Olena Bilosiuk Explained

Olena Bilosiuk
Birth Date:1987 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Legnica, Poland
Height:1.75 m
Club:Kolos
Wcdebut:2 March 2007
Olympicteams:2 (2010, 2014)
Olympicmedals:1
Olympicgolds:1
Worldsteams:7 (20092013, 2017, 2020, 2021)
Worldsmedals:6
Worldsgolds:1
Wcseasons:15 (2006/07, 2008/09–2013/14, 2015/16-present)
Wcwins:2
Wcrelayswins:6
Wcpodiums:8 (2 gold, 2 silver, 4 bronze)
Wcrelayspodiums:25 (6 gold, 12 silver, 7 bronze)
Native Name:Олена Білосюк

Olena Bilosiuk (née Olena Pidhrushna (Ukrainian: Олена Михайлівна Підгрушна|translit=Olena Mykhailivna Pidhrushna; born 9 January 1987)[1] is a Ukrainian biathlete. She is Olympic and World champion and multiple medalist in different high-level competitions. Pidhrushna is considered one of Ukraine's most successful winter sports athletes. She lives in Ternopil.

Career

Her first international competition was 2005 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival in Monthey, Switzerland, where she won two bronze medals, and 2005 Biathlon Junior World Championships in Kontiolahti, Finland. Next season she missed internationally, but on 2 March 2007, she debuted in Biathlon World Cup by finishing 44th in sprint in Lahti, Finland. She was enrolled in the national team for all three last World Cup stages that season but didn't gain any points. She didn't get a quota in the national team in 2007–08 season. That time she spent competing at Biathlon European Championships and junior competitions.

In 2008–09 season, she took part regularly in the relay team, and on 7 January 2009, she was in the winning relay team in German Oberhof.

She represented Ukraine at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.[2] Her best result at that Games was rank 12 in mass start.

2012–13 season became one of her most successful. In the first sprint race of that season on 1 December 2012, Olena finished third in Östersund, Sweden, and was second in pursuit in Italian Antholz-Anterselva in January 2013. Later on, Pidhrushna took a hat-trick of medals at the 2013 Biathlon World Championships, where she won the gold in the sprint, was part of the women's relay team which won silver, and secured a bronze in the pursuit. For these achievements, she was named Ukraine's best sportswoman of 2013.[3] That season she ended ranking 8th in World Cup general classification.

2013–14 season started for her quite successfully, with one podium in January. Together with Juliya Dzhyma, Valj Semerenko and Vita Semerenko, she won the gold medal in the Women's relay at the 2014 Winter Olympics, in Sochi, Russia. Pidhrushna took a break in her sports career at the end of the 2013–14 season and was subsequently appointed Deputy Minister of Youth and Sports in the Ukrainian government.[3] On 30 November 2014, she gave an interview for biathlon.com.ua, stating: "I took break in my sport career for a decree only. I can't do anything before the time the child will be born... so I must do something... I want fans to understand my decision and wait. I hope to be back in future, after the child will be born..."[4] So she returned in November 2015. Her attempts to have a child were then unsuccessful. Later she divorced her husband.

She returned in 2015–16 season, which she started with two bronze medals in sprint and individual race in Swedish Östersund. In mid-February she won sprint in Canmore, Canada. That year she achieved her best World Cup ranking – 7. Next season Pidhrushna didn't have plenty of good results, and she missed all races in March.

She qualified to represent Ukraine at the 2018 Winter Olympics.[5] Pidhrushna carried the Ukrainian flag during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics. Due to poor physical conditions, she didn't compete in any race.

Biathlon results

Olympic Games

1 medal (1 gold)

EventIndividualSprintPursuitRelay
align=left 32nd 18th 21st 12th 6th
align=left 8th 26th 22nd 7th Gold
align=left Didn't compete
align=left 2022 Beijing7th

World Championships

5 medals (1 gold, 2 silver, 3 bronze)

EventIndividualSprintPursuitRelay
align=left 16th DNF rowspan="6"
align=left 24th 31st 19th 24th DSQ
align=left 14th 6th
align=left 11th Gold Bronze 11th bgcolor=silverSilver
align=left DNF 16th 5th 18th 5th 4th
align=left 10th 34th DNS DNS bgcolor=silverSilver 5th
align=left 4th 13th 24th Bronze
align=left 43rd 11th 7th 12th Bronze 4th

World Cup

Individual podiums

SeasonPlace Competition Placement
Sprint bgcolor=silver2
Pursuit bgcolor=silver2
Sprint 3
Individual 3
Sprint 3
Sprint bgcolor=gold1

Relay podiums

SeasonPlace Competition Placement
Relay 1
Relay bgcolor=silver2
Mixed relay bgcolor=silver2
Mixed relay bgcolor=silver2
Relay bgcolor=silver2
Relay 1
Relay bgcolor=silver2
Mixed relay 3
Relay 1
Relay 2
Relay 3
Relay bgcolor=gold1
Relay bgcolor=silver2
Relay 3
Relay bgcolor=silver2

Rankings

Season Individual SprintPursuit Mass start Overall
28 70 52 52
15 31 32 26 29
21 29 26 27 26
10 36 51 30 32
19 14
22 19 34 31 28
12
5 37 55 30 33
61 35 52
34 38 67 36 43
67 27 21 27 25

Personal life

Olena was born in Legnica, Poland, but she spent her childhood in Velyka Berezovytsia near Ternopil, Ukraine. Her family had to move because her father was a military officer.[6]

She graduated from Ternopil Volodymyr Hnatyuk National Pedagogical University, where she studied physical training and sports. Now she is a Ph.D. student at Lviv State University of Physical Culture.

Pidhrushna married Oleksiy Kayda on 26 May 2013.[7] Kayda is a member of Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) for the party Svoboda.[8] According to Pidhrushna, her husband was attacked in December 2013 by "provocateurs" during the Euromaidan demonstrations.[9] In October 2016 she declared that they divorced.[10]

During the awarding ceremony after her victory in the women's relay in Hochfilzen on 8 December 2013, she and other Ukrainian biathletes shouted "For Maidan".[9] Pidhrushna gained at a news conference after her women's relay victory at the 2014 Winter Olympics a minute's silence in memory of the people who died in Kyiv in the February 2014 Euromaidan riots.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Тепер Білосюк: Підгрушна вийшла заміж і змінила прізвище. sport.ua.
  2. Web site: Olena Pidhrushna, Biathlon . Vancouver 2010 . 21 February 2010.
  3. Web site: Retiring from Biathlon; Part 2, the Women . . 29 April 2014 . . 23 September 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141103161722/http://www5.biathlonworld.com/en/press_releases.html/do/detail?presse=2216 . 3 November 2014 .
  4. Web site: Olena Pidhrushna. Our sportsmen showed their character. biathlon.com.ua . 30 November 2014.
  5. Web site: Ukrainian squad for the 2018 Winter Olympics. Ukrainian Biathlon Federation. 20 January 2018.
  6. 5 facts about Olena Pidhrushna (9 January 2017)
  7. "Свободівець" Кайда повінчався з біатлоністкою Підгрушною , Tablo ID (27 May 2013)
  8. http://chesno.org/en/profile/154/ Кайда, Олексій Петрович
  9. "За Майдан" – біатлоністки підтримали українців на врученні золотих медалей, gazeta.ua (08/12/2013)
  10. Biathlete Olena Pidhrushna confirmed that she is divorced, (30 October 2016)
  11. http://uk.reuters.com/article/us-olympics-ukraine-silence-idUKBREA1K1KZ20140221 Minute's silence respected at Ukraine news conference