Anna Chicherova
Anna Vladimirovna Chicherova (born 22 July 1982) is a retired Russian high jumper of Armenian origin who competed at the elite level for over two decades.[1][2] She achieved her greatest success with a gold medal in the women's high jump at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, clearing 2.02 metres to secure victory.[3] Chicherova also claimed the world outdoor title at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu with a leap of 2.03 metres, marking her sole major championship win at the senior outdoor level that remains untainted.[1] Her personal best of 2.07 metres, set in 2011, ranks her among the top performers in the event's history.[3] However, her career was marred by doping violations; reanalysis of samples led to the stripping of her 2008 Olympic bronze medal and 2009 World Championships silver, reflecting broader issues with prohibited substance use in Russian athletics during that era.[4][5] Chicherova retired in January 2023 at age 40, after earning additional medals such as silver at the 2016 Olympics and multiple indoor world silvers.[6][7]Early Life and Career Beginnings
Birth and Introduction to Athletics
Anna Chicherova was born on 22 July 1982 near Rostov in western Russia, though her official birthplace is recorded as Armenia due to her mother's Armenian heritage and the registration there.[8] [1] Her family background immersed her in sports from infancy; her father competed as a high jumper, while her mother played basketball professionally.[9] Chicherova's introduction to athletics occurred in early childhood through her father's influence, who regularly brought her to the local stadium. Family photographs document her jumping over a low bar at age three, marking the onset of her engagement with jumping events.[8] This exposure steered her toward high jump as her primary discipline, building on her father's expertise and fostering technical familiarity from a foundational age.[9] By her youth, Chicherova transitioned from informal play to structured training, leveraging the athletic environment to develop her skills systematically. Her early starts contrasted with later breakthroughs, such as the 2003 Russian indoor record of 2.04 meters, but laid the groundwork for elite-level technique refinement.[9]Initial Competitions and Development
Chicherova began training in high jump at age seven under her father, Vladimir Chicherov, a former professional jumper who introduced her to the event in their hometown of Belaya Kalitva.[10] [11] This early start occurred amid post-Soviet economic difficulties that limited resources for young athletes in Russia, yet her father's coaching laid the foundation for her technical proficiency.[11] At age 16, she relocated to Moscow to enroll in the Russian Sports Academy, where she refined her skills under structured professional guidance.[10] Her breakthrough came in 1999 at the World Youth Championships in Bydgoszcz, Poland, earning gold with a personal best clearance of 1.89 meters on July 17.[10] This victory marked her emergence as a junior prospect, showcasing consistent form over increasing heights. The following year, competing as a 17-year-old at the 2000 World Junior Championships in Santiago, Chile, Chicherova qualified with 1.83 meters before placing fourth in the final on October 20 with 1.85 meters, behind winner Tatyana Kivimägi of Estonia.[12] This performance highlighted her developing competitiveness against international peers, though she trailed the podium by minimal margins. Early career progression involved adapting to senior-level demands, with initial personal bests around 1.85–1.89 meters reflecting steady technical gains in approach speed and bar clearance efficiency.[10]Major Competitive Achievements
World Championships and Olympic Performances
Chicherova debuted at the Olympics in Athens 2004, placing sixth in the women's high jump final with a clearance of 1.96 m.[13] At the Beijing 2008 Games, she originally secured bronze with 2.03 m in the final after qualifying at 1.93 m, but was disqualified in 2016 after her sample retested positive for turinabol, resulting in the annulment of her results from July 2008 through October 2010.[14][15] She won gold at the London 2012 Olympics, clearing a personal best of 2.05 m to edge out competitors on countback after several others reached 2.03 m.[16] In Rio 2016, Chicherova took silver with 1.97 m, finishing behind Ruth Beitia of Spain who cleared the same height on her first attempt.[1]| Olympics | Location | Qualification Height | Final Height | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Athens | - | 1.96 m | 6th |
| 2008 | Beijing | 1.93 m | 2.03 m (DQ) | DQ (orig. 3rd) |
