2018 Russian Athletics Championships

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2018 Russian Athletics Championships
Athletics pictogram.svg
Dates19–22 July
Host city Kazan
VenueCentral Stadium
Events38
Participationaround 1000 athletes

The 2018 Russian Athletics Championships was held July 19-22 at Central Stadium in Kazan. The capital of Tatarstan hosted the event for the third time, having done so previously in 2008 and 2014. Around 1000 athletes from 76 regions of the country participated in the competition. Over the course of four days, 38 events were contested.[1]

For the third year in a row, the national championships did not include the selection of an international team (on this occasion, for the 2018 European Athletics Championships). This was due to the continuation Russia's ban from international athletics by the IAAF due to doping, which began in 2015. Three Russians, who competed at that competition as Authorised Neutral Athletes (Sergey Shubenkov, Anzhelika Sidorova and Danil Lysenko), chose not to compete at the national event, instead competing at the Herculis 2018 IAAF Diamond League meeting.[2]

Vladimir Nikitin won the men's 1500 metres in a championship record of 3:35.85. After the collapse of the USSR, only two people showed faster results at this distance: the country's record holder Vyacheslav Shabunin and .[3] Aleksandr Lesnoy improved his personal record to 21.58 m, bringing him to fourth among Russia's all-time men's shot putters.[4]

The 2012 Olympic champion Anna Chicherova returned from her doping ban but was beaten into second place by world-leader Mariya Lasitskene.[5]

Ekaterina Ivonina set a European-leading time of 9:16.68 to win the 3000 metres steeplechase. She led from start to finish and beat the silver medalist by 22 seconds.[6]

Several athletes extended their list of national honours: Dmitry Tarabin won the javelin for the sixth time in a row, while hurdler Konstantin Shabanov became a six-time champion in the 110 metres hurdles.

Championships[]

During 2018, Russian championships were held in various cities in individual athletics disciplines:

Results[]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
Lipetsk Oblast
Bryansk Oblast
10.32
Krasnodar Krai
10.33
Krasnodar Krai
10.34
200 metres
Tula Oblast
20.81
Krasnodar Krai
20.82
Lipetsk Oblast
Bryansk Oblast
20.95
400 metres
Saint Petersburg
46.00
Kursk Oblast
46.01 Denis Kudryavtsev
Tyumen Oblast
46.28
800 metres
Moscow Oblast
Belgorod Oblast
1:46.79
Moscow
Perm Krai
1:48.01
Moscow Oblast
1:48.32
1500 metres Vladimir Nikitin
Moscow
Perm Krai
3:35.85
Moscow Oblast
Belgorod Oblast
3:40.18 Valentin Smirnov
Saint Petersburg
Chelyabinsk Oblast
3:41.35
5000 metres Evgeniy Rybakov
Kemerovo Oblast
13:23.57
Kemerovo Oblast
13:26.25
Tambov Oblast
13:27.61
3000 m s'chase
Sverdlovsk Oblast
8:22.40
Altai Krai
8:28.70
Moscow
Altai Krai
8:29.42
110 m hurdles Konstantin Shabanov
Moscow
Pskov Oblast
13.53
Moscow
Pskov Oblast
13.88
Saint Petersburg
13.88
400 m hurdles Timofey Chalyy
Krasnoyarsk Krai
Moscow Oblast
49.52
Tyumen Oblast
49.99
Moscow Oblast
Novosibirsk Oblast
50.78
High jump Ivan Ukhov
Moscow
2.32 m Ilya Ivanyuk
Bryansk Oblast
Smolensk Oblast
2.28 m
Moscow
Bryansk Oblast
2.26 m
Pole vault Evgeniy Lukyanenko
Krasnodar Krai
Moscow
5.65 m Georgiy Gorokhov
Moscow
Bryansk Oblast
5.55 m Aleksandr Gripich
Krasnodar Krai
Moscow
5.55 m
Long jump Aleksandr Menkov
Krasnoyarsk Krai
Mordovia
8.03 m
(+1.2 m/s)
Pavel Shalin
Moscow
Lipetsk Oblast
7.97 m
(+1.4 m/s)

