Tag: race

  • Radio Romania International Sports club

    Radio Romania International Sports club

    Many-time world and Olympic medalist, veteran kayak rower Vasile Diba died on February 20, 2024. The first Romanian Olympic kayak champion was born on July 24, 1954, in the Tulcea County locality of Jurilovca, in the east.

    Diba made his debut in rowing with the Delta Tulcea sports club in 1970, under the supervision of one of Romania’s greatest coaches, Igor Lipalit. In 1971, Vasile Dina succeeded his first great performance winning the national juniors’ title in men’s canoe sprint kayak single 500m race. Also in 1971, on the Snagov Lake in Romania, Diba became European juniors’ vice-champion in men’s kayak double.

    In 1973, being drafted for the military service in the structures of the Internal Affairs Ministry, Vasile Dîba was signed up by Dinamo Bucharest sports club. In 1977, Diba wins his first world titles in a seniors’ competition in Mexico’s Xochimilco. Diba won the title in men’s canoe sprint kayak single 500m race. Also, he was part of the team that won kayak 4x500m relay race.

    Vasile Diba’s career continued, until the end, with Dinamo Bucharest Sports Club. In 1976, as part of the Olympic Games in Montreal, Diba won the gold medal in men’s canoe sprint kayak single 500m race and the bronze medal in the 1,000m race. Also in the 500m and 1,000m races, in 1977 Vasile Diba won the world title in Sofia. In 1978, he retained his title in the 500m race at the World Championships in former Yugoslavia.

    In Moscow in 1980, Vasile Diba participated in the Olympics for the second time around in his career. Back then he won bronze in men’s canoe sprint kayak single 500m race and silver with men’s kayak four crew. Vasile Diba also took the start in the Los Angeles Olympics, in 1984, but he was unable to step onto a step of the podium.

    Vasile Dîba retired from competition in 1987. His record until them had been a scintillating one,so Diba is one of Romania’s greatest kayak rowers of all time. After he retired from competition, Diba opted for quitting the world of sports altogether, joining the Internal Affairs Ministry enforcement structures. He worked in the ministry’s Judiciary section in a Bucharest-based police station until 2001, when he retired.

  • Athlete of the Week

    Athlete of the Week

    A new edition of the Dakar Rally came to an end in Saudi Arabia and Romania has made its presence felt in the competition this year as well. In the car race, the Romanian carmaker, Dacia, came fourth with driver Nasser Al-Attiyah at the steering wheel. The Qatari driver was pleased with the Dacia Sandrider, which enabled him to win a leg in the prestigious competition.

    At his 15th participation in the motorcycle section, biker Emanuel Gyenes came 20th in the ranking. He has again compelled recognition in the Original by Motul, section where participants compete without technical assistance and for his remarkable performance Radio Romania International has designated him Athlete of the Week.

    Emanuel Gyenes rode a KTM motorcycle during the competition and slept in a tent while temperature dropped under 10 Celsius at night. He would wake at 4 in the morning have breakfast and get his bike ready for the race. In the all-out ranking he came 20th, five hours, 16 minutes and 50 seconds after the winner, Daniel Sanders of Australia.

    In the Original by Motul category, before the last leg, the Romanian came one minute after Benjamin Melot of France. He managed an exceptional performance during the final race though and has added a second title after the one he secured five years ago.

    Emanuel Gyenes was born in Satu Mare, northern Romania on March 3rd 1984. He made his debut in the 2007 Dakar Rally, when he came 47th. He secured his best performance in the 2016 edition, when he ranked the 14th, which was also the best performance of a Romanian in the aforementioned race.

    After his performance in Saudi Arabia, he told the journalists in Bucharest that he would like to compete in the car section of the prestigious competition in the future.