| 2012 | London | 1.95 m | 2.05 m | 1st |
| 2016 | Rio | 1.94 m | 1.97 m | 2nd |
| World Championships | Location | Final Height | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Osaka | 2.00 m | 2nd |
| 2009 | Berlin | 2.00 m (DQ) | DQ (orig. 2nd) |
| 2011 | Daegu | 2.03 m | 1st |
| 2013 | Moscow | 2.00 m | 2nd |
| 2015 | Beijing | 1.99 m | 3rd |
European and National Successes
Chicherova secured gold at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships in Madrid, Spain, clearing a height of 1.97 m to claim her first senior European title.[19] She followed this with silver at the 2009 European Indoor Championships in Turin, Italy, achieving 1.99 m.[1] In 2011, she won gold at the European Indoor Championships in Paris, France, with a leap of 2.01 m.[1] At the outdoor European Athletics Championships, Chicherova earned gold in 2010 in Barcelona, Spain, clearing 2.03 m, and defended her continental dominance with another gold in 2012 in Helsinki, Finland, at 2.05 m.[1] These victories highlighted her peak form during that period, with the 2012 performance marking one of her seasonal bests. On the national stage, Chicherova was a dominant figure in Russian high jump, winning the title six times between 2004 and 2012, including consecutive victories from 2007 to 2009. Her 2011 national championship win in Cheboksary featured a Russian record clearance of 2.07 m, surpassing the previous mark and underscoring her technical prowess post-maternity.[20] She added another national title in 2016, jumping 1.98 m.[14] These successes solidified her status as one of Russia's premier high jumpers domestically.Doping Violations and Sanctions
2008 Beijing Olympics Retest and Disqualification
In August 2008, at the Beijing Olympics, Chicherova placed third in the women's high jump final with a leap of 2.03 meters, earning a bronze medal behind gold medalist Yelena Isinbayeva (Russia) and silver medalist Vita Palamar (Ukraine).[21][22] Following the final on August 24, 2008, she provided a urine sample for doping control. As part of the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) reanalysis program for samples from the 2008 Games—initiated to apply advanced detection methods unavailable at the time—Chicherova's A and B samples tested positive for dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (turinabol), a prohibited anabolic steroid.[21][23] On October 6, 2016, the IOC Disciplinary Commission disqualified her from the high jump event, annulled all her results from the competition, and stripped her of the bronze medal, with the decision citing an anti-doping rule violation under the IOC's rules applicable to the 2008 Games.[21] This retest was among over 1,000 samples reexamined from Beijing and London 2012, targeting substances linked to state-sponsored doping in Russia, though Chicherova maintained her innocence, attributing the positive result to possible contamination.[24][22] Chicherova appealed the IOC's ruling to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), arguing procedural irregularities and chain-of-custody issues with the samples.[23] On October 6, 2017, the CAS panel dismissed her appeal in its entirety, upholding the disqualification and confirming the presence of turinabol metabolites as evidence of an anti-doping violation, without imposing additional sanctions beyond the event-specific annulment.[22][23] The bronze medal was reassigned to American jumper Chaunté Lowe, who had originally placed fourth.[21][24] This case exemplified the IOC's retrospective enforcement, which has led to over 100 disqualifications from the 2008 Olympics amid revelations of systemic doping in Russian athletics.[25]Additional Violations and Appeals Process
In October 2016, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Disciplinary Commission issued a decision disqualifying Chicherova from the 2008 Beijing Olympics after reanalysis of her sample revealed the presence of the prohibited substance dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (turinabol), an anabolic steroid. The ruling stripped her of the bronze medal, erased her results from the high jump final on August 20, 2008, and imposed a lifetime ban from future Olympic Games, pursuant to the IOC's anti-doping rules applicable to the Beijing Games.[21] Chicherova filed an appeal with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) challenging the IOC's findings, arguing procedural irregularities in the sample handling and retesting process, as well as the validity of the analytical evidence under World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) protocols. The CAS panel reviewed the case under its appeals procedure for anti-doping rule violations, examining chain-of-custody documentation, laboratory accreditation standards from the time of retesting, and the athlete's right to a fair hearing.