Moscow
Volgograd Oblast
7.81 m
(+0.9 m/s)
Triple jump
Samara Oblast
16.98 m
(+0.4 m/s)
Aleksey Fyodorov
Moscow Oblast
Smolensk Oblast
16.76 m
(+1.4 m/s)
Dmitriy Sorokin
Krasnodar Krai
16.76 m
(+1.4 m/s)
Shot put Aleksandr Lesnoy
Krasnodar Krai
Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
21.58 m Maksim Afonin
Moscow
Sakha−Sakha Republic
20.44 m
Moscow
Rostov Oblast
20.04 m
Discus throw
Moscow
64.37 m Viktor Butenko
Moscow
Stavropol Krai
62.74 m
Moscow
Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
61.15 m
Hammer throw Denis Lukyanov
Moscow Oblast
Rostov Oblast
74.74 m Aleksey Sokirskiy
Krasnodar Krai
74.61 m Sergey Litvinov
Mordovia
74.60 m
Javelin throw Dmitriy Tarabin
Krasnodar Krai
Moscow Oblast
82.89 m
Southern Federal District/Republic of Crimea
75.99 m
Moscow Oblast
Smolensk Oblast
75.29 m
4 × 100 m relay  Krasnodar Krai



39.73  Ulyanovsk Oblast

 [Wikidata]

39.81  Saint Petersburg

Konstantin Petryashov

39.84
4 × 400 m relay  Saint Petersburg



3:04.88  Tyumen Oblast
Pavel Trenikhin


Denis Kudryavtsev
3:05.43  Irkutsk Oblast

Vladimir Krasnov

3:09.67

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres Kristina Sivkova
Moscow
11.30
Penza Oblast
Tula Oblast
11.42
Saint Petersburg
Vologda Oblast
11.51
200 metres
Penza Oblast
Tula Oblast
23.17
Sverdlovsk Oblast
Chelyabinsk Oblast
23.41
Saint Petersburg
Vologda Oblast
23.53
400 metres Polina Miller
Krasnodar Krai
Altai Krai
51.82 Ekaterina Renzhina
Moscow
Tula Oblast
52.14
Sverdlovsk Oblast
Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
52.46
800 metres Ekaterina Zavyalova
Moscow
Mordovia
2:00.80 Anzhelika Shevchenko
Saint Petersburg
2:01.60
Moscow
Yaroslavl Oblast
2:01.72
1500 metres
Moscow
Ivanovo Oblast
4:05.00 Elena Korobkina
Moscow
Lipetsk Oblast
4:07.45
Belgorod Oblast
Bryansk Oblast
4:07.87
5000 metres Elena Korobkina
Moscow
Lipetsk Oblast
15:19.11 Ekaterina Ishova
Moscow Oblast
Chuvashia
15:24.09
Moscow Oblast
Novosibirsk Oblast
15:26.64
3000 m s'chase Ekaterina Ivonina
Moscow Oblast
Perm Krai
9:16.68
Moscow
Primorsky Krai
9:39.07
Moscow
Sakha−Sakha Republic
9:50.19
100 m hurdles Ekaterina Galitskaya
Rostov Oblast
Saint Petersburg
13.21
Krasnodar Krai
Sverdlovsk Oblast
13.21
Krasnoyarsk Krai
Saint Petersburg
13.40
400 m hurdles Vera Rudakova
Moscow
Perm Krai
56.03
Moscow Oblast
Samara Oblast
56.04
Moscow
Moscow Oblast
57.26
High jump Mariya Lasitskene
Moscow Oblast
Kabardino-Balkaria
2.00 m Anna Chicherova
Moscow
1.90 m
Moscow
1.90 m
Pole vault Olga Mullina
Moscow
4.65 m Aksana Gataullina
Moscow
4.55 m
Moscow
Irkutsk Oblast
4.45 m
Long jump Elena Sokolova
Moscow
Belgorod Oblast
6.68 m
(+0.6 m/s)

