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・ Aleksey Tillo
・ Aleksey Tolstoy
・ Aleksey Tregubov
・ Aleksey Trubetskoy
・ Aleksey Tumakov
・ Aleksey Uvarov
・ Aleksey Vakhonin
・ Aleksey Vasilyev (racing driver)
・ Aleksey Vdovin
・ Aleksey Verbov
・ Aleksey Vergeyenko
・ Aleksey Voropayev
・ Aleksey Voyevodin
・ Aleksey Vysotsky
・ Aleksey Yachmenev
Aleksey Yakimenko
・ Aleksey Yemelin
・ Aleksey Yermolayev
・ Aleksey Yesin
・ Aleksey Yufkin
・ Aleksey Zagornyi
・ Aleksey Zaleski
・ Aleksey Zhemchuzhnikov
・ Aleksey Zhigalov
・ Aleksey Zhivotov
・ Aleksey Zhuk
・ Aleksey Zhukov
・ Alekseyenko
・ Alekseyev I-21
・ Alekseyev I-212


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Aleksey Yakimenko : ウィキペディア英語版
Aleksey Yakimenko

Aleksey Andreyevich Yakimenko ((ロシア語:Алексей Андреевич Якименко); born 31 October 1983) is a Russian fencer, six-time team World champion (2002, 2003, 2005, 2010, 2011, and 2013), eleven-time European champion (team and individual), and team bronze medallist in the 2004 Summer Olympics. He won the Fencing World Cup series three times (2004–05, 2006–07, 2010–11), with fifteen titles to his name, and earned five gold medals in the Universiade.
==Career==
Yakimenko started fencing at the age of 7 in his hometown Burnaul under coach Aleksey Fitsev, a friend of his father's.〔(【引用サイトリンク】script-title=ru:Алексей Якименко )〕 He also practiced football and athletics, but fencing soon had his preference. Within two months of training he became champion of Altai Krai for his age group.〔 At the age of 13 he moved to Moscow to train at MGFSO under national coach Aleksandr Filatov.〔 In 2002 he won the silver medal and the team gold medal at the European Junior Championships in Conegliano and became double Junior World champion in Antalya. He was noted for his "dazzling technique, sparkling physique and excellent coordination". These results caused him get selected into the senior national team at the age of 18.
Yakimenko's debut senior competition was the team event of the 2002 World Championships in Lisbon, where he won a gold medal together with Sergey Sharikov, Stanislav Pozdnyakov and Aleksey Frosin. He claimed his first individual medal at the 2003 European Championships in Bourges: his winning streak was interrupted only in the final by his captain, four-time Olympic champion Pozdnyakov. He came away with a silver medal, to which a team gold medal was added a few days later. He was defeated in the second round of the World Championships, but Russia retained his World title.
In the 2003–04 season Yakimenko climbed his first World Cup podium with a gold medal in Bonn, followed a few months later by a second place in the Nancy Grand Prix. He made his Olympic début in the team event of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens along with Sharikov, Pozdnyakov, and Aleksey Dyachenko. Russia lost against Italy in the semi-final, but narrowly prevailed over the United States to earn the bronze medal.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Olympics Statistics: Aleksey Yakimenko )〕〔(2004 Olympics Results )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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