Dmytro Baranovskyi Explained

Dmytro Baranovskyi or Dmytro Baranovskyy (Ukrainian: Дмитро Барановський; born July 28, 1979) is a male long-distance runner from Ukraine who specialises in the marathon. He represented his country in the event at the 2004 Summer Olympics.

Career

Baranovskyy won the 2005 edition of the annual Fukuoka Marathon, clocking 2:08:29 on December 4, 2005. He set his personal best of 2:07:15 at the competition the following year, but was beaten into the runner-up spot by Haile Gebrselassie.[1] He was also the winner of the 10,000 metres gold medal at the 2001 European Athletics U23 Championships.

He returned to Fukuoka in 2011 and came seventh, the second European to finish after Dmitriy Safronov.[2]

Achievements

Representing
1999European U23 ChampionshipsGöteborg, Sweden8th5000m13:59.55
4th10,000m29:28.68
2001European U23 ChampionshipsAmsterdam, Netherlandsbgcolor=silver2nd5000m14:03.67
bgcolor=gold1st10,000m29:13.36
2003Frankfurt MarathonFrankfurt, Germany5thMarathon2:12:47
2004Hamburg MarathonHamburg, Germany10thMarathon2:12:34
Athens, Greece - MarathonDNF
Frankfurt MarathonFrankfurt, Germany6thMarathon2:15:03
2005Hamburg MarathonHamburg, Germany5thMarathon2:11:57
Fukuoka, Japan1stMarathon2:08:29
2006Vienna MarathonVienna, Austria3rdMarathon2:10:56
Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan2ndMarathon2:07:15
2007Seoul International MarathonSeoul, South Korea6thMarathon2:10:51
2008Lake Biwa MarathonOtsu, Japan17thMarathon2:16:17
2009Tokyo MarathonTokyo, Japan7thMarathon2:13:17
Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan3rdMarathon2:08:19
2010Boston MarathonBoston, United States17thMarathon2:17:15
Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan6thMarathon2:13:40
2011Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan7thMarathon2:12:08
2012Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan10thMarathon2:13:23
2013Warsaw MarathonWarsaw, Poland7thMarathon2:12:46
2014Warsaw MarathonWarsaw, Poland9thMarathon2:12:40
2016Fukuoka MarathonFukuoka, Japan8thMarathon2:11:39
2017Warsaw MarathonWarsaw, Poland7thMarathon2:17:18

External links

Notes and References

  1. Nakamura, Ken (2006-12-03). Gebrselassie’s 2:06:52 victory falls just shy of course record in Fukuoka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-12-06.
  2. Nakamura, Ken (2011-11-04). Running in his debut, Ndambiri triumphs in Fukuoka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-12-04.