Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova Biography

Elena Chalova is a professional Russian tennis player playing in the ITF Women's Circuit. On November 9, 2009, she reached her highest WTA singles ranking of 151. Her current singles ranking is 160 as of 19 April 2010. She is currently coached by Valeri Chalov.

Personal life

Elena Chalova was born to Valeri Chalov and Irina Chalova, and has a brother named Michael. She was born on 16 May 1987 in Ufa, Russia, where she currently resides. She started played tennis at the age of seven. Her favourite surface is hard. She speaks English and Russian.

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova


Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova

Elena Chalova

Babe Didrikson Zaharias

Babe Didrikson Zaharias Biography
She is undoubtedly one of the greats in the history of women's golf. But a strong argument can also be made that Babe Didrikson Zaharias was the greatest female athlete of all-time. Writing about her in 1939, Time magazine described Babe as a "famed woman athlete, 1932 Olympic Games track & field star, expert basketball player, golfer, javelin thrower, hurdler, high jumper, swimmer, baseball pitcher, football halfback, billiardist, tumbler, boxer, wrestler, fencer, weight lifter, adagio dancer."
They left out tennis and diving, among others. Somehow, Babe even managed to find time to play harmonica on vaudeville and win the sewing championship at the 1931 Texas State Fair!
Later, a newspaper reporter wrote that Zaharias "operates like a woman whose life is a constant campaign to astound people."

The Babe grew up in Texas, the daughter of immigrant Norwegians. She was nicknamed after Babe Ruth because of her baseball talents (she later barnstormed with the famed House of David team).

In basketball, she led her team to the Amateur Athletic Union national championship in 1931 and was an All-American 3 years.
In track and field, Zaharias set five world records in one day at an AAU meet in 1932. At that meet, her team won the national team title ... and Babe was the only member of the team!

At the 1932 Olympics, Babe won gold medals in the 80-meter hurdles and javelin, and silver in the high jump.

She didn't even take up golf until she was in her 20s, then won the first tournament she entered, the 1935 Texas Women's Invitational. And she worked hard at her game, hitting as many as 1,000 balls a day.

All the work paid off. She won, and won a lot, including her first major at the 1940 Western Open. She won 17 of the 18 tournaments she entered in 1946-47, including the U.S. Women's Amateur in '46 and British Ladies Amateur in '47.

Babe won on the Women's Professional Golf Association tour, too, the predecessor to the LPGA, of which she was a cofounder.

Zaharias was, by far, the biggest star of the young LPGA. At tournaments, she was a showman and a showboat. Her on-course banter with fans was often off-color, sometimes crude, but always entertaining. She gave the people what they wanted, and they came out to see her. Babe's star power has often been credited with keeping the fledgling tour alive, and behind the scenes she worked tirelessly to line up sponsors - sometimes cold-calling companies and haranging their CEOs until they agreed to sponsor an event.

Babe was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1953 and underwent surgery. She returned to win the 1954 U.S. Women's Open by 12 strokes, plus the Vare Trophy. But the cancer came back in 1955. She won the last tournament she played, the 1955 Peach Blossom Open, then was too ill to continue.

In December of 1955, barely able to walk, Zaharias had a friend drive her to Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth. She knelt down and touched the grass one last time.

She died months later at age 45.

Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson
Babe Didrikson Zaharias
Babe Didrikson Zaharias Golf Tournament Preview.wmv

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Elena Bovina

Elena Bovina BCoached by Oliver Gross
Best shots are her serve and forehand
Father, Oleg Bovin, is a former member of the Russian national water polo team; mother, Margarita, is a homemaker; sister Irina, studied law at American University in Washington, DC, and also plays tennis
Likes the powerful and aggressive games of Venus Williams and Jennifer Capriati
Favorite cities are Milan and Sydney
Lived in Morocco when she was very young and trained at the Bollettieri Academy in Florida from 1997-99
Favorite movie is The Fifth Element
Likes techno music, dancing, sushi, ice hockey, soccer and ice creamiography
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina
Elena Bovina v Julia Schruff: US Open Qualifying 2008
Elena Bovina

