. Anna Shchagina (RUS) 4:15.22, 2. Karoline Bjerkeli Grovdal (NOR) 4:16.22, 3. Rhianwedd Price (GBR) 4:16.59<br />
5000 m: 1. Renata Plis (POL) 15:49.29, 2. Volha Mazuronak (BLR) 15:51.89 , 3. Clémence Calvin (FRA) 15:53.28<br />
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<br />
4&#215;400 m: 1. Russia , 2. France, 3. Romania<br />
Long jump: 1. Darya Klishina (RUS) 6.95 m, 2. Volha Sudareva (BLR) 6.86 , 3. Taroum Sosthene Moguenara (GER) 6.79<br />
High jump: 1. Mariya Kuchina (RUS) 1.99 m, 2. Ruth Beitia (ESP) 1.97 , 3. Kamila Licwinko (POL) 1.97<br />
Hammer: 1. Anita Wlodarczyk (POL)78.28 m, 2. Betty Heidler (GER)75.73 . Alexandra Tavernier (FRA)74.05<br />
Shot: 1. Christina Schwanitz (GER) 19.82, 2. Irina Tarasova (RUS 18.51, 3. Alina Dubitskaya (BLR) 18.38</p>
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