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Yipsi Moreno

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Yipsi Moreno
Medal record
Women’s Athletics
Representing  Cuba
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place 2004 Athens Hammer
Silver medal – second place 2008 Beijing Hammer
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2001 Edmonton Hammer
Gold medal – first place 2003 Paris Hammer
Silver medal – second place 2005 Helsinki Hammer
Silver medal – second place 2007 Osaka Hammer
Pan American Games
Gold medal – first place 2003 Santo Domingo Hammer
Gold medal – first place 2007 Rio de Janeiro Hammer
Gold medal – first place 2011 Guadalajara Hammer
Silver medal – second place 1999 Winnipeg Hammer
Central American and Caribbean Games
Gold medal – first place 2006 Cartagena Hammer
Continental Cup
Bronze medal – third place 2010 Split Hammer

Yipsi Moreno González (born November 19, 1980 in Camagüey) is a Cuban hammer thrower. She is a double world champion and Olympic silver medalist, a former world junior record holder and current area[1] record holder. She is currently ranked first in the world.[2]

Early life and education

At the age of 11, she was recruited by the Cerro Pelado Sports School in her hometown, where she started practicing shot put and discus throw. Hammer throw was not a regular women's event at the time, but following its introduction in Cuba in 1993, she eventually concentrated on this event. Gradual improvement earned her a place on the national junior team in 1996.

Athletics career

1997-2000

In 1997, Moreno won the Pan American Junior Championships in Havana with a throw of 55.74 metres, improving the two-year-old championship record with ten metres. She beat the second place finisher Maureen Griffin by a 46 centimetre margin.[3] This year she threw past the 60 metre mark for the first time, with 61.96 m. The next year, she finished fourth at the 1998 World Junior Championships, this time 29 centimetres behind Griffin.[4] After the World Junior Championships, Moreno started working with a new coach Eladio Hernández, himself a former hammer thrower. The cooperation paid off almost immediately as Moreno established a new world junior record on 29 May 1999 with 66.34 metres at altitude in Mexico City.

Later that year, she won the silver medal at the Pan American Games with 63.03 metres, only beaten by Dawn Ellerbe who threw 65.36.[5] At the World Championships the same year her only valid throw measured 58.68 metres, giving her an eighteenth place in the final (there was no qualification round).[6] At her next major competition, the 2000 Olympics, she improved to fourth place.

2001-2002

In 2001, she broke the 70 metre barrier for the first time, and improved her personal best to 70.65 metres as she won the World Championships in Edmonton. Three weeks later she won the silver medal at the 2001 Summer Universiade behind Manuela Montebrun of France, who had finished fifth in Edmonton. In 2002 she improved to 71.47 metres in Madrid in July. She was selected to represent the Americas at the 2002 World Cup held in the same city two months later, and finished second.

2003–2005

In July 2003, she improved further to 75.14 metres. At the Pan American Games she won the gold ahead of compatriot Yunaika Crawford, smashing Dawn Ellerbe's championship record with a 74.25 metres throw.[5] At the World Championships in August she defended her title with a second round effort of 73.33 metres. Her third round result of 72.52 m further secured the gold as runner-up Olga Kuzenkova managed no more than 71.71 m.[7] Commenting on her victory, Moreno stated that she "was happy for Cuba and my family". The inaugural World Athletics Final in Szombathely, where she obtained another triumph, concluded the season. At the end of the year she was named Cuban Sportswoman of the Year for 2003.

2004 was an Olympic year and Moreno was considered the pre-event favourite for the hammer throw contest.[8] Not only was she in lead of the world ranking, her new personal best and South American record of 75.18 metres from the National Cuban Olympics in Havana in April was the world leading result.[9][10] In the Olympic final, however, her chance of winiing soon dwindled as Olga Kuzenkova took the lead and Moreno fouled her first throw. Moreno went on to foul on three of her five remaining efforts, managing 73.36 metres in the fourth round, while Kuzenkova had improved to 75.02 metres in the third round.[8] Yunaika Crawford took the bronze medal behind Moreno.

The 2004 Olympic Games was the first and only major competition for Moreno in 2004. She did not compete at the World Athletics Final and experienced a foot injury which sidelined her for the first half of 2005. This meant she was dethroned from the leading position at the world ranking, but she recovered the position after a silver medal at the 2005 World Championships and a victory at the 2005 World Athletics Final. For the first time in her career, however, she went a whole season without improving her personal best.

2006-2007

In early 2006, Moreno won her first Central American and Caribbean Games title, setting another championship record with 70.22 metres. In August she again lost her top ranking position, this time to Russia's Tatyana Lysenko who had established a new world record of 77.80 m. Moreno's season best mark was 74.69 m from the Ostrava Super Grand Prix in May. She finished third at the 2006 World Athletics Final and the 2006 World Cup, both times behind Kamila Skolimowska of Poland.

On 3 March 2007, she broke her own area record as she threw 75.64 metres in Kingston, Jamaica. Establishing the new record in the fifth round of the competition, she followed this up with a 75.43 metres throw in the final round, again longer than her previous personal best. "I have had a good start this year, without physical problems", Moreno explained. [11] On 17 June she improved the record again, with a 76.36 m throw from the second round in the Janusz Kusocinski Memorial, Warsaw.[12]

2008

At the 2008 Olympics Women's Hammer Throw final, Moreno again won a silver medal, this time behind Aksana Miankova of Belarus, who threw an Olympic Record distance of 76.34 meters in her second-to-last round. Moreno was in the silver medal position with one throw left, and in her final effort, she fell short of Miankova with a throw of 75.20 meters, although it was her best throw of the final.

Footnotes

  1. ^ North America, Central America and the Caribbean (NACAC)
  2. ^ World rankings
  3. ^ Pan American Junior Championships - GBR Athletics
  4. ^ 1998 World Junior Championships - Official Results - Hammer Throw - Women - Final (IAAF)
  5. ^ a b Pan American Games - GBR Athletics
  6. ^ 1999 World Championships - Official Results - Hammer Throw - Women - Final (IAAF)
  7. ^ 2003 World Championships - Official Results - Hammer Throw - Women - Final (IAAF)
  8. ^ a b "CT" (25 August 2004). "Women's Hammer Throw Final". IAAF. Retrieved 2007-03-07.
  9. ^ Moreno improves Area record to 75.18 in Cuban National Olympics. IAAF (2004-04-26). Retrieved on 2010-04-29.
  10. ^ IAAF top lists - women's hammer throw 2004
  11. ^ Clavelo Robinson, Javier (6 March 2007). "Moreno lets fly with 75.64m Area Hammer Throw record". IAAF. Retrieved 2007-03-07.
  12. ^ Jackowski, Pawel (18 June 2007). "Tikhon and Moreno blast hammers out to 82.58 and 76.36m on superb night of results in Warsaw". IAAF. Retrieved 2007-06-21.

References


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