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・ László Sternberg
・ László Surján
・ László Szabados
・ László Szabó
・ László Szabó (actor)
・ László Szabó (canoeist)
・ László Szabó (chess player)
・ László Szabó (fencer)
・ László Szabó (footballer born 1989)
・ László Szabó (handballer born 1946)
・ László Szabó (handballer born 1955)
・ László Szabó (motorcyclist)
・ László Szabó (wrestler)
・ László Szalay
・ László Szalay (skier)
László Szalma
・ László Szapáry
・ László Szarka
・ László Szatmári
・ László Szekeres
・ László Szilágyi
・ László Szilágyi (judoka)
・ László Szilágyi (politician)
・ László Szlávics, Jr.
・ László Szobothin
・ László Szollás
・ László Szombatfalvy
・ László Szomjas
・ László Szuszkó
・ László Széchenyi


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László Szalma : ウィキペディア英語版
László Szalma

László Szalma (born 27 October 1957) is a retired Hungarian long jumper. He won six medals at the European Indoor Championships—two gold, three silver and one bronze—and finished fourth at the 1980 Olympic Games and the 1983 World Championships. His career best jump of 8.30 metres, achieved in July 1985 in Budapest, is the current Hungarian record.
==Career==
He was born in Nagymaros.〔. Retrieved on 7 February 2009.〕 He won a Hungarian title for the first time in 1977, taking the national indoor championship, and first made his mark in international athletics at the 1977 European Indoor Championships. With a jump of 7.78 metres he won the bronze medal.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1977 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 At the 1978 European Indoor Championships the next year he won the gold medal with a jump of 7.83 metres.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1978 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 In 1980 he competed at the Olympic Games in Moscow, finishing fourth.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=László Szalma )〕 Then, despite jumping even better at the 1981 European Indoor Championships, Szalma only finished fourth with 7.90 metres, eleven centimetres behind the winner Rolf Bernhard.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1981 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 In the summer he won the gold medal at the 1981 Summer Universiade. At the 1982 European Indoor Championships, there was an eleven centimetre gap between first and seventh place; Szalma finished in between at a fifth place.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1982 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 At the 1982 European Championships he dropped slightly to an eleventh place.
In 1983 Szalma competed at the inaugural World Championships. He leapt 7.97 metres to progress from the qualifying round,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Results - LONG JUMP - Men - Qualification )〕 and finished fourth in the final with 8.12 metres.〔 He missed the 1984 Summer Olympics due to the Soviet-led 1984 Summer Olympics boycott, but repeated the fourth place at the 1985 World Indoor Games. During the 1984–85 indoor season he also won the silver medal at the European Indoor Championships. It was a very tight competition, with Szalma tying the winner, his compatriot Gyula Pálóczi, on 8.15 metres but with Pálóczi winning on countback. Also, Szalma was one centimetre ahead of bronze medalist Sergey Layevskiy and two centimetres ahead of fourth placer Ján Leitner.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1985 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 In the summer he jumped a career best of 8.30 metres, in July in Budapest.〔 The result is the Hungarian record, and also the best result in Europe that year. At the end of the season he finished third at the 1985 World Cup, tying with but losing to Robert Emmiyan at 8.09 metres.
At the 1986 European Indoor Championships Szalma won his second silver medal in a row, but this time with a jump of 8.24 metres,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1986 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 which was a career best on the indoor track.〔 In 1987 there were two indoor championships, with Szalma finishing fourth at the European〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1987 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 and sixth at the 1987 World Indoor Championships.〔 In 1988 he won his last silver medal at the European Indoor Championships, finishing three centimetres behind Frans Maas and three ahead of Giovanni Evangelisti.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1988 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 In the summer he competed at the 1988 Olympic Games, finishing sixth both in the qualifying round and in the final.〔 In 1989 he finished fourth at both the European〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1989 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 and the 1989 World Indoor Championships.〔
At his final European Indoor Championships in 1990, Szalma only managed a fifteenth place.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1990 European Indoor Championships, men's long jump final )〕 At his third Olympic participation, two years later, he did not manage to reach the final of the long jump competition.
He became the Hungarian long jump champion in 1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985 and 1988, rivalling with Béla Bakosi, Gyula Pálóczi, Zsolt Szabó and Csaba Almási. He also became Hungarian indoor champion in the years 1977 through 1990, except for one year, as Gyula Pálóczi won in 1985.〔 Szalma stands tall, and during his active career he weighed .〔

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