    (bill)

  • July 28, 2024

    July 28, 2024

    OLYMPICS – Romanian swimmer David Popovici has qualified, earlier today, to the semi-finals of the 200 m freestyle at the Olympic Games in Paris, with the best time of the series, 1:45.65, one of only two under 1:46 in an event where a 1:95-second spread covered the top 19 swimmers. The semifinals are scheduled for this evening. Popovici (19 years old) was fourth in the 200 m freestyle final three years ago, at the Tokyo Olympics. The Romanians Ioana Vrînceanu and Roxana Anghel qualified to the semifinals of the women’s doubles event, after winning the second series. Romanian rowers Florin Arteni and Florin Lehaci also qualified for the semifinals of the men’s double sculls, after finishing second in the second round. Romanian Sabrina Maneca Voinea has the highest score on beam and floor in the qualifications of artistic gymnastics. In the team competition, Romania totaled 159.497 points, being overtaken by Britain with 160.830 points.

     

    SEINE – The heavy rainfall in Paris in the last few days has affected the quality of the Seine, forcing the organizers of the Olympic Games to cancel the training for the triathlon contest, scheduled for Sunday morning, on the river crossing the French capital. The Olympic triathlon, made up of three events, swimming 1.5 km, cycling 40 km and running 10 km, is the first event of the 2024 Olympic Games to be held on the Seine, before the open water swimming events, scheduled for the second week of the Games. Before swimming on Tuesday and Wednesday, the triathlon competitors have the opportunity to “get used” with the river, even if some have decided to continue training in the pool.

     

    WEATHER – The weather  in Romania will be hot into next week. Until Monday evening, a yellow code is also in place in this respect, valid for the south and southwest of the country. Temperatures are expected to rise up to 37 degrees Celsius, while on Monday highs can reach 39 degrees in the south, then, as of Tuesday, the weather will again enter a cooling process until the end of next week, when temperatures are expected to exceed again 35 degrees Celsius. Meteorologists also say that Romania should brace for a new heatwave in August, but the nights will no longer be tropical.

     

    CHECKS – Romanian border police officers have carried out, since the operationalization of the eDAC application until now, more than 557,000 checks to establish the legal status of persons and to prevent and combat possible illegal acts, the application being used including by the mobile teams in the field. The most recent case was reported two days ago, when, following checks carried out in the departure area, a team of the Henri Coandă International Airport  found a man who could not provide documents, declined his identity verbally and presented a photo, on his mobile phone, of a Pakistani passport. Following the checks carried out, it was established that the man was on Romanian soil illegally.

     

    CHILDREN – The total number of children in Romania who had both parents working abroad was, at the end of March 2024, 9,039, some 719 less compared to the the previous year, according to data supplied by the National Authority for the Protection of Children’s Rights and Adoption (ANPDCA). Also, the number of children with parents working abroad dropped to 61,007 at the end of March, from 64,936 on December 31, 2023.

     

    FUEL – The average price of a liter of gasoline in Romania increased by 5.1% compared to last month, and the average price of a liter of diesel increased by 4.7%. In Bucharest, a liter of standard gasoline is sold at prices between 7.35 lei and 7.49 lei, and a liter of standard diesel is between 7.44 lei and 7.57 lei (1 euro is the equivalent of around 5 lei). Romania is currently in third place in the European Union among the countries with the cheapest gasoline, after Bulgaria and Malta, and in fourth place in terms of the lowest diesel price, after Bulgaria, Lithuania and Malta.

     

    RACE – Romanian pilot Simone Tempestini is in second place, out of over 100 crews, in the Rally di Roma Capitale, the fifth stage of the European Rally Championship (FIA ERC). Romania’s national rally champion eight times, Tempestini won stages 5 and 6, the latter being the longest of Saturday. Born in Italy to Italian parents, Tempestini has been living in Romania since he was 14 and became a Romanian citizen in 2016, the year he was also world junior champion. (EE)

  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week

    Romanian cyclist
    Ede-Károly Molnár this past Sunday won
    the European title in the mountain bike cross-country eliminator held in
    Sakarya, Turkey. It was Romanian cyclism’s all-time high so far. Reason enough
    for Radio Romania International to designate Ede-Károly Molnár the Athlete of
    the week.


