Vladimir Graudyn Explained

Vladimir Vladimirovich Graudyn (Russian: Владимир Владимирович Граудынь; born 26 August 1963) is a Russian former track and field athlete who competed in the 800 metres for the Soviet Union. He was a silver medallist at both the IAAF World Indoor Championships and European Athletics Indoor Championships in 1987.

Graudyn represented his country at the World Championships in Athletics that same year and also raced at the 1988 Summer Olympics. He was a three-time national champion. His personal best for the 800 m was 1:44.10 minutes.

Career

Born in Moscow, Graudyn joined the Spartak Minsk based in the Belarus SSR.[1] He first emerged at national level at the 1986 Soviet Spartakiad, where he was the gold medallist in the 1500 metres in a time of 3:44.29 minutes.[2] He also won the 800 m champion at the Soviet Indoor Athletics Championships that year – a title which he defended the following year.[3] On his major international debut he reached the semi-finals at the 1986 European Athletics Championships.[4]

Graudyn had most of his success at international in the 1987 season. At the 1987 European Athletics Indoor Championships he took the silver medal in the 800 m behind Dutchman Rob Druppers in a tactical race.[5] The following month he competed at the 1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships and repeated that finish, coming second but this time to Brazil's José Luíz Barbosa. He was the Soviet Union's only ever medallist in the men's event at that competition.[6] He was the Soviet Union's best performer in the 800 m at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics, missing qualification for the final by a margin of three hundredths and outperforming Andrey Sudnik.[7]

Graudyn set a personal best of 1:44.10 minutes at the Bislett Games in 1988 – this time placed him in the top ten in the world that year and he was third among Europeans, bettered only by British duo Steve Cram and Sebastian Coe.[8] [9] However, he failed to match this form at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, being eliminated in the quarter-final round.[1] That proved to be the last major international event that he ran at. His wife, Yuliya Graudyn, would later win world and European medals for Russia.[10]

National titles

International competitions

1986European ChampionshipsStuttgart, West Germany5th (semis)800 m1:47.50
1987European Indoor ChampionshipsLiévin, Francebgcolor=silver2nd800 m1:49.14
World Indoor ChampionshipsIndianapolis, United Statesbgcolor=silver2nd800 m1:47.68
World ChampionshipsRome, Italy6th (semis)800 m1:45.36
1988Olympic GamesSeoul, South Korea5th (q-finals)800 m1:47.07

Notes

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418081624/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/gr/vladimir-graudyn-1.html Vladimir Graudyn
  2. http://www.gbrathletics.com/nc/urs.htm Soviet Championships
  3. http://www.gbrathletics.com/nc/ursi.htm Soviet Indoor Championships
  4. http://www.european-athletics.org/mm/Document/EventsMeetings/General/01/27/31/44/StatisticsHandbookZ%C3%BCrich2014_Neutral.pdf European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK
  5. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/ei.htm European Indoor Championships
  6. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/wi.htm World Indoor Championships
  7. http://todor66.com/athletics/world/1987/Men_800m.html Men 800m World Championship Rome (ITA) 1987 - Tuesday 01.09
  8. http://trackfield.brinkster.net/Profile.asp?ID=2304&Gender=M Vladimir Graudyn
  9. http://www.gbrathletics.com/tp/eurm.htm European Top Performers 1980-2005: Men (Outdoor)
  10. http://trackfield.brinkster.net/Profile.asp?ID=918&Gender=W Yuliya Graudyn