Yurlova was born on 1 April 1972 in
Velsk, a town near the central-southern border of
Arkhangelsk Oblast in the
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (Russian SFSR) of the
Soviet Union. She began playing
bandy as a child and, while attending Syktyvkar School No. 21 for
secondary school in
Syktyvkar,
Komi Republic, she played with the bandy club
Stroitel Syktyvkar. As a
captain of Stroitel, she won first place in the Soviet All-Union Bandy Cup. She also participated in the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the Russian SFSR. After graduating, she entered the department of Physical Education at the Arkhangelsk State Pedagogical Institute (now part of the
Northern (Arctic) Federal University) in
Arkhangelsk,
home of Burevestnik (), one of the best women's bandy teams in the country. Yurlova joined Burevestnik and became a Russian Championship silver medalist with the team. She later played with Octyabr () in Moscow and won the Russian Championship title in women's bandy. In 1993, at age 21, she switched from bandy to ice hockey. Yurlova began playing in the newly-created
Russian Women's Hockey League (RWHL) with
Luzhniki Moscow in 1995 and was a member of the historic Luzhniki roster that won the inaugural Russian Championship title in women's ice hockey in 1996. She remained with the club – which was later known as CSK VVS Moscow (1996–1998), Viking Moscow (1998–2000), SKIF Moscow (2000–2006), and SKIF Nizhny Novgorod (2006–present) – until her retirement from ice hockey in 2008. going on to win another seven Russian Championship titles with the team, in addition to two
IIHF European Women's Champions Cup medals, silver in
2004 and bronze in
2005.
International play Yurlova made her debut with the Russian national ice hockey team at the 1996 IIHF European Women Championship, where she contributed to Russia’s silver medal victory – the first and only European Championship medal won by the nation. She also participated in the
IIHF Women's World Championships in
1997,
1999,
2000, and
2001, winning bronze at the 2001 tournament – Russia’s first World Championship medal, which stood as the team’s only medal for fifteen years until they claimed bronze again at the
2016 tournament. == Death ==