    According to
    Agerpres Romanian news agency, in Turkey, Molnar overpowered great mountain bike
    cyclists such as the French Titouan Perrin-Ganier or Nils-Obed Riecker and Simon
    Gegenheimer of Germany. Molnar was also lucky, because during the last leg of
    the race one of his three challengers got his bike chain broken, so right from
    the start Molnar secured a medal for himself. The Romania stepped up a little
    bit and walked away with gold, being one second faster than many-time European and
    world champion, Titouan Perrin-Ganier,


    Ede-Károly
    Molnár hails from Sfântu Gheorghe, in central Romania. He was born on March 6, 1996.
    Molnar has been competing in the Concurează la cross-country eliminator (XCE) since
    2022 when he also won a bronze medal at the European Championship in Portugal. He also competed in the Olympic cross-country (XCO) and in the short-track (XCC) races, where he walked
    away with silver at the National Championships in 2023. Molnar was only defeated
    by Vlad Dascălu, a cyclist who will represent Romanian at the 2024 edition of
    the Olympic Games in Paris, in the Olympic cross-country race.


    For the Romanian
    cyclist, the next top-notch competition is drawing near as in two weeks’ time
    the World Championships are about to kick-start, held in Palangkaraya, Indonesia. It is the competition where
    Molnar will have the opportunity to prove the success in Turkey was not a
    random performance.


    —–

  • Radio Romania International Sports club

    Radio Romania International Sports club


    The Slovenian city of Maribor for a week running
    was the capital of athletes from all over Europe. The European Youth Olympic
    Festival brought together Europe’s hopefuls in a great number of sports disciplines,
    ranging from athletics to swimming, from handball to judo. To Slovenia, Romania
    sent a 92-strong delegation of athletes who competed in 9 sports disciplines.
    The Romanian delegation’s final record was made of 20 medals, so Romania came
    in 4th according to the nations’ competition. Of the gold medals,
    five were won by swimmers. Robert Badea won the 200m and 400m mixed events, Aissia
    Prisăcariu won the 200m backstroke event, while Daria Silişteanu won gold in
    the 100m backstroke. Added to that
    was the women’s relay team that won the 4 by 100m freestyle, In judo, Tudor Mosoiu won in the 60-kilogram
    category, while David Gliga walked home with gold in the 73-kilogram category. In
    athletics, gold went to women’s mixed relay team (100+200+300+400 meters) and
    to Alin Şavlovschi, in the 2, 000m steeplechase.


    14-year-old swimmer Daria Silişteanu is a national record holder in the 50m backstroke event. In
    Maribor, Daria won the gold medal twice. Here is what Daria told upon her
    return to Romania, sounding upbeat about the Romanian delegation’s results in Maribor.

    Us, swimmers, walked away with quite a few medals. In
    athletics but also in handball quite a few medals were won as well. I am happy
    with the result, especially in the 100m backstroke. I really wasn’t expecting
    that, I listened to my coach, he said I can have a more powerful start, I took
    my chance, he said I can finish the race quite fine and I swam as powerfully as
    I could.


    Six silver medals were also won in Maribor. In tennis, Giulia Popa won,
    in the women’s singles, also securing a win in the women’s doubles, alongside Alexia
    Tatu. In men’s doubles, Yannick Alexandrescu and Alejandro Nourescu walked away
    with silver. In the 400m hurdles, Ştefania Uţă won silver as well. In gymnastics, silver went to Alexia
    Vănoagă in the beam event. Also silver went to women’s national handball team. The
    bronze medals went to swimmers Darius Coman, in the 100m 200m breaststroke and to
    Andrei Proca in the 1, 500m freestyle event. Athletes Alexandra Hudea in the 3,000m race and Cristian Popescu, in the
    long-jump event, also walked away with bronze.

  • Radio Romania International Sports club

    Radio Romania International Sports club

    One of Romania’s greatest athletes has recently celebrated his 89th birthday anniversary. A time-honored veteran of our Olympic champions, born on July 22nd, 1934, Leon Rotman was the first Romanian to have won two gold medals at the same edition of the Olympic Games, in Melbourne, in 1956.