Moscow
6.45 m
(+2.1 m/s)

Moscow
Stavropol Krai
6.41 m
(+2.2 m/s)
Triple jump Ekaterina Koneva
Krasnodar Krai
Khabarovsk Krai
14.79 m
(+2.3 m/s)

Moscow
Bryansk Oblast
14.13 m
(+1.7 m/s)

Tatarstan
13.92 m
(+1.0 m/s)
Shot put
Moscow
Tver Oblast
18.02 m Anna Avdeeva
Samara Oblast
17.78 m Irina Tarasova
Moscow
Rostov Oblast
17.66 m
Discus throw Yelena Panova
Moscow
Vladimir Oblast
59.17 m Ekaterina Strokova
Moscow
Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
58.50 m Yuliya Maltseva
Moscow
Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug
56.37 m
Hammer throw
Moscow Oblast
Rostov Oblast
70.72 m
Samara Oblast
67.68 m
Sverdlovsk Oblast
Stavropol Krai
63.28 m [a]
Javelin throw
Moscow Oblast
Rostov Oblast
60.02 m
Voronezh Oblast
55.02 m
Saint Petersburg
53.71 m
4 × 100 m relay  Saint Petersburg
Ekaterina Galitskaya


44.93  Krasnodar Krai

Nina Morozova

Polina Miller
45.38  Penza Oblast



45.62
4 × 400 m relay  Moscow

Nadezhda Kotlyarova

3:34.18  Moscow Oblast



Alena Mamina
3:34.61  Perm Krai

Vera Rudakova

3:34.94

a On October 25, 2018, the All-Russian Federation of Athletics announced a 4-year disqualification of the hammer thrower for 4 years. Methenolone was detected in her doping test at this event. The result of the athlete in this tournament (3rd place, 66.54 m) was annulled in accordance with the rules.[7]

Mountain running (uphill)[]

The 19th Russian Mountain Running Championship (uphill) took place on March 31, 2018 in Zheleznovodsk, Stavropol Territory. The race circuit was on the slopes of Mount Beshtau. A total of 82 participants (51 men and 31 women) from 25 regions of Russia started the race. repeated last year's success, winning the men's race. Since 2011, for the sixth time, Alexei was in the top three of the country's uphill mountain running championship. became the national champion of Russia for the seventh time in her career. She won previous victories in the indoor 5000 metres (2007), mountain (up and down) (2010, 2011, 2017) and the uphill mountain race (2012, 2013). For the third year in a row, Anastasia Rudnaya, the world champion in orienteering, climbed the podium in the women's event. After two bronze medals, she won the silver medal, only 16 seconds behind the winner.[8]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
11.88 km

Height difference:+1098 m −142 m

Sverdlovsk Oblast
56:57
Bashkortostan
57:43
Udmurtia
57:56

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
7.1 km

Height difference:+888 m −102 m

Samara Oblast
49:38
Saint Petersburg
49:54
Samara Oblast
50:10

Cross country (spring)[]

The 2018 Russian Spring Cross Country Championships were held on 28 April in Zhukovskiy, Moscow Oblast. A total of 73 runners (34 men and 39 women) from 33 regions of Russia took part in four senior races.[9]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
4 km
Voronezh Oblast
11:19
Altai Krai
11:20
Moscow
Oryol Oblast
11:21
8 km
Novosibirsk Oblast
Zabaykalsky Krai
23:22
Krasnodar Krai
23:23
Moscow
Oryol Oblast
23:24

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
2 km
Moscow
Yaroslavl Oblast
5:58
Moscow Oblast
Saint Petersburg
6:00 Natalya Aristarkhova
Krasnoyarsk Krai
6:03
5 km
Moscow
Ivanovo Oblast
16:04
Tomsk Oblast
Novosibirsk Oblast
16:10
Novosibirsk Oblast
16:12

