Fernanda Ribeiro
Maria Fernanda Moreira Ribeiro, GCIH (Portuguese pronunciation: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃dɐ ʁiˈβɐjɾu]; born 23 June 1969), is a long-distance runner born in Penafiel, Portugal. The pinnacle of her career was at the 1996 Summer Olympics when she won the women's 10000 m gold medal, establishing a new Olympic record of 31:01.63. Her victory gave Portugal its third Olympic gold medal.
Biography
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Ribeiro started running with Grupo Desportivo do Kolossal, before joining FC Porto, which she represented from 1982-1992. She returned to FC Porto after two years at Maratona Clube da Maia. Along with her sports career, she has worked at her town hall as a sports adviser to the mayor.[where?]
She holds Portugal's record for most Olympic medals.[citation needed] She has the record for most athletic medals won in Portugal, having participated in five summer Olympics (Seoul 1988, Barcelona 1992, Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, and Athens 2004) and many more European and World Championships.
Ribeiro has continued running in her later years and won third place at the 2010 Lisbon Half Marathon, when she was 40 years old.[2] She helped the Portuguese women's team win the title at the European Cup 10000 m in June 2010, rounding out the country's top runners with a seventh-place finish.[3]
Atlanta Olympic 10000 m gold medal, 1996
This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (March 2013) |
On 2 August 1996 Ribeiro ran in the finals of the Olympic women's 10000 m run. At the beginning of the last lap, Ribeiro was close behind the Chinese athlete Wang Junxia, world record holder and 5000 m Olympic champion. On the backstretch, Wang opened up as much as a 10-metre gap. In the last 200 meters accelerated, Ribeiro passed her opponent on the inside just as she entered the final straightaway. Wang had no answer.
At the end of the race, Fernanda said:
- I had promised to fight until my very limits, I only missed finishing on my knees. From the third kilometer I started feeling pain on the Achilles' tendon, managed to withstand, suffered, but I, for the dream of becoming Olympic champion, was ready to run until... death knocked me over! I just got a bit scared when I saw Wang, isolating 400 m to the finish line. But that instant I wasn't defeated yet... it was when I remembered my promise to go to Fatima on foot.[citation needed]
In November 1996, she made a pilgrimage to Fátima as promised to thank Our Lady of Fátima for her incredible victory.
Achievements and Results
This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (March 2013) |
Olympic Games
- 13th 3000 m, 1988 Seoul, KOR
- 9th 3000 m, 1992 Barcelona, SPA
- 1st 10000 m, 1996 Atlanta, USA
- 3rd 10000 m, 2000 Sydney, AUS
- DNF 10000m, 2004 Athens, GRE
World Championships
- 4th 3000 m, 1986 Athens, GRE (junior)
- 24th 3000 m, 1987 Rome, ITA
- 2nd 3000 m, 1988 Sudbury, CAN (junior)
- 22nd 3000 m, 1991 Tokyo, JAP
- 10th 10000 m, 1993 Stuttgart, GER
- 1st 10000 m, 1995 Gothenburg, SWE
- 2nd 5000 m, 1995 Gothenburg, SWE
- 3rd 3000 m, 1997 Paris, FRA (indoor)
- 2nd 10000 m, 1997 Athens, GRE
- 3rd 5000 m, 1997 Athens, GRE
World Cup
- 2nd 10000 m, 1994 London, ENG
European Championships
- 25th 3000 m, 1986 Stuttgart, GER
- 1st 3000 m, 1987 Birmingham, ENG (junior)
- 19th 3000 m, 1990 Split, YUG
- 1st 3000 m, 1994 Paris, FRA (indoor)
- 1st 10000 m, 1994 Helsinki, FIN
- 1st 3000 m, 1996 Stockholm, SWE (indoor)
- 2nd 3000 m, 1998 Valencia, SPA (indoor)
- 2nd 10000 m, 1998 Budapest, HUN
Road Relay Team Championships
- 1st, 1992 Funchal, POR
World Cross Country Championships
- 10th Long Race, 1994 Budapest, HUN