    Leon Rotman was born in the old Bucharest neighborhood of Dudesti, into the family of a Jewish store-keeper. When he was 15 and still an apprentice with the Timpuri Noi plants, Leon Rotman took up training on the premises of Flacara club’s wrestling hall, being one of the 67-kilgram hopefuls. In 1952, when on the shores of the Floreasca lake, he discovered the nautical sports. Soon afterwards he was granted membership of Dinamo Bucharest Sports club’s kayak-canoe section. Rotman was quick to persuade his coaches that his place was definitely in the men’s canoe single boat. It didn’t take Rotman too long to succeed a string of wins at national level, so much so that he gained membership of the delegation representing Romania at the Olympic Games in Melbourne in 1956. Back then, three of the four gold medals won in the men’s canoe events went to the Romanian rowers, who had no problem outclassing their challengers from Russia and Hungary, then the dominating powers in the nautical sports.



    Rotman’s s first noteworthy victory occurred in the 10,000m race. The Romanian had problems registering for the event since his boat was slightly bent, an official irregularity according to the competition’s organizers. Rotman was given another boat, but that also had a problem: it was longer than officially stipulated. The canoe was shortened with a saw, then during the race Rotman displayed his force and talent, defeating the favorites of the 10,000m race, the Hungarians János Parti and István Hernek as well as the then Soviet Genady Bukharin. Rotman won the race being 80 meters ahead of the runner-up rower, Janos Parti.



    The 1,000m race followed. This time around as well, Rotman was the favorite. He confirmed, and yet again won the race; with Hungary’s Hernek being Rotman’s runner-up rower. Just like in the 10,000m race, the bronze medal went to Bukharin. The third gold medal won by the Romanian rowers in Melbourne went to Alexe Dumitru and Simion Ismailciuc, in the 1,000m men’s canoe double race.



    In 1960 at the Olympics Games in Rome, the Romanian rowers won only one medal, again through Leon Rotman, who walked home with bronze in the 1, 000m men’s canoe single race.


  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The European Games in Krakow drew to a close on Sunday. All told, Romania won 17 medals, of which 6 gold, 6 silver and 5 bronze. Gold went to mountain biker Vlad Dascălu and athlete Claudia Bobocea in the 1,500m race. Also winning gold were Kinga Barabasi and Apor Gyorgydeak in the women’s and men’s individual teqball events, respectively to Bernadette Szocs, in the individual table tennis event, as well as to Romania’s national women’s table tennis team, in the nations’ competition.



    Romanian national men’s water polo team came in 6th at the World Cup in Los Angeles. In the fixtures for the 5-11 positions, Romania defeated Olympic champion Serbia, 17-14, and lost to Greece, 8-11. We recall our national team also succeeded a noteworthy performance a week ago, qualifying to the 2024 edition of the European Championship’s final tournament.



    In news from tennis, in the final of the WTA 250 tournament in Bad Homburg, an event with 260 thousand USD in prize money, Romania’s Monica Niculescu and Japan’s Eri Hozumi were defeated in the women’s doubles final by Lidia Morozova of the Belarus and Gamarra Martins of Brazil, 6-nil, 7-6. For their performance in Germany, Niculescu and Hozumi were handed a cheque worth 6, 090 USD and were granted 180 WTA points.



    The European U-21 football championship jointly hosted by Georgia and Romania has now reached its semifinal stage. The semifinalist teams are Israel, Spain, England and Ukraine. In this past Saturday’s quarterfinal fixtures in Bucharest, Spain defeated Switzerland, 2-1 in extra time. In Tbilisi, Israel grabbed a 4-3 win against Georgia after the penalty shootout. In Cluj on Sunday, Ukraine defeated France, 3-1, while in Georgia’s Kutaisi, England grabbed a 1-nil win against Portugal. The semifinals are scheduled on Wednesday. In Batumi, Israel goes against England, while on Bucharest’s Steaua stadium Spain takes on Ukraine.


  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup

    The European Games in Krakow drew to a close on Sunday. All told, Romania won 17 medals, of which 6 gold, 6 silver and 5 bronze. Gold went to mountain biker Vlad Dascălu and athlete Claudia Bobocea in the 1,500m race. Also winning gold were Kinga Barabasi and Apor Gyorgydeak in the women’s and men’s individual teqball events, respectively to Bernadette Szocs, in the individual table tennis event, as well as to Romania’s national women’s table tennis team, in the nations’ competition.



