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  1. Irena Szewińska (Leningrado, Unión Soviética, 24 de mayo de 1946-Varsovia, Polonia, 29 de junio de 2018) fue una atleta polaca especializada en pruebas de velocidad y salto de longitud. Participó en cinco Juegos Olímpicos : Tokio 1964 , México 1968 , Múnich 1972 , Montreal 1976 y Moscú 1980 y ganó siete medallas (tres de ellas de oro ...

  2. Career. Between 1964 and 1980 she participated in five Olympic Games, winning seven medals, three of them gold. She also broke six world records and is the only athlete (male or female) to have held a world record in the 100 m, 200 m and the 400 m events. She also won 10 medals in European Championships.

  3. 30 de jun. de 2018 · The IAAF is deeply saddened by the news that legendary Polish sprinter Irena Szewinska, widely considered one of the most successful and multi-talented athletes of all time, died on Friday (29) in Warsaw after a long battle with cancer. Szewinska, a five-time Olympian who set ten world records and served as an IAAF Council Member ...

  4. 3 de jul. de 2018 · Irena Szewinska, a sprinter and long jumper who won seven medals in five Olympic Games, tying an Olympic women’s record and becoming a national hero in Poland, died on Friday at a hospital in...

  5. Irena Szewińska fue una atleta polaca especializada en pruebas de velocidad y salto de longitud. Participó en cinco Juegos Olímpicos: Tokio 1964, México 1968, Múnich 1972, Montreal 1976 y Moscú 1980 y ganó siete medallas en cinco pruebas diferentes. Además batió varias plusmarcas mundiales.

  6. Irena Szewińska is a legendary athlete who won seven medals in five different events at five Olympic Games from 1964 to 1976. She also broke the 50-second barrier in the 400m and became a member of the International Olympic Committee in 1998.

  7. Irena Szewińska was a Polish sprinter who dominated women’s athletics for nearly two decades. Between 1964 and 1976, she earned seven Olympic medals, tying the record of Australian Shirley Strickland de la Hunty for most medals won by a woman in Olympic athletics competition.