Elena Baltacha

Elena Baltacha Biography

Elena Baltacha is a Ukrainian-born tennis player who has played for Great Britain & Scotland
Baltacha comes from a very sporty family. Father Sergei used to play professional football . He represented the USSR & played in the United Kingdom with Ipswich Town & St Johnstone. Her mother Olga represented the USSR in the pentathlon & heptathlon at the Olympic Games. Brother Sergei played football, for Scottish Football League First Division team St Mirren of Paisley & Millwall.
Currently living in Enfield, London, England, with her mother, she practices at the Hazelwood Lawn Tennis & Squash Club, in Winchmore Hill, North London, where she is coached by Alan Jones & Jo Durie. She is part of a tennis academy set up at Hazelwood, aimed at grooming talented young players into future professionals. The club boasts 7 outside courts & 3 indoor tennis courts along with a further 3 squash (sport) courts.
After arriving at Heathrow Airport on January 13, 1989, Elena moved to Ipswich where her father Sergei was to play football for the next year before moving to Scotland. The family lived in Perth where she grew up & spent her teenage years. The British No. 1 tennis player reached her highest world ranking in March 2005, when she was ranked 118 overall. Most of her career so far has been plagued by injury. The 2006 Wimbledon Tournament was no different as she was forced to pull out of the main women's draw. Many critics believe that this vulnerability to injury has hampered her claim to become a major player on the tennis circuit.

She is quite heavy for her height it seems, and had the 3rd fastest serve in the women's game at one point.

She says she has a scientific approach to her game, aiming for strengh.

In her teens her career was delayed by a health scare.

She wears a cap and glasses when playing. and is said to laugh allot.

Her father also managed Inverness Caledonian Thistle

This site was written in February 2007

Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
Elena Baltacha
2011 US Open: Elena Baltacha (First Round)
Amelie Mauresmo vs Elena Baltacha 2009 AO Highlights

Ekaterina Makarova

Ekaterina Makarova Biography
A native of Moscow, Russia, Ekaterina Makarova is the daughter of Valery and Olga Makarova. Her mother travels with her on tour and her brother, Andrey, is a corporate sales manager. She began playing when she was six years old when a friend introduced her to the sport, and she began playing at Club Luzhniki. Makarova speaks Russian and English and lists Roger Federer and Anastasia Myskina as her favorite players. She is coached by Evgenia Manyukova and enjoys pop music, particularly Jennifer Lopez.

Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova
Ekaterina Makarova

Ekaterina Makarova in Luxembourg 2007
Maria Sharapova Vs. Ekaterina Makarova - Rome 2011 2nd Round Highlights

Ekaterina Ivanova

Ekaterina Ivanova Biography

VANOVA Ekaterina - born October 3, 1949. G. Leningrad. In 1967 came and in 1973 graduated from Leningrad Mechanical Order of the Red Banner Institute in 'Flight Dynamics and Control ". Every year from 01.09.1973 to 01.07.1976 on the job upgrading their skills in Mathematics and Mechanics of the Leningrad Order of Lenin and the Order of Red Banner of Labor of the State University of skill AA. Zhdanov mathematics. In 1978 she graduated from the intramural aspitanturu ELAM. In 1983 graduated with honors from the University of Marxism-Leninism of the Leningrad Party Committee.
At the time of study at the institute was proforgom group and Leninist Scholar. Attended lectures on engineering psychology at the University, which helped her in a comprehensive manner to the studied material. 11.1972-01.1973 - laboratory SRI team of devices. 04.1973-12.1975 - Engineer SRI team of devices. 12.1975-12.1978 - graduate student, junior researcher, Department No 5 of the Leningrad Mechanical Institute. 01.1979-08.1983 Junior Fellow No 5 ELAM. 07.1982 took part in the experiment of hypokinesia, conducted by the Institute of Biomedical Problems,. 09.1983-12.1983 - Assistant ELAM. 12.1983-199 ..... - Cosmonaut researcher ELAM. While preparing to fly into space was actively involved in scientific and pedagogical work in the Baltic State Technical University. Elected Chair Komsomol organizer ELAM, . was a visiting instructor, Department of the Party bureau ELAM, . Deputy Chairman of the Council of young scientists and specialists of the Institute, . Member MAN, . responsible for the collection of works on the dynamics of flight ELAM, . member of the Council of ELAM proforintatsii,
. In 1980 was admitted to the selection of a cosmonaut and former chief medical commission of the Ministry of Health and the USSR Ministry of Defense
. 09/03/1983 decision of the interdepartmental commission of the USSR CM credited to the cosmonaut and the Order of the Ministry of the USSR Wissa appointed cosmonaut researcher. From 26/12/1983 to 04/07/1984 held in the CTC training to fly a spaceship Soyuz T and DOS "Salute" as a cosmonaut-researcher. From 1983-1984 was part of the backup crew and was trained on the program "extravehicular activity". In 04 .-. 05.1984 passed entrance exams interdepartmental commission on the structure and systems of the spacecraft and the station with "excellent". In 06.1984 in the crew (together with VV. Vasyutin and VP. Savinykh) conducted comprehensive training with "excellent". Volume totaled 1,159 hours of training. From 19/11/1984 to 22/04/1987 was preparing to fly on a spacecraft "Soyuz TM" and the research station Mir as flight engineer for the women's crew (with S.E. Savitsky and E.I. Dobrokvashinoy). The volume of training at 22.04.1987 amounted to 3823 hours. During the period of preparation passed exams mezhdedomstvennym commissions to design and systems of the spacecraft and the station only to "excellent". On its own initiative, mastered functions captain and the manual docking in contingency situations. In 1987, EA. Ivanov was presented general designer VP. Glushko to participate in 1988 as a flight engineer in a space flight on the Soyuz TM "and complex" Mir "(jointly with VA. Lyakhov and VV. Polyakov), but for reasons dictated by the international situation at that time, was replaced by a citizen of Afghanistan, AA. Mohmand. Since 1988, cosmonaut researcher BGTU EA. Ivanov held annual medical re-examinations in the Institute for medikobiologicheskih problems with the endorsement of the medical review committee ( "is fit" without restrictions). In 1995, State President. RF Committee on Higher Education VG. Kinelev turned to RSA with a request to contract with EA. Ivanova for her flight into space. However B.D. Ostroumov replied that at that time crews to perform space flight ma station Mir in 1995-1997 had already been formed and approved by. She was also invited to contact one of the organizations (CPC, . RSC Energia, and IBMP) about the possibility of its enrollment in the state of one of the cosmonaut corps, . with subsequent incorporation of the crew subject to completion of all necessary procedures, . including the approval of the Interagency Commission on the Selection of Astronauts,

Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
Ekaterina Ivanova
farting by ekaterina ivanova - celebrity big brother
Ekaterina Ivanova

Jackie Joyner-Kersee

Jackie Joyner-Kersee  Biography
 Won three gold, one silver and two bronze medals over four consecutive Olympic Games.
Jackie Joyner-Kersee Joyner-Kersee's outstanding Olympic career included six medals, three of them gold.  Peter Read Miller
In every revolution -- and surely the explosion of women's sport is nothing less -- there is a leader. Whether vocal or silent, whether by purpose or happenstance, there is a figure whose shadow falls across an era and whose footprints mark the path for others to follow. In ways that could be measured, Jackie Joyner-Kersee was one of the greatest Olympic athletes in history, and in ways that could not, she was a rare combination of courage and grace, of power and vulnerability. A generation of women looked into her face and saw something they had never before seen in sport, and they were drawn to it.
"You could see that she loved everything she did and that she invested every ounce of strength she had in it," says Mia Hamm, who was 12 when Joyner-Kersee narrowly missed winning a gold medal in the heptathlon at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. "You saw her and
you got the idea of what a woman athlete should be. At the time it seemed almost like she wasn't responsible for just her sport, but for all of women's sport."
Hamm's words ring true. Joyner-Kersee is Sports Illustrated For Women's Greatest Female Athlete of the 20th Century not just because she was one of the best performers in track and field history, but also because the energy of her athleticism and personality wrapped itself around all of women's sport at precisely the time when it began to grow.

Joyner-Kersee was one of the first children of Title IX. She was 10 years old when the groundbreaking legislation was passed in 1972, mandating equal access to sports for men and women across the country. A brilliant athlete, she also became a surrogate parent to the later offspring of Title IX, her career beginning in one era of women's sport and ending in another. "When I was little, a lot of women's sports heroes were gymnasts and figure skaters, and I just could not relate to those sports," says Julie Foudy, Hamm's U.S. soccer teammate and, like Hamm, a teenager during Joyner-Kersee's finest days. "Jackie I could relate to."

When Marion Jones, who would grow into an NCAA championship-winning basketball player at North Carolina and a two-time 100-meter world champion, was a high school junior in Southern California, she met Joyner-Kersee at a track meet. "She encouraged me, said nice things to me, and I was just overwhelmed," says Jones. "Jackie was everybody's role model." Like Hamm and Foudy, Jones later became close friends with Joyner-Kersee and was more taken with her as a person than as an athlete. "She was everything I expected and more," says Hamm. "That's saying something, because she was one of my heroes."

Joyner-Kersee's childhood was set in the dark ages of women's sport, when athletic girls spent their time racing boys and playing on their teams. The second oldest of Mary and Alfred Joyner's four children, raised in the south-end slums of East St. Louis, Ill., she was first a dancer, then a cheerleader. When she discovered track and field at age nine, she and her friends would carry sand in potato-chip bags they found in a nearby playground and spread it in front of the Joyners' porch, creating a makeshift long jump pit. There were none of the elite travel teams that nurture the athletic careers of talented girls in the '90s. There was, instead, a man named Nino Fennoy, who coached a junior track team called the East St. Louis Railers and who gave Joyner-Kersee the means to learn about herself. (It is telling of Joyner-Kersee's generation that one of the most important moments in her life came at the age of 14, when she beat her older brother, Al, in a race. "He still says he won," says Jackie, "but he didn't.")