    Romanian national men’s water polo team came in 6th at the World Cup in Los Angeles. In the fixtures for the 5-11 positions, Romania defeated Olympic champion Serbia, 17-14, and lost to Greece, 8-11. We recall our national team also succeeded a noteworthy performance a week ago, qualifying to the 2024 edition of the European Championship’s final tournament.



    In news from tennis, in the final of the WTA 250 tournament in Bad Homburg, an event with 260 thousand USD in prize money, Romania’s Monica Niculescu and Japan’s Eri Hozumi were defeated in the women’s doubles final by Lidia Morozova of the Belarus and Gamarra Martins of Brazil, 6-nil, 7-6. For their performance in Germany, Niculescu and Hozumi were handed a cheque worth 6, 090 USD and were granted 180 WTA points.



    The European U-21 football championship jointly hosted by Georgia and Romania has now reached its semifinal stage. The semifinalist teams are Israel, Spain, England and Ukraine. In this past Saturday’s quarterfinal fixtures in Bucharest, Spain defeated Switzerland, 2-1 in extra time. In Tbilisi, Israel grabbed a 4-3 win against Georgia after the penalty shootout. In Cluj on Sunday, Ukraine defeated France, 3-1, while in Georgia’s Kutaisi, England grabbed a 1-nil win against Portugal. The semifinals are scheduled on Wednesday. In Batumi, Israel goes against England, while on Bucharest’s Steaua stadium Spain takes on Ukraine.


  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week

    Athlete Mădălina Florea came in 6th in the women’s Mountain classic event as part of the World Mountain and Trail Running Championship in Austria’s Innsbruck-Stubai. Madalina clocked one hour, seven minutes and 25 hundredths of a second, in the 15.5- kilometer event, held at an altitude of 760 meters, The winner was US athlete Grayson Murphy, with a timing of one hour, four minutes and 29 seconds, As part of the same event, Magdalena Bosânceanu came in 46th, Adelina Panaet came in 48th, while Liliana Dragomir came in 54th.



    For her remarkable feat in the recently-held Championships, Radio Romania International has designated Mădălina Florea the Athlete of the week.



    30-year-old Madalina Florea was born on February 3rd, 1993 in central Romania’s Sighisoara. Initially, Madalina was into rhythmic gymnastics for three years, trying her hand at the ribbon, rope, ball and the pair of clubs. Madalina Florea took a completely different career path in sports, taking up athletics and also playing football with her colleagues while on training sessions. In her senior’s career, Madalina scooped gold in the semi-marathon held in Bucharest, in 2014. Then in Great Britain’s Birmingham, in 2016, Madalina walked away with silver, also in the semi-marathon. Also in 2016, she won bronze in the teams’ competition as part of the European cross-country Championships in Chia, Italy. In 2017, in Abidjan on the Ivory Coast, Madalina took part in the Francophony Games, where she came in 4th in the 5,000m race. As part of the same event, Madalina Florea came in 3rd in the 10,000m race.



    In 2018, Madalina sustained a serious ankle injury and the ensuing surgical operation kept her away from the track for one year. In 2019 however, she had a vigorous comeback and won the semi-marathon in Bucharest, reenacting her performance of 2014. Also in 2019, at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championship held in Angostura, Argentina, Madalina walked home with bronze in the nations’ competition. In 2022, Madalina Florea’s record included a silver medal in the World Mountain Running Championship in El Paso, Spain.




  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week

    Athlete Mădălina Florea came in 6th in the women’s Mountain classic event as part of the World Mountain and Trail Running Championship in Austria’s Innsbruck-Stubai. Madalina clocked one hour, seven minutes and 25 hundredths of a second, in the 15.5- kilometer event, held at an altitude of 760 meters, The winner was US athlete Grayson Murphy, with a timing of one hour, four minutes and 29 seconds, As part of the same event, Magdalena Bosânceanu came in 46th, Adelina Panaet came in 48th, while Liliana Dragomir came in 54th.



    For her remarkable feat in the recently-held Championships, Radio Romania International has designated Mădălina Florea the Athlete of the week.



