Marina Georgieva-Nikolova Explained

Sport:Short track speed skating
Marina Georgieva-Nikolova
Birth Date:10 June 1980
Birth Place:Sofia, Bulgaria
Height:5 ft 3 in
Weight:119 lb
Worlds:4
Highestranking:12 (overall)

Marina Georgieva-Nikolova (Bulgarian: Марина Георгиева-Николова, born June 10, 1980, in Sofia) is a Bulgarian short-track speed-skater.

Georgieva-Nikolova competed at the 2002 and 2010 Winter Olympics for Bulgaria. In 2002, she finished fourth in her opening round race of the 1500 metres, failing to advance. In the 500 metres she finished second and advanced to the quarterfinals, where she finished fourth, failing to advance further. She was also a member of the Bulgarian 3000 metre relay team, which finished third in the semifinals and second in the B Final, ending up sixth overall.In 2010, she was disqualified in the first round of the 500 metres, failing to advance. In the 1500 metres, she finished third in the opening heat, advancing to the quarterfinals, where she finished seventh and did not advance. Her best individual finish, is 15th, in the 2002 500 metres.[1]

As of 2013, Georgieva-Nikolova has won three bronze medals at the World Championships, as part of the Bulgarian 3000 metre relay team. Her best individual performance at a World Championships was in 2008, when she came 11th in the 500 metres. She also won two gold medals as a member of the Bulgarian relay team at the European Championships.[2]

As of 2013, Georgieva-Nikolova has two ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup podium finishes. She won bronze in the 1500 metres in 2006–07 at Heerenveen, and as a member of the Bulgarian relay team at Quebec City in 2007–08. Her top World Cup ranking is 12th, in the overall in 2002–03.[2]

World Cup Podiums

[2]

DateSeasonLocationRankEvent
4 February 2007 1500m
3 February 2008 3000m Relay

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sports Reference Profile. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418070442/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ge/marina-georgieva-nikolova-1.html. dead. 2020-04-18.
  2. Web site: ISU Biography.