Marathon[]

The 2018 Russian Marathon Championships was held on 30 April in Volgograd, incorporated into the city's annual marathon.[10]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Marathon Aleksey Reunkov
Moscow
Chelyabinsk Oblast
2:12:20 Stepan Kiselev
Tatarstan
2:13:17
Saint Petersburg
2:14:30

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Marathon Sardana Trofimova
Sakha-Sakha Republic
2:28:55 Alina Prokopeva
Moscow Oblast
Chuvashia
2:30:24
Chelyabinsk Oblast
2:30:40

Mountain running (uphill-downhill)[]

The 2018 Russian Mountain Running Championships (uphill-downhill) was the 20th edition of the competition. It was held on 6 May 2018 in Rybinsk, Yaroslavl Oblast. A total of 48 runnes (33 men and 15 women) from 17 regions started the championships.[11]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
12 km

Height difference:+816 m −816 m

Moscow
55.34
Samara Oblast
56.09
Yaroslavl Oblast
56.47

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
8 km

Height difference:+544 m −544 m

Samara Oblast
42.53
Samara Oblast
45.50
Yaroslavl Oblast
46.12

24-hour run[]

The Russian 24-hour Championship was held on May 12–13 at the in Moscow as part of the XXVII Super Day marathon. A total of 55 athletes (40 men and 15 women) from 19 regions of Russia took the start. became the youngest winner of the championship: at the time of the finish she was 22 years 240 days. The men's champion, , won the national championship for the first time in his career. A 60-year-old Yuriy Galkin, after two wins in 2016 and 2017, appeared on the podium for a third time. For the third year in a row, the silver medal in the women's race was won by , and the bronze medal by . [12]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
24-hour run
Moscow Oblast
241,214 m
Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
234,371 m
Moscow Oblast
231,188 m

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
24-hour run
Krasnodar Krai
229,981 m
Kirov Oblast
228,389 m
Saint Petersburg
214,789 m

Relay[]

The Russian Relay Championships was held in Smolensk on May 30–31 at the stadium of the Smolensk Academy of Physical Culture. Competitions were held simultaneously with the .[13]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100+200+400+800 m relay  Belgorod Oblast



3:09.74  Saint Petersburg



3:11.08  Ulyanovsk Oblast



3:12.96
4 × 800 m relay  Moscow Oblast

Egor Nikolaev

7:31.93  Saint Petersburg



Valentin Smirnov
7:32.37  Udmurtia



7:44.69
4 × 1500 m relay  Saint Petersburg



15:45.70  Moscow



15:47.04  Bashkortostan



16:09.55
Shuttle hurdles relay  Kemerovo Oblast



59.42  Moscow Oblast



1:02.26 Only two teams finished


Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100+200+400+800 m relay  Ulyanovsk Oblast



 [Wikidata]
3:37.82  Kursk Oblast



3:40.81  Saint Petersburg



3:41.92
4 × 800 m relay  Saint Petersburg
Anzhelika Shevchenko


8:46.75  Moscow Oblast


Ekaterina Sokolova
9:00.03  Voronezh Oblast



10:15.59
4 × 1500 m relay  Saint Petersburg



17:57.21  Moscow



18:57.39 ne vruchalas' [b]
4 × 100 m relay  Saint Petersburg



Ekaterina Galitskaya
55.27  Moscow Oblast



59.51  Volgograd Oblast


Olga Fomina
1:01.44

b V estafete 4×1500 metrov u zhenschin uchastvovali tolko 2 komandy.

Racewalking[]

The 2018 Russian Race Walking Championships was held June 9-10 in Cheboksary. The route was laid along the embankment of the Cheboksary Bay. The competition was attended by 59 athletes (33 men and 26 women) from 9 regions of the country. For the first time, a women's 50 km race took place at the Russian Championship, following the IAAF's international recognition of the event in 2016. The first champion and record holder of Russia was Klavdiya Afanasyeva.