    30-year-old Madalina Florea was born on February 3rd, 1993 in central Romania’s Sighisoara. Initially, Madalina was into rhythmic gymnastics for three years, trying her hand at the ribbon, rope, ball and the pair of clubs. Madalina Florea took a completely different career path in sports, taking up athletics and also playing football with her colleagues while on training sessions. In her senior’s career, Madalina scooped gold in the semi-marathon held in Bucharest, in 2014. Then in Great Britain’s Birmingham, in 2016, Madalina walked away with silver, also in the semi-marathon. Also in 2016, she won bronze in the teams’ competition as part of the European cross-country Championships in Chia, Italy. In 2017, in Abidjan on the Ivory Coast, Madalina took part in the Francophony Games, where she came in 4th in the 5,000m race. As part of the same event, Madalina Florea came in 3rd in the 10,000m race.



    In 2018, Madalina sustained a serious ankle injury and the ensuing surgical operation kept her away from the track for one year. In 2019 however, she had a vigorous comeback and won the semi-marathon in Bucharest, reenacting her performance of 2014. Also in 2019, at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championship held in Angostura, Argentina, Madalina walked home with bronze in the nations’ competition. In 2022, Madalina Florea’s record included a silver medal in the World Mountain Running Championship in El Paso, Spain.




  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week

    At the World Rowing Championships held in Bled, Slovenia, the Romanian delegation’s overall record was made of five gold medals and one silver medal. On Saturday, the Romanian women’s four rowing crew, made of Mădălina Bereş, Maria Tivodariu, Magdalena Rusu and Amalia Bereş walked away with gold. Also on Saturday, the Romanian delegation’s only silver medal went to the men’s coxed eight crew, made of Mihăiţă Ţigănescu, Ciprian Tudosă, Florin Arteni, Mugurel Vasile Semciuc, Marius Cozmiuc, Sergiu Bejan, Ştefan Berariu, Florin Lehaci and Adrian Munteanu.



    On Sunday, Ionela Cozmiuc won gold in the lightweight women’s single sculls, while Ioana Vrînceanu and Roxana Anghel won the world title in the women’s pair. Olympic champions Ancuţa Bodnar and Simona Radiş won yet another gold medal in women’s pair event. The Romanian delegation concluded the competition also winning gold in women’s coxed eight event. The winning crew was made of Magdalena Rusu, Roxana Anghel, Adriana Adam, Maria Tivodariu, Mădălina Bereş, Amalia Bereş, Ioana Vrînceanu, Simona Radiş and Victoria-Ştefania Petreanu. According to the nations’ competition, Romania came in second, while Great Britain was at the top of the table.



    All medalists at the 2023 edition of the European Championships fully deserve the title of Athlete of the week. Spoiled for choice as it may be, Radio Romania International opted for designating Ionela Cozmiuc the Athlete of the week, for her exceptional feat in the individual event she won. Halfway through the race, Cozmiuc was third placed, yet her comeback was exceptional; Ionela Cozmiuc won the race, setting a new European record, with a timing of 7 minutes, 32 seconds and 43 hundredths of a second.



    Ionela Cozmiuc was born on January 3rd, 1995 in northern Romania’s Câmpulung Moldovenesc. She is 1.78-meter tall and weighs 57 kilograms. Ionela is signed up by Dinamo Bucharest sports club. Her international record includes the 8th place she won at the Rio Olympics in 2016, and the 6th-place at the Tokyo Olympics in in 2021. Ionela Cozmiuc is a two-time world champion, in Sarasota, the USA, in 2017 and in Bulgaria’s Plovdiv, in 2018. Ionela’s record also includes a bronze medal she won at the European championships in 2019 in Poznan, Poland.




  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week

    At the World Rowing Championships held in Bled, Slovenia, the Romanian delegation’s overall record was made of five gold medals and one silver medal. On Saturday, the Romanian women’s four rowing crew, made of Mădălina Bereş, Maria Tivodariu, Magdalena Rusu and Amalia Bereş walked away with gold. Also on Saturday, the Romanian delegation’s only silver medal went to the men’s coxed eight crew, made of Mihăiţă Ţigănescu, Ciprian Tudosă, Florin Arteni, Mugurel Vasile Semciuc, Marius Cozmiuc, Sergiu Bejan, Ştefan Berariu, Florin Lehaci and Adrian Munteanu.



