Name: Gamova
Full name: Ekaterina Gamova
Gender: Female
< p>Nationality: RussiaBirthplace: Chelyabinsk
Birthday: 1980.10.17
Height: 2.04 meters
Weight: 82 kg
Position: Attacker
Spike height: 3.21 meters
Blocking height: 3.10 meters
Project: Volleyball
Club team and national team coach: Karpoli
Selected to the national team: 1998
Date of birth: October 17, 1980 Japan
Height: 2.06 meters
Weight: 80 kg
Birthplace: Chelyabinsk
Sports: Volleyball
Smashing height: 3.21 meters
Blocking height: 3.10 meters
Personal dream: to become an art designer
(rumor She has Eastern Baltic and Slavic ancestry, with slight Mongoloid characteristics)
Club team and national team coach: Karpoli
Time of selection for the national team: 1998
Sports achievements:
Russian Domestic League - Champion from 2001 to 2003
Runner-up in 1999 and 2000
European Championship - 1999 Champion in 2001 and 2001
World Championship - third place in 2002
Olympic Games - Sydney 2000 and second place in Athens 2004
World Cup --- Runner-up in 1999
World Women's Volleyball Grand Prix---Champion in 1999 and 2002
Honors received:
Awarded Athletes in 2000
p>In 2001, she was awarded the Second Class Medal of Honor for the Motherland
In 2004, she was elected the best female volleyball player in Europe and won the silver medal at the Athens Olympics
2006 World Championship
>Fourth place in the 2008 Olympic Games
The number one attacker of the world powerhouse Russian women's volleyball team. Gamova, who is 2.04 meters tall, is the tallest among the world's women's volleyball players. Although she is very tall, she is very flexible and has well-balanced skills. Her spike height can reach 3.21 meters and her blocking height can reach 3.10 meters. Once she stands on the court, her opponents will feel great psychological pressure. Once she shows her strength, her super-hand attack will make it difficult for her opponents to organize effective blocks, leaving her and her teammates in a state of no one.
Gamova has won the best score and best block awards in the World Series many times, and won the 2006 World Championship championship with the Russian team, the third place in the 1998 and 2002 World Championship, and the 1999 and 2002 World Championship. The World Women's Volleyball Grand Prix champion in 2000, the 2000 Sydney Olympics and the 2004 Athens Olympics silver medals and a series of honors.