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Stefka Kostadinova

Medal record Women's athleticsCompetitor for  BulgariaOlympic GamesGold 1996 AtlantaHigh jumpSilver 1988 SeoulHigh jumpWorld ChampionshipsGold 1987 RomeHigh jumpGold 1995 GothenburgHigh jumpEuropean Championships Gold 1986 StuttgartHigh jump

Stefka Kostadinova (Bulgarian: Стефка Костадинова) (born March 25, 1965 in Plovdiv) is a Bulgarian former athlete specialising in the high jump and current president of the Bulgarian Olympic Committee.

Stefka Kostadinova won gold in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, setting an Olympic record of 2.05 m. She also has an Olympic silver from the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. Kostadinova is a double world outdoor champion - from the World Championships in 1987 and 1995.

Kostadinova has taken part in five IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics - Paris 1985, Indianapolis 1987, Budapest 1989, Toronto 1993 and Paris 1997, winning gold in all of them. She has also snatched gold in all European Championships in Athletics which she has competed in. She is a European outdoor champion from Stuttgart in 1986 and a four-time European indoor champion from Athens 1985, Budapest 1988 and Paris 1994.

Kostadinova is still the reigning world record holder in the women's high jump with 2.09 m which she jumped at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics in Rome. Her world record is one of the oldest in modern athletics. Kostadinova has set altogether seven world records - three outdoors and four indoors, and has jumped over 2.00 m 197 times, an achievement unequalled by any other athlete in the women's high jump.

Kostadinova has been voted four times Sportsperson of the Year in Bulgaria (1985, 1987, 1995 and 1996). She is also included in the Top 10 of the Twentieth Century Female Athletes, according to the International Association of Athletics Federations.

In 1995 Kostadinova gave birth to her son, Nikolay, just several months before winning gold in the 1995 World Championships in Athletics. In 1999 she divorced her long-standing husband and coach, Nikolay Petrov. The same year she officially put an end to her athletic career, though she had actually not participated in any major sports competition since the World Indoors Championship in 1997.

After retiring Kostadinova started a career in sports administration. Since 1999 she has held various positions, such as vice president of the Bulgarian Athletics Federation, vice president of the Bulgarian Olympic Committee and deputy sports minister of Bulgaria (2003 - 2005).

On November 11, 2005 Kostadinova was elected President of the Bulgarian Olympic Committee. She replaced Ivan Slavkov, who was expelled by the International Olympic Committee for violating its standards in ethics.

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Records Preceded by
Lyudmila AndonovaWomen's High Jump World Record Holder
June 1, 1986– Succeeded by
IncumbentSporting positions Preceded by
Ivan SlavkovPresident of the
Bulgarian Olympic Committee
November 11, 2005– Succeeded by
IncumbentSporting positions Preceded by
Lyudmila AndonovaWomen's High Jump Best Year Performance
19851988Succeeded by
Silvia CostaPreceded by
Heike HenkelWomen's High Jump Best Year Performance
19921993Succeeded by
Silvia Costa
Inga Babakova
Britta BilačPreceded by
Inga BabakovaWomen's High Jump Best Year Performance
19961997Succeeded by
Venelina VenevaPreceded by
Lyudmila AndonovaWomen's Bulgarian National Champion
19851988Succeeded by
Rosanel Gogi Preceded by
Svetlana Leseva Women's Bulgarian National Champion
1991Succeeded by
Lyudmila AndonovaPreceded by
Venelina VenevaWomen's Bulgarian National Champion
1996Succeeded by
Khristina Kalcheva
v • d • eOlympic champions in women's high jump1928: Ethel Catherwood• 1932: Jean Shiley• 1936: Ibolya Csák• 1948: Alice Coachman• 1952: Esther Brand• 1956: Mildred McDaniel• 1960: Iolanda Balaş• 1964: Iolanda Balaş• 1968: Miloslava Rezková• 1972: Ulrike Meyfarth• 1976: Rosemarie Ackermann• 1980: Sara Simeoni• 1984: Ulrike Meyfarth• 1988: Louise Ritter• 1992: Heike Henkel• 1996: Stefka Kostadinova • 2000: Yelena Yelesina• 2004: Yelena Slesarenko Categories: 1965 births | Living people | Bulgarian athletes | High jumpers | World record holders | People from Plovdiv | Athletes at the 1988 Summer Olympics | Athletes at the 1992 Summer Olympics | Athletes at the 1996 Summer Olympics | Olympic athletes of Bulgaria | Olympic gold medalists for Bulgaria | Olympic silver medalists for Bulgaria

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