    On Sunday, Ionela Cozmiuc won gold in the lightweight women’s single sculls, while Ioana Vrînceanu and Roxana Anghel won the world title in the women’s pair. Olympic champions Ancuţa Bodnar and Simona Radiş won yet another gold medal in women’s pair event. The Romanian delegation concluded the competition also winning gold in women’s coxed eight event. The winning crew was made of Magdalena Rusu, Roxana Anghel, Adriana Adam, Maria Tivodariu, Mădălina Bereş, Amalia Bereş, Ioana Vrînceanu, Simona Radiş and Victoria-Ştefania Petreanu. According to the nations’ competition, Romania came in second, while Great Britain was at the top of the table.



    All medalists at the 2023 edition of the European Championships fully deserve the title of Athlete of the week. Spoiled for choice as it may be, Radio Romania International opted for designating Ionela Cozmiuc the Athlete of the week, for her exceptional feat in the individual event she won. Halfway through the race, Cozmiuc was third placed, yet her comeback was exceptional; Ionela Cozmiuc won the race, setting a new European record, with a timing of 7 minutes, 32 seconds and 43 hundredths of a second.



    Ionela Cozmiuc was born on January 3rd, 1995 in northern Romania’s Câmpulung Moldovenesc. She is 1.78-meter tall and weighs 57 kilograms. Ionela is signed up by Dinamo Bucharest sports club. Her international record includes the 8th place she won at the Rio Olympics in 2016, and the 6th-place at the Tokyo Olympics in in 2021. Ionela Cozmiuc is a two-time world champion, in Sarasota, the USA, in 2017 and in Bulgaria’s Plovdiv, in 2018. Ionela’s record also includes a bronze medal she won at the European championships in 2019 in Poznan, Poland.




  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week


    The first major rowing competition of 2023 was held last week in Hungarys Szeged.



    The 2023 ICF Canoe and Kayak Sprint & Paracanoe World Cup brought together Europes top-notch rowers, with world and European champions among them. The Romanian delegation was made of nine rowers, of which seven competed in the mens and two proved their mettle in the womens version of the competition. The record all told earned the Romanian delegation the 3rd position according to the nations competition.



    Cătălin Chirilă won gold in mens C1 event, in the 500m and 1,000m races. Ilie Sprincean and Oleg Nuţă won mens C2 1,000m race. Reason enough for Radio Romania International to designate Catalin Chirila the Athlete of the week.



    In Szeged, Cătălin Chirilă won his first race on Friday, in the 500m mens C1 race, an event where he is a world vice-champion and a bronze medallist at the European championships. Chirila clocked one minute and 50 seconds and 72 hundredths of a second. Chirila was followed was Moldavian Sergey Tarnovsky, who arrived one second and 72 hundredths of a second later, and the French Loic Leonard, who arrived 3 seconds and 57 hundredths later than Chirila. On Saturday, in the mens C1 1000m race defending world champion Catalin Chirila started off as favorite. Chirila clocked 3 minutes, 55 de seconds and 10 hundredths of a second, outperforming many-time world champion, German Conrad Scheibner, who finished the race nearly two seconds later than Chirila. Catalin Chirila also outclassed Polands Wiktor Glazunow, who finished the race almost 4 seconds later than Chirila.



    Cătălin Chirilă was born in Tulcea, on May 11, 1998. He is signed up by Steaua Bucharest. Army Club. Chirilas first notable world-level performances occurred in mens C2 events, jointly with Victor Mihalachi. In 2019, at the European championships hosted by Minsk in Belarus, Chirila and Mihalachi won the gold medals in the 1000m race. In 2021, at the European championships in Polands Poznan, Chirila and Mihalachi won bronze, also in the 1000m race. At the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Chirilă and Mihalachi came in 5th. Since 2022, Chirila has been competing in mens singles events. At the World Championships in Halifax, Canada, Chirila won the 1000m Olympic race and came in 2nd in the 500m race. At the European Championships in Munich, Catalin Chirila again won the 1000m race, coming in 3rd in the 500m race.




  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week


    The first major rowing competition of 2023 was held last week in Hungarys Szeged.



