Russian sprinter
Zadorina at the 2011 European Indoor Championships.
Ksenia Ivanovna Zadorina (Russian: Ксения Ивановна Задорина; born March 2, 1987) is a Russian sprinter.
International competitions
[edit]
Representing
Russia
Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
|
2005
|
European Junior Championships
|
Kaunas, Lithuania
|
2nd
|
400 m
|
53.39
|
2006
|
World Junior Championships
|
Beijing, China
|
4th
|
400m
|
51.99
|
5th
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:33.21
|
2007
|
European U23 Championships
|
Debrecen, Hungary
|
3rd
|
400m
|
51.78
|
1st
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:26.58
|
Universiade
|
Bangkok, Thailand
|
3rd
|
400 m
|
51.89
|
2nd
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:30.49
|
2009
|
European U23 Championships
|
Kaunas, Lithuania
|
2nd
|
400 m
|
51.76
|
1st
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:27.59
|
2010
|
European Team Championships
|
Bergen, Norway
|
1st
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:23.76
|
European Championships
|
Barcelona, Spain
|
1st (h)
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:26.89
|
2011
|
European Indoor Championships
|
Paris, France
|
3rd
|
400 m
|
52.03
|
1st
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:29.34
|
World Championships
|
Daegu, South Korea
|
1st (h)
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:20.94
|
2012
|
European Championships
|
Helsinki, Finland
|
2nd
|
400 m
|
51.26
|
6th
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:28.36
|
2013
|
European Indoor Championships
|
Gothenburg, Sweden
|
2nd
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:28.18
|
2014
|
European Championships
|
Zürich, Switzerland
|
16th (h)
|
400 m
|
52.57
|
2nd (h)
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:28.42
|
2015
|
World Championships
|
Beijing, China
|
4th
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:24.84
|
|
---|
- 1997:
Great Britain (Jamison, Sloane, Mitchell, Curbishley)
- 1999:
Russia (Levina, Yemelyanova, Grishakova, Pospelova)
- 2001:
Great Britain (Gear, Meadows, Duncan, Thieme)
- 2003:
Russia (Gushchina, Ivanova, Gulumyan, Firova)
- 2005:
Russia (Ovchinnikova, Kochetova, Migunova, Zaytseva)
- 2007:
Russia (Shulikova, Zadorina, Novikova, Litvinova)
- 2009:
Russia (Sedova, Zadorina, Vdovina, Ustalova, Mochalina†)
- 2011:
Russia (Subbotina, Yefimova, Terekhova, Topilskaya)
- 2013:
Poland (Gorzkowska, Hołub, Karczmarczyk, Święty)
- 2015:
Great Britain (Bundy-Davies, Clark, Ohuruogu, McAslan)
- 2017:
Poland (Muraszewska, Janowicz, Karaś, Gaworska)
- 2019:
Poland (Łozowska, Wosztyl, Widawska, Kaczmarek)
- 2021:
Czech Republic (Vondrová, Jíchová, Veselá, Malíková, Holubářová†)
- 2023:
France (Thery-Demarque, Delaunay-Belleville, Toriel, Maraval, Lasserre†)
- 2025:
Great Britain (Grieve, Newnham, Malik, John, Mpassy†, Ives†)
|
† denotes athletes who took part in heats only |