Natalia Zabolotnaya

Natalya Alexandrovna Sabolotnaja (Russian Наталья Александровна Заболотная; born August 15, 1985 in Salsk, Russia) is a Russian weightlifter.

Career

Your biggest success so far celebrated Natalja Sabolotnaja at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, where she was able to win the silver medal with 272.5 kg behind the same power, but lighter Thai Pawina Thongsuk in the weight class up to 75 kg. This two combat power at that time was a world record, the individual performance in the snatch with 125 kg also. The world record in the snatch since she could improve five times since December 17, 2011 to 135 kg; between them were also the Chinese Chung Hong Liu and Podobedowa record keepers (as of July 2012).

On November 13, 2005, she presented at the World Championships in Doha a duel world record of 285 kg, which was improved by about half a year of Svetlana Podobedowa 1 kg and 28 November 2009 at the 2009 World Championships of Podobedowa by a further 6 kg was exceeded. In the 2010 World Cup in Antalya she took the record with 293 kg back, but it could increase to 295 kg Podobedowa in the same competition. Since November 17, 2011 Sabolotnaja is again a world record with 296 kg (as of July 2012).

Sabolotnaja holds with 130 kg in the snatch since November 13, 2005 to continue the junior world record (as of July 2012).

For Russia, it also won the silver medal at the 2005 World Championships 285 kg and the silver medal at the 2007 World Championships 281 kg.

In addition, there are four gold medals in single combat, they at the European Championships in 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2010, each with 278 kg, 264 kg ( 123 141) and 265 kg ( 120 145) and 285 kg ( 129 156) in the overall has brought. This performance is at the same time at the 2010 European Championships the best of all lifters with 322.6 points relative ( Sinclair).

In the Summer Olympics 2012, she was able to improve the Olympic records in the snatch at 131 kg and in a duel to 291 kg, but remained so because of the higher by 220 g body weight in 2nd place behind the Kazakh Svetlana Podobedowa, with 161 kg a new Olympic record in pushing achieved.

Natalya Sabolotnaja used in bumping to the relatively rarely seen object push technology without lunge.

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