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Federation of Fire and Applied Correspondent of the Ryazan Region

Company

Owners

The Russia Russian Federation of Fire-Applied Sport (Russian Federation of Fire-Applied Sport) is an all-Russian public organization that aims to develop, popularize fire-applied sports in Russia.

History

2014

Management

As of January 2014, President - Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Emergencies Alexander Petrovich Chupriyan. The head of the regional branch is Dmitry Valerievich Dorofeev.

Tasks of the organization

  • The Federation of Fire and Applied Sports of Russia and the Russian Emergencies Ministry are responsible for the formation of the Russian national team. The Russian national team has been a recipient of the USSR national team since 1993.
  • The Federation of Fire and Applied Sports of Russia is a member of the International Sports Federation of Firefighters and Rescuers.
  • Fire and rescue sport

The Russian national fire and applied sports team, according to experts, as of January 2014 is the strongest in Europe. In International PPP tournaments, it is steadily in the top three.

1964: Formation of the Federation of Fire and Applied Sports of the USSR

In 1964, the Federation of Fire and Applied Sports of the USSR was formed. The main types of exercises were developed and approved. They are:

  • climbing the assault staircase into the window of the fourth floor of the training tower;
  • installation of a retractable three-pillar staircase and lifting it through the window of the third floor of the training tower;
  • overcoming the hundred-meter obstacle strip;
  • combat deployment;
  • fire relay (4 x 100 meters)

One of the most spectacular types of PPS is climbing the assault staircase into the window of the 4th floor of the training tower. After the "start" signal, an athlete with an assault staircase (attack) in his hands must run 32 meters to the training tower and climb it, fixing the staircase to the window openings of each of the floors and finish by stepping on the contact plates of the 4th floor. In this form, PPPs sometimes turn out to be decisive hundredths of a second.

Installing and climbing a retractable 3-knee ladder is the most difficult type of fire and applied sports, requiring athletes not only considerable physical effort, but also coordination of actions, since here athletes start in pairs. You need to remove a 3-knee ladder weighing 48 kilograms from a fire truck, overcome the distance to the training tower, after which one athlete must extend the ladder to the level of 3 floors, and the second - climb it. European colleagues unanimously recognized this type of exercise as the most difficult and traumatic, and in the program of the International Competition it was decided not to use it.

To overcome the 100-meter strip, the athlete needs to overcome a 2-meter fence 23 meters after the start, pick up 2 fire hoses (weighing 5 kg), run along the log, then connect one sleeve to the branch on the treadmill, and the second to the trunk located behind the back and finish.

All types of exercises contain elements of various sports: volleyball, football, athletics, gymnastics and others. Fire-applied sports are designed to develop the qualities vital in the work of fire fighters - strength, endurance, reaction speed, the ability to withstand significant physical activity and work in smoke at high temperatures. Our athletes possess these qualities in no small part.

1963: Inclusion of Fire and Applied Sports in the Unified All-Union Sports Classification

Over time, unusual and spectacular competitions in fire-applied sports became very popular, and in 1963, by the decision of the Central Council of the Union of Sports Societies and Organizations of the USSR, fire-applied sports were included in the unified all-Union sports classification.

1937 - 1948

The history of fire and applied sports (PPS) of Russia begins in 1937, when the first fire competitions of the NKVD of the USSR took place. The TRP complex (ready for labor and defense), which is very popular in the USSR, played a large role in the appearance and development of this sport. The delivery of TRP standards was a kind of prerequisite for the introduction of physical education classes with special training elements in parts of the fire department.

Subsequently, on the basis of these elements (putting on combat clothes and equipment, carrying a speaker and sleeves, walking on a log, etc.), types of fire and applied sports arose. The competition program included the same types as today, as well as gymnastics, athletics and shooting. In addition, until 1948, the exercise to overcome the 100-meter strip included carrying a 60-kilogram mannequin.