    The 2023 ICF Canoe and Kayak Sprint & Paracanoe World Cup brought together Europes top-notch rowers, with world and European champions among them. The Romanian delegation was made of nine rowers, of which seven competed in the mens and two proved their mettle in the womens version of the competition. The record all told earned the Romanian delegation the 3rd position according to the nations competition.



    Cătălin Chirilă won gold in mens C1 event, in the 500m and 1,000m races. Ilie Sprincean and Oleg Nuţă won mens C2 1,000m race. Reason enough for Radio Romania International to designate Catalin Chirila the Athlete of the week.



    In Szeged, Cătălin Chirilă won his first race on Friday, in the 500m mens C1 race, an event where he is a world vice-champion and a bronze medallist at the European championships. Chirila clocked one minute and 50 seconds and 72 hundredths of a second. Chirila was followed was Moldavian Sergey Tarnovsky, who arrived one second and 72 hundredths of a second later, and the French Loic Leonard, who arrived 3 seconds and 57 hundredths later than Chirila. On Saturday, in the mens C1 1000m race defending world champion Catalin Chirila started off as favorite. Chirila clocked 3 minutes, 55 de seconds and 10 hundredths of a second, outperforming many-time world champion, German Conrad Scheibner, who finished the race nearly two seconds later than Chirila. Catalin Chirila also outclassed Polands Wiktor Glazunow, who finished the race almost 4 seconds later than Chirila.



    Cătălin Chirilă was born in Tulcea, on May 11, 1998. He is signed up by Steaua Bucharest. Army Club. Chirilas first notable world-level performances occurred in mens C2 events, jointly with Victor Mihalachi. In 2019, at the European championships hosted by Minsk in Belarus, Chirila and Mihalachi won the gold medals in the 1000m race. In 2021, at the European championships in Polands Poznan, Chirila and Mihalachi won bronze, also in the 1000m race. At the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Chirilă and Mihalachi came in 5th. Since 2022, Chirila has been competing in mens singles events. At the World Championships in Halifax, Canada, Chirila won the 1000m Olympic race and came in 2nd in the 500m race. At the European Championships in Munich, Catalin Chirila again won the 1000m race, coming in 3rd in the 500m race.




  • Athlete of the Week

    Athlete of the Week


    The first major sporting event of the year in athletics was hosted by Istanbul in Turkey. The European Indoor Athletics Championships brought together roughly 600 athletes from 47 countries and Romania was represented by 14 athletes, 7 in the mens competitions and 7 in the womens contests. Four of them had made it to the finals of their competitions: Claudia Bobocea in the 15 hundred meter race. Alina Rotaru and Gabriel Bitan in the long jump event and Gabriela Stanciu in the high jump contest. Bitan won bronze in the event and Bobocea became silver medalist and has also been designated Athlete of the Week by Radio Romania International.


    We recall that Romania also put up a good show at the 2015 indoor edition in Prague, when Marian Oprea became bronze medalist in the triple jump event and Florentina Iusco in the long jump event. At the latest edition in Torun, Poland, the best Romanian performance was obtained by Daniela Stanciu who came fifth in the high jump contest. In Istanbul, Stanciu ranked seventh and Alina Rotaru fifth.


    Gabriel Bitan has won for Romania the first European medal in the mens long jump event since the silver obtained by Bogdan Ţăruş in 2005.


    However, the most interesting performance was obtained by Claudia Bobocea in the 15 hundred meter race, where she obtained the best time in her entire career, 4 minutes, 3 seconds and 76 hundredths. She was outperformed by multiple world and Olympic medalist Laura Muir, of Britain who ended the race only 36 hundredths before the Romanian athlete. Sofia Ennaoui of Poland came third in the race.


    Claudia Bobocea was bron in Bucharest on 11th June 1992 and took up athletics in 2007. She has always been among the worlds fastest runners in middle-distance races, although she has failed to obtain medals in major competitions.


    In 2016, she qualified for the 800 meter race in Rio Olympics but unfortunately went 51st. She obtained her best indoor performance in 2019 in Glasgow, when she ended the race in the seventh place, so the medal in Istanbul is her best performance so far.


    (bill)