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Thursday, February 21, 2019

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Sparks add European star Alina Iagupova to their roster

The L.A. Sparks will add a two-way threat from Europe to their arsenal ahead of the upcoming season, announcing Wednesday that they’ve signed 5-foot-11 guard Alina Iagupova, a 20-plus-point scorer in Euroleague play and teammate of Sparks guard Chelsea Gray on the Turkish Cukurova Mersin team.
“I’m excited to sign Alina Iagupova,” Sparks Executive Vice President and General Manager Penny Toler said in a news release. “Alina has played at a high level overseas for several years and can contribute on both ends of the floor. I’m really happy she’s decided to bring her talents to the Sparks and the WNBA.”
Playing now alongside Gray for Cukurova Mersin, Iagupova is averaging a team-high 18.2 points and 6.8 assists, as well as 5.4 rebounds and 1.9 steals while shooting 63.8 percent from the field as she’s led the team to a 19-0 mark in Turkish league play.
The 27-year-old also has played well in international competition, averaging 23.5 points and 6 assists in Euroleague, and 20.1 points and 6.4 assists in Eurocup action this season. Last year, she was named to the Eurobasket.com All-European first team.
A native of Dnipro, Ukraine, Iagupova’s professional playing history also includes stops in Kazakhstan, Belgium and France.
So far this month, the Sparks re-signed two-time Defensive Player of the Year Alana Beard, matched an offer sheet by the Phoenix Mercury to retain five-year WNBA veteran Odyssey Sims, signed Tierra Ruffin-Pratt and Ashley Walker, and re-signed guard Karlie Samuelson, a Mater Dei High School graduate.
Free agent Essence Carson’s tenure with the team ended when she signed with the Phoenix Mercury.

Paralegal Alina Antal turned drug boss under jailed alleged Assyrian gang associate lover’s orders

No result found, try new keyword!A WOMAN who once trained to be a paralegal became the unlikely head of a western Sydney cannabis syndicate after taking directions from her jailed lover, an alleged Assyrian gang associate. Alina Anta...

Alina Zagitova Says She Didn't Drink Water During The 2018 Olympics

Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko (Associated Press)
Alina Zagitova, the Russian teen who narrowly edged two-time defending world champion Evgenia Medvedeva for the women’s figure skating gold at the 2018 Winter Olympics and recently took second at the European Championships, sat down for a series of interviews this week with Russian media. One of the running themes in these sit-downs was her body, and more precisely her weight.
When talking to Russian Glamour, Zagitova was asked if she had any specific food restrictions or if she ever indulged in food like chips. She answered:
“No, I don’t like chips. Well, perhaps it’s because I don’t eat them. I like sweets—chocolate, candy. Generally, I restricted myself during the Olympic Games. I was, you can say, not drinking water at all. That is, we just rinsed our mouths and spit it all out.”
So: during the Olympics, Zagitova pulled off her incredible performances while treating water like mouthwash. She did add that her eating habits improved after the Olympics. “I started paying more attention to my health. So, I started eating right, [started] both eating and drinking. And now I have some, I don’t know, strength, both mental and physical.”
Zagitova did later acknowledge that in the face of disappointment at last year’s world championships, where she fell in the long program and missed the podium, she did eat junk food and watch TV. At least we have some proof that she is human like the rest of us, and not an alien sent from another planet to do four triple loops in a row.
“After the World Championships where I competed unsuccessfully, I really got something sweet, I won’t tell what, and I ate all of it while watching a TV show. But it was the end of the season already, there were no more competitions, I didn’t need to prepare for anything, so I could afford it.”
Food and weight were also themes during Zagitova’s interview with Sport24:
“Eteri Georgievna always tells you when you gain weight. But there are no phrases like ‘you’re fat.’ We watch our weight by ourselves, we see ourselves in the mirror. I don’t restrict myself in anything besides, perhaps, cakes. There are sweets in my life but I’m fighting that [urge]. I look at my weight, if I gained a bit, I try to eat less.”
Eteri Tutberidze is Zagitova’s coach, and was Medvedeva’s coach for many years until she left after the 2018 Olympics to move to Toronto to train with Brian Orser. Tutberidze is something of a controversial figure in the skating world for seeming to push the young skaters under her tutelage too hard.
Tutberidze has also coached some of the most prominent Russian figure skaters from the last five years. In addition to Zagitova and Medvedeva, she is also coaching the top Russian junior skaters including world junior champion Alexandra Trusova, who can do several quad jumps in her program. Tutberidze also coached Yulia Lipnitskaya, who was one of the breakout stars of the 2014 Olympics in Sochi; though she didn’t medal individually, she helped the Russians win the team gold. About four years later, Lipnitskaya announced her retirement from the sport after she completed treatment for anorexia.
Zagitova appears to defend her coach in this interview:
“I can’t tell much about Tutberidze. But she is as dedicated as me. She never gives up. She moves towards the goal she set for herself. She has everything—both the carrot and the whip.”
But does Tutberidze let you eat the carrot? That’s the question.
All translations were done by Liubov Baladzhaeva. You can read her work and translations at Gymnovosti and you can follow her on Twitter @cherity1313.

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