Yet it is not for inspirational qualities alone that Joyner-Kersee stands at the top of this list, ahead of Babe Didrikson Zaharias (No. 2), Billie Jean King (No. 3), Sonja Henie (No. 4) and the inseparable tandem of Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (Nos. 5 and 6). Joyner-Kersee's athletic résumé holds up to the harshest scrutiny.

Her silver medal in Los Angeles marked a prelude to one of the greatest Olympic careers in history, in which she would win six medals, three of them gold. Four years after L.A. she won not only the heptathlon but also the long jump in Seoul. At the '92 Barcelona Games she won another heptathlon gold and took a bronze in the long jump. In Atlanta she closed out her Olympic career with a last-jump bronze in the long jump.

Joyner-Kersee did for the heptathlon what Bruce Jenner did for the decathlon, taking an oddball mix of events and not only elevating them to great sport but also infusing them with high personal drama. In the final event of the '84 Olympic hep, the 800 meters, Joyner-Kersee needed to finish within .33 of a second of Australian Glynis Nunn to win a gold medal; she finished 2.6 seconds behind. Her heptathlon victories were operatic struggles. She won in Barcelona despite illness and debilitating heat, and at the 1993 world championships in Stuttgart, Germany, during one of the worst asthma attacks of her life. Her world record of 7,291 points in the event, set in Seoul, still stands, and Joyner-Kersee has the top six performances in history.

In 1987 she tied the world record in the long jump. It was broken a year later by Galina Chistyakova of Russia, but Joyner's 24'7" leap in 1994 remains the second-longest jump in history and would have won the 1999 world championship by an astounding 17 inches. True to her versatility, she also broke or tied American records for the sprint hurdles, both indoors and out. As a track athlete alone she presents a persuasive case for attaining the No. 1 spot on this list. But she was not just a track athlete. She was also an All-Pac-10 basketball player at UCLA. In 1996, at the age of 34 and long past her basketball prime, she played briefly for the Richmond Rage of the American Basketball League.

Yet merely reciting achievements sanitizes her greatness. It was in her last moments as an athlete that she best showed herself. After withdrawing tearfully from the heptathlon at the Atlanta Olympics and being walked off the track by her husband and coach, Bob Kersee, Jackie returned six days later to compete in the long jump. Stuck in sixth place among eight jumpers and reduced to a pale imitation of herself by the same injured right thigh that forced her out of the heptathlon, Joyner-Kersee faced her final jump. "This is it, Jackie," she told herself before sprinting down the runway. "This isn't the way you wanted it to be, but this is your last shot." Grimacing with every stride ("I never thought there was any shame in making faces, even when I was a little girl," she says), Joyner-Kersee reached into her past and popped a jump of 22'11 3/4", good for a bronze medal by one inch.

Two years later she dragged her tired body to Uniondale, N.Y., for the Goodwill Games, in which she would compete in her final heptathlon. Against all reason, in bludgeoning heat and humidity and on minimal training, she ran a 2:17.61 for the closing 800 meters, good for a 23-point victory over DeDee Nathan, her heir to American heptathlon supremacy. At the finish she fell into her husband's arms and wept. "I can't believe it's over," she said that night. "I can't believe the time went by so quickly."

Time has not slowed since. On a recent fall afternoon she rode in a limousine, scooting from a photo shoot in Kansas City to catch a flight home to St. Louis, where she could resume operations in her many business ventures, including Elite Sports Marketing (athlete representation and management), Gold Medal Rehab (sports medicine), the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Youth Foundation and her sponsorship of a NASCAR team. "I'm retired, and I've never been busier," she says. "I thought I'd be chillin'." Even postcareer she is blazing a trail.
Earlier that day she had posed for the picture that appears on the cover of this magazine with members of the U.S. women's soccer team, her successors in the public eye. At the end of the photo session, as the soccer players put on their team sweats, Joyner-Kersee pulled a yellow fleece top over her taut upper body, paused and then cartwheeled gracefully across the room. The soccer players, celebrities themselves, shrieked like schoolgirls. Joyner stood tall and laughed until she shook. If you looked closely, you could almost see the cord that connected them.
Jackie Joyner-Kersee 
  Jackie Joyner-Kersee 
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Jackie Joyner-Kersee 
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Jackie Joyner-Kersee 
Jackie Joyner-Kersee 
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
1988 Seoul Olympics Jackie Joyner Kersee 7 40