The 19-year-old Sergey Shirobokov claimed the men's title over 20 km: his result (1:17:25) made him the fourth fastest ever in Russia and the ninth in the world among adults. Elena Lashmanova exceeded the 20 km world record time by almost a minute, 1:23:39 versus 1:24:38. Her time was a new national record, but was not ratified by the IAAF as a global one due to the disqualification of the national federation due to the doping scandal and, as a result, the lack of international judges at the race.[14][15][16]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
20 km walk Sergey Shirobokov
Mordovia
Udmurtia
1:17:25
Mordovia
1:20:55  [Wikidata]
Moscow
Chuvashia
1:21:28
50 km walk Sergey Bakulin
Mordovia
3:42:20  [Wikidata]
Mordovia
3:54:20
Moscow
3:59:14

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
20 km walk Elena Lashmanova
Mordovia
1:23:39
Mordovia
1:27:42
Mordovia
Kemerovo Oblast
1:29:50
50 km walk Klavdiya Afanasyeva
Mordovia
Chuvashia
4:14:46
Mordovia
Udmurtia
4:22:36
Mordovia
Chelyabinsk Oblast
4:27:13

10,000 metres[]

The 2018 Russian Championships in the 10,000 metres was held on June 30 as part of the . Competitions were held at Meteor Stadium in the suburban town of Zhukovsky, Moscow Oblast. The races took place in the evening in warm and windless weather. A total of 44 athletes (29 men and 15 women) from 29 regions of the country started the championships. defended the title of champion of the country, leading from the start. In the men's race, Vladimir Nikitin won his first national title.[17][18]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
10,000 metres Vladimir Nikitin
Moscow
Perm Krai
28:16.43 Evgeniy Rybakov
Kemerovo Oblast
28:29.52
Tatarstan
28:33.40

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
10,000 metres
Moscow Oblast
Novosibirsk Oblast
32:45.94 Lyudmila Lebedeva
Moscow
Mari El
32:57.11
Moscow
33:01.25

Combined events[]

The 2018 Russian Combined Events Championships was held on July 4–5 in Smolensk. The competition was attended by 51 athletes (28 men and 23 women) from 18 regions of the country. Competitions were held at the stadium of the Smolensk Academy of Physical Culture. and won the outdoor national championship for the first time in their career. Vaseykina's victory was secured by 5743 points - the lowest winning score among for the heptathlon championship since 1992.[19]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Decathlon
Moscow
Krasnoyarsk Krai
7925pts Artem Lukyanenko
Moscow
Rostov Oblast
7813pts
Moscow
Krasnoyarsk Krai
7708pts

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Heptathlon
Moscow
Bryansk Oblast
5743pts Aleksandra Butvina
Rostov Oblast
Saint Petersburg
5719pts
Tatarstan
5692pts

Half marathon[]

The 2018 Russian Half Marathon Championships was held on 2 September in Yaroslavl as part of the Yaroslavl Half Marathon. The circuit was a circular 10.55 km route set in the historic part of the city. A total of 47 athletes (29 men and 18 women) from 24 regions of the country took the start.[20]

Competitions were held in warm and sunny weather. In the women's run, took the lead from the start. Tatyana Arkhipova overtook her on the second lap of the course and won by a margin of twelve seconds. In the men's race, the top three contenders for the medals were determined after the 15th kilometer. , who won the Russian title for the second time in his career, was the fastest in the final segment.[21]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Half marathon
Altai Krai
Moscow
1:04:45 Nikolay Chavkin
Moscow
1:05:16
Ryazan Oblast
1:05:29

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Half marathon Tatyana Arkhipova
Moscow Oblast
Chuvashia
1:11:23
Kursk Oblast
1:11:35
Perm Krai
1:13:34

15K[]