- 1st Long Race, 1994 Budapest, HUN (Team)
- 10th Short Race, 2000 Vilamoura, POR
- 1st Short Race, 2000 Vilamoura, POR (Team)
European Cross Country Championships
- 6th 4,5 km, 1994 Alnwick, ENG
- 3rd 4,5 km, 1994 Alnwick, ENG (Team)
- 4th 5,6 km, 1998 Ferrara, ITA
- 1st 5,6 km, 1998 Ferrara, ITA (Team)
- 15th 5,64 km, 2004 Heringsdorf, GER
- 1st 5,64 km, 2004 Heringsdorf, GER (Team)
- 3rd 8,2 km, 2007 Toro, SPA (Team)
European 10000 Meters Challenge
- 1st 10000 m, 1998 Lisbon, POR
- 1st 10000 m, 1998 Lisbon, POR (Team)
- 2nd 10000 m, 2002 Camaiore, ITA
- 1st 10000 m, 2002 Camaiore, ITA (Team)
- 1st 10000 m, 2003 Athens, GRE
- 1st 10000 m, 2003 Athens, GRE (Team)
- 3rd 10000 m, 2004 Maribor, SLO
- 2nd 10000 m, 2004 Maribor, SLO (Team)
European Cup 10000 Meters
- 2nd 10000 m, 2005 Barakaldo, SPA
- 1st 10000 m, 2005 Barakaldo, SPA (Team)
- 6th 10000 m, 2009 Ribeira Brava, POR
- 1st 10000 m, 2009 Ribeira Brava, POR (Team)
- 7th 10000 m, 2010 Marseille, FRA
- 1st 10000 m, 2010 Marseille, FRA (Team)
Lusophony Games
- 2nd Half Marathon, 2006 Macau, CHN
- 1st 10 km road, 2009 Lisbon, POR
Ibero-American Championships
- 3rd 3000 m, 1990 Manaus, BRA
- 1st 5000 m, 2000 Rio de Janeiro, BRA
- 1st 5000 m, 2004 Huelva, SPA
Iberian 10000 Meters Championships
- 1st 10000 m, 1992 Maia, POR
Medal Count
- 40 International Medals (23 Gold, 10 Silver, 7 Bronze)
- 26 International Medals - Individual (12 Gold, 9 Silver, 5 Bronze)
- 14 International Medals - Team (11 Gold, 1 Silver, 2 Bronze)
Medals By Year
- 1987 - 1
- 1988 - 1
- 1990 - 1
- 1992 - 2
- 1994 - 5
- 1995 - 2
- 1996 - 2
- 1997 - 3
- 1998 - 5
- 2000 - 3
- 2002 - 2
- 2003 - 2
- 2004 - 4
- 2005 - 2
- 2006 - 1
- 2007 - 1
- 2009 - 2
- 2010 - 1
Most International Medals - Women
- 62 Caterine Ibargüen, COL
- 50 Debbie Ferguson-McKenzie, BAH
- 43 Veronica Campbell-Brown, JAM
- 42 Merlene Ottey, JAM
- 40 Fernanda Ribeiro, POR
- 37 Maria de Lurdes Mutola, MOZ
- 32 Chandra Sturrup, BAH
Personal bests
- 2000 m outdoor – 5:37.88 (Lisbon, 1996)
- 2000 m indoor – 5:37.34 (Valencia, 1996)
- 3000 m indoor – 8:39.49 (Stockholm, 1996)
- 5000 m outdoor – 14:36.45 (Hechtel, 1995)
- 5000 m indoor – 15:06.52 (Moscow, 1996)
- 10000 m – 30:22.88 (Sydney, 2000)
- 10000 m Olympic – 31:01.63 (Atlanta, 1996 – Olympic record)
References
- ^ "Fernanda Ribeiro Bio, Stats, and Results | Olympics at Sports-Reference.com". Archived from the original on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ Fernandes, Antonio Manuel (21 March 2010). "Scorching 58:23 World Half Marathon record by Tadese in Lisbon! - UPDATED". IAAF. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
- ^ Ramsak, Bob (6 June 2010). "Farah and Monteiro take European Cup 10000m victories". IAAF. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
External links
- http://www.atletas.net Archived 31 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- Fernanda Ribeiro
- 1969 births
- Living people
- People from Penafiel
- Portuguese female long-distance runners
- Portuguese female marathon runners
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Olympic athletes for Portugal
- Olympic gold medalists for Portugal
- Olympic bronze medalists for Portugal
- Golden Globes (Portugal) winners
- World Athletics Championships medalists
- European Athletics Championships medalists
- Medalists at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Medalists at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Olympic gold medalists in athletics (track and field)
- Olympic bronze medalists in athletics (track and field)
- Goodwill Games medalists in athletics
- World Athletics Championships winners
- Competitors at the 1994 Goodwill Games
- Sportspeople from Porto District