ATHLETE

Olga Kuzenkova

1970 - Today

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Olga Sergeyevna Kuzenkova (Russian: Ольга Серге́евна Кузенкова; born 4 October 1970 in Smolensk) is a Russian track and field athlete, the first woman to throw the hammer more than 70 meters. She has tested positive for doping. She won gold in the women's hammer throw event at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. She trained with Aleksandr Seleznyov. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Olga Kuzenkova is the 1,813th most popular athlete (up from 2,159th in 2019), the 2,264th most popular biography from Russia (up from 2,531st in 2019) and the 81st most popular Russian Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Olga Kuzenkova ranks 1,813 out of 6,025Before her are Otto Nilsson, Uli Vos, Henry Proctor, Eric Carlberg, Claude Piquemal, and Nadezhda Ilyina. After her are Yury Sisikin, Grigory Mkrtychan, Nikolay Smaga, Tyson Gay, Meinhard Nehmer, and Pierre Blondiaux.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1970, Olga Kuzenkova ranks 278Before her are Abraham Olano, Johann Mühlegg, Åsne Seierstad, Jonah Falcon, Takanori Nishikawa, and Võ Văn Thưởng. After her are Tetsuya Nomura, Alexi Lalas, Erkan Petekkaya, Serdar Ortaç, Regina Hall, and Sajida al-Rishawi.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Olga Kuzenkova ranks 2,264 out of 3,761Before her are Stanislav Stepashkin (1940), Oleg Tinkov (1967), Andriy Nesmachniy (1979), Tina Karol (1985), Nadezhda Ilyina (1949), and Tatyana Averina (1950). After her are Yury Sisikin (1937), Grigory Mkrtychan (1925), Vladimir Pashkov (1961), Antonina Ryzhova (1934), Tamara Nosova (1927), and Anastasia Myskina (1981).

Among ATHLETES In Russia

Among athletes born in Russia, Olga Kuzenkova ranks 81Before her are Ellina Zvereva (1960), Aleksandr Klepikov (1950), Ivan Kizimov (1928), Vyacheslav Vedenin (1941), Yury Zaitsev (1951), and Nadezhda Ilyina (1949). After her are Yury Sisikin (1937), Grigory Mkrtychan (1925), Tamara Bykova (1958), Rinnat Safin (1940), Tamara Manina (1934), and Lyudmila Titova (1946).