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Werner Schildhauer

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Name
  
Werner Schildhauer


Role
  
Olympic athlete

Werner Schildhauer

Werner Schildhauer (born 5 June 1959 in Dessau) is a retired German track and field athlete, who represented the former East Germany at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow in the 10,000 meter run and placed 7th behind his team mate Jörg Peter (see, for example, the Finnish-language book "The Great Olympic Book" / Suuri Olympiateos, volume 3, published in 1980).

Career

At the European Championship in 1982 he won the silver medal in the 5,000 meter run and in the 10,000 meter run. At the World Athletics Championship in 1983 he won the silver medal in both the 5000 meter and 10,000 meter runs. On 28 May 1983 he set an East German record in the 10,000 meters with a time of 27:24.95, a time which had also stood as a German record and was broken almost 14 years later by Dieter Baumann (see also Schildhauer's German-language Wikipedia biography).

Schildhauer represented the Chemie Halle sport club; his long-time rival in East Germany was Hansjörg Kunze.

Schildhauer was known for his effective kick in the final lap or the final 200 metres of the race. In the 1982 European Championships 5,000-metre final, he rose from fourth place to second place on the home straight (see some written description or video of the race; user AlAn1981 had such a video entitled "David Moorcroft" on YouTube until the end of 2008). In the 1983 World Athletics Championships 5,000-metre final, he rose from fifth place to second place in the last 200 metres; he was still running seventh when the final lap began (see the Finnish Broadcasting Corporation YLE's Living Archives / Elävä arkisto, and the following links: Urheilu / Sports, Yleisurheilu / Athletics, Yleisurheilun MM-kisat / World Athletics Championships, MM-kisat 1983 / World Championships 1983, Vainio heittäytyi MM-pronssille / Vainio lunges to the World Championships bronze medal). In the 1983 World Athletics Championships 10,000-metre final, he sprinted to the lead with about 450 metres or 440 metres to go, and quickly moved to a roughly five-metre lead over his teammate, Hansjörg Kunze. On the final bend, however, Kunze caught him and Italy's Alberto Cova sprinted past him with about five metres to go (see the "Runner" / Juoksija magazine's "World Athletics Championships 1983" / Yleisurheilun MM-kisat 1983, and its article on the 10,000-metre final). Schildhauer lost his chance for one or two Olympic medals when almost all the Soviet bloc countries of Eastern Europe refused to participate in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. He still competed in the 1985 World Athletics Cup but lost to Ethiopia's Wodajo Bulti and the United States' Pat Porter in the 10,000-metre race (see, for instance, the English-language Wikipedia article on the 1985 IAAF World Cup). Leg injuries ended his active running career shortly afterwards (see especially published German-language books about Schildhauer).

References

Werner Schildhauer Wikipedia