From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German sprinter
Tatjana Pinto
Tatjana Pinto at the 2020 Triveneto Meeting in Trieste |
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Full name | Tatjana Lofamakanda Pinto |
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Born | (1992-07-02) 2 July 1992 (age 31)
Münster,
Germany |
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Height | 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) |
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Weight | 56 kg (123 lb) |
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Country |
Germany |
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Sport |
Athletics |
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Event |
Sprint |
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Regional finals | 1st at the
2012 European Athletics Championships |
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Personal bests |
- 100 meters: 11.00 s (2016, Mannheim)
- 200 meters: 22.63 s (2019, Doha)
- 60 meters: 7.06 s (2018, Dortmund)
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Tatjana Lofamakanda Pinto (born 2 July 1992) is a German
athlete who competes as a
sprinter.
Career
Together with
Leena Günther,
Anne Cibis and
Verena Sailer, Pinto won the gold medal at the
2012 European Athletics Championships in Helsinki at the 4×100 metres relay. The same team came in fifth at the
2012 Summer Olympics in London.
Personal life
Pinto's father is
Portuguese, while her mother was from
Angola.
[1]
References
External links
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1938:
Germany (
Kohl,
Krauß,
Albus,
Kühnel)
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1946:
Netherlands (
v.d. Kade-Koudijs,
Witziers-Timmer,
Adema,
Blankers-Koen)
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1950:
Great Britain (
Hay,
Desforges,
Hall,
Foulds)
-
1954:
Soviet Union (
Krepkina,
Uliskina,
Itkina,
Turova)
-
1958:
Soviet Union (
Krepkina,
Kepp,
Polyakova,
Maslovska)
-
1962:
Poland (
Ciepły,
Sobotta,
Szyroka,
Piątkowska)
-
1966:
Poland (
Bednarek,
Straszyńska,
Kirszenstein,
Kłobukowska)
-
1969:
GDR (
Höfer,
Meissner,
Podeswa,
Vogt)
-
1971:
FRG (
Schittenhelm,
Helten,
Irrgang,
Mickler)
-
1974:
GDR (
Maletzki,
Stecher,
Heinich,
Eckert)
-
1978:
Soviet Union (
Anisimova,
Maslakova,
Kondratyeva,
Storozhkova)
-
1982:
GDR (
Walther,
Eckert,
Rieger,
Göhr)
-
1986:
GDR (
Gladisch,
Rieger,
Brestrich-Auerswald,
Göhr)
-
1990:
GDR (
Möller,
Krabbe,
Behrendt,
Günther)
-
1994:
Germany (
Paschke,
Knoll,
Zipp,
Lichtenhagen)
-
1998:
France (
Benth,
Bangué,
Félix,
Arron)
-
2002:
France (
Combe,
Hurtis,
Félix,
Sidibé)
-
2006:
Russia (
Gushchina,
Rusakova,
Khabarova,
Grigoryeva)
-
2010:
Ukraine (
Povh,
Pohrebnyak,
Ryemyen,
Bryzhina)
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2012:
Germany (
Günther,
Cibis,
Pinto,
Sailer)
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2014:
Great Britain (
Philip,
Nelson,
J. Williams,
Henry)
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2016:
Netherlands (
Samuel,
Schippers,
Van Schagen,
Sedney)
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2018:
Great Britain (
Philip,
Lansiquot,
B. Williams,
Asher-Smith)
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2022:
Germany (
Mayer,
Haase,
Lückenkemper,
Burghardt)
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2024:
Great Britain (
Asher-Smith,
Henry,
Hunt,
Neita)
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