The 2018 Russian 15K Championships were held on 9 September in Saransk as part of the 46th run in the memory of Peter Bolotnikov. A total of 49 athletes (31 men and 18 women) from 12 regions of the country entered the competition. 31-year-old for the first time in his career became national champion. Elena Nagovitsyna won the women's race, following a fourth place finish at the half marathon championship a week earlier.[22]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
15 km
Khakassia
47.57
Samara Oblast
49.14
Samara Oblast
49.25

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
15 km Elena Nagovitsyna
Udmurtia
Chuvashia
52.51
Chuvashia
53.19 Gulnara Vygovskaya
Samara Oblast
54.55

100 km[]

The 2018 Russian 100 km Championships was held on 9 September in Saint Petersburg. The competition took place on Krestovsky Island on a circular track 2.5 km long under comfortable weather conditions (cloudy, up to +20 degrees). A total of 33 athletes (21 men and 12 women) from 20 regions of the country took the start.

The main surprise of the men's race was the withdrawal of the current champion and record holder of Russia . From the start, he stepped forward along with , after the 30th kilometer he made a successful break-away attempt and at some point had an almost minute advantage. However, after the middle of the distance, the gap began to decrease: by 60 km, the leaders again caught up, and after the 75th km, Larkin stopped running altogether. After the main competitor had vanished, Khudyakov was 17 minutes ahead of the nearest pursuer, which was more than enough to maintain the first position and win the Russian championship in the 100 km run for the third time in his career.

Several favorites stopped the fight in the course of the race and in the women's race. The current champion of the country came down after 57 km, the world champion ran a little more than 30 km. In the middle of the race, the leader was , the bronze medalist of the previous year's championship. At the beginning of the second half, she was ahead of and , who led the fight for the victory to the finish. At certain moments, Gogoleva's advantage reached almost two minutes, but by 85 km only 10 seconds remained. Zakharchenko closely approached the leader, but she did not have the strength for the final segment. Nadezhda Gogoleva became the champion of Russia for the second time in her career, Dina Zakharchenko won the silver medal, losing by less than a minute. For the second year in a row, reached the national podium in both supermarathon disciplines, 24 hours and 100 km.

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 km
Voronezh Oblast
6:47.47
Saint Petersburg
7:00.58
Mordovia
7:05.02

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 km
Sakha−Sakha Republic
7:44.50
Samara Oblast
7:45.41
Kirov Oblast
7:55.05

Cross country (autumn)[]

The 2018 Russian Autumn Cross Country Championships was held in Orenburg on 20–21 October. A total of 58 runners (38 men and 20 women) from 29 regions of Russia took part in two senior races. Competitions were held in cool weather with strong gusty wind. added the title of the strongest on the autumn highway in Orenburg to the victory in the spring national championship in cross country.[23][24][25]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
10 km
Novosibirsk Oblast
Zabaykalsky Krai
32.37
Bashkortostan
32.43
Bashkortostan
32.47

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
6 km
Kemerovo Oblast
21.32 Lyudmila Lebedeva
Moscow
Mari El
21.41
Kurganskaya Oblast
21.48

Mountain running (long-distance)[]

The 12th Russian Championship in Long Distance Mountain Running took place on 28 October in Krasnaya Polyana, Krasnodar Territory. A total of 42 participants (30 men and 12 women) from 13 regions of Russia took part. won the women's run for the fourth year in a row, ahead of Nailiya Yulamanova.[26]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
30 km

Height difference:+1311 m −1311 m

Samara Oblast
2:02.47
Bashkortostan
2:03.19
Samara Oblast
2:04.52

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
30 km

Height difference:+1311 m −1311 m

Samara Oblast
2:30.25 Nailiya Yulamanova
Samara Oblast
2:33.00
Samara Oblast
2:36.11

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  17. ^ "Chempionat i pervenstvo Rossii sredi yuniorov i yuniorok do 23 let v bege na 10000 m" (PDF). VFLA. 2018-06-30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-16. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
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