[26] On October 6, 2017, CAS dismissed the appeal in its entirety, upholding the IOC's sanction and confirming the anti-doping rule violation.[22] The arbitrators found no substantive flaws in the retesting methodology conducted by accredited WADA laboratories and rejected claims of contamination or mishandling, emphasizing the reliability of the adverse analytical finding.[24] No further appeals were pursued, and the decision rendered the bronze medal redistribution final, with the IOC awarding it to the next eligible athlete. Chicherova's other titles, including the 2012 Olympic gold and 2011 World Championship gold, remained unaffected, as no violations were linked to those events.[27]Athletic Technique and Records
High Jump Technique and Training Approach
Anna Chicherova employed the Fosbury Flop technique, characterized by a curved, arcuate run-up that generates centrifugal force to facilitate backward arching over the bar.[28] Her approach speed reached approximately 8.75 m/s, producing a centrifugal force of 55.66 kg during the run-up phase, which, combined with gravity, resulted in a total encumbrance of 79.66 kg.[28] In the swing phase, Chicherova's fly leg achieved a velocity of 9.26 m/s over a distance of 1.14 m in 0.123 seconds, while her arm swings contributed additional momentum at speeds of 5.69 m/s (left arm) and 4.87 m/s (right arm), yielding 283.85 kg of centrifugal force.[28] The repulsion phase, lasting 0.123 seconds, relied primarily on elastic energy from tendon deformation rather than muscular contraction alone, enabling vertical takeoff speeds exceeding 5 m/s essential for elite performance.[28] Kinematic analysis from her 2.03 m jump at the 2011 World Championships revealed a horizontal velocity of 7.37 m/s during approach, a takeoff contact time of 160 ms, and a takeoff angle of 46.6 degrees, with horizontal and vertical velocities of 3.59 m/s and 4.18 m/s, respectively.[29] Her center of mass peaked at 2.22 m, demonstrating efficient conversion of horizontal momentum to vertical lift and a backward lean of 30.5 degrees during bar clearance.[29] Chicherova's training emphasized biomechanical optimization, including technical drills to enhance tendon elasticity and phase-specific velocities, as inferred from studies of her jumps highlighting the primacy of elastic recoil in repulsion.[28] As a veteran athlete, she incorporated periodized microcycles focusing on speed, impulse, and technique refinement, aligning with protocols for elite female high jumpers.[30] Her regimen supported sustained competitiveness into her 30s, with resumed technical training noted post-injury or breaks at facilities like Podolsk sports base.[31]Personal Best Progression and Seasonal Bests
Chicherova's personal best progression in the high jump marked steady advancement through her early career, culminating in a late-career peak. She first established prominence indoors by clearing 2.04 m on 7 January 2003 in Yekaterinburg, setting a Russian indoor record at the time.[9] Outdoors, her breakthrough to elite levels came with 2.03 m cleared on 23 August 2008 during the Beijing Olympic final, then her outdoor personal best.[32] The most significant leap occurred on 22 July 2011—her 29th birthday—when she achieved 2.07 m in Cheboksary, surpassing her prior mark and establishing the Russian national outdoor record, a height ranking third-equal in outdoor history.[1] [33] Indoors, she extended her ceiling to 2.06 m on 4 February 2012 in Arnstadt, Germany, ranking second-highest ever indoors.[34] These marks represented her career highs, with no further improvements recorded. Seasonal bests reflected her competitive peaks around 2011–2012, followed by solid but diminished performances amid injuries, maternity, and sanctions. In 2011, her seasonal best of 2.07 m aligned with the personal best.[1] The 2012 season yielded 2.06 m indoors and 2.05 m outdoors, including at the London Olympics.[35] By 2015, post-comeback, she registered 2.03 m as her seasonal high in Lausanne. Later seasons saw declines, such as 1.94 m (non-legal wind) in 2022.[1]| Year | Seasonal Best (m) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 2.04 (indoor) | Russian indoor record set early in season.[9] |
| 2008 | 2.03 (outdoor) | Achieved at Olympics. |
| 2011 | 2.07 (outdoor) | Career peak and national record.[1] |
| 2012 | 2.06 (indoor) / 2.05 (outdoor) | Included Olympic gold height.[35] [34] |
| 2015 | 2.03 (outdoor) | World-leading mark that year. |