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Galina Vecherkovskaya

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BrownHairedGirl (talk | contribs) at 18:37, 4 August 2016 (recat rowers by gender, replaced: Category:Soviet rowersCategory:Soviet female rowers, Category:Russian rowersCategory:Russian female rowers, removed: Category:Female rowers using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Galina Vecherkovskaya
Personal information
Born27 June 1926 (1926-06-27) (age 97)
Leningrad, Russia
Sport
SportRowing
ClubBurevestnik, Trud
Medal record
Representing the  Soviet Union
European Rowing Championships
Gold medal – first place 1955 Ghent Coxed fours
Gold medal – first place 1956 Bled Coxed fours
Gold medal – first place 1959 Macon Quad sculls
Gold medal – first place 1961 Prague Double sculls
Gold medal – first place 1962 Berlin Double sculls

Galina Yanovna Vecherkovskaya (also Putyrskaya, Russian: Галина Яновна Вечерковская (Путырская), born 27 June 1926) is a retired Russian rower who won five European titles between 1955 and 1962.[1][2][3]

Vecherkovskaya was born in Leningrad, but during World War II her family lived in Ryazan Oblast. Her father, Jan Kazimirovich, was an engineer who was executed during the Stalin's purges in late 1930s. Vecherkovskaya started training in rowing in 1947, when she enrolled to the Lesgaft Institute of Physical Education (GDOIFK). She graduated in 1951 and until 1984 lectured at GDOIFK; after that, between 1984 and 1997 she worked as a physician at a city hospital for children. Around 1948 Vecherkovskaya married her coach, Kiril Putyrski, and for some time competed under his name as Galina Putyrskaya; they divorced around 1960.[1][2]

Before the 1955 European Championships, Vecherkovskaya and her partner Mikhailova were medal favorites in double sculls. However, two rowers of the Soviet coxed four became pregnant, and to save the team Vecherkovskaya and Mikhailova were merged into the coxed four that resulted in a gold medal.[1]

References