Ike Landvoigt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ike Landvoigt (born September 19, 1973 in Potsdam ) is a former German rower who was world champion with the eighth in 1995 .

Career

Landvoigt took third place in the German championships in 1992 in a four-man with helmsman and eighth. The 1.96 m tall Landvoigt won his first German championship title in 1995 in eighth place. At the 1995 World Rowing Championships in Tampere, Ike Landvoigt won his only world title. In 1996 Landvoigt was German champion with the four-man without a helmsman . At the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Landvoigt finished ninth in a foursome.

From 1997 to 1999 Ike Landvoigt won the German championship title in eighth and also competed in eighth at the world championships. After a fifth place in 1997 and the silver medal in 1998 , tenth place in 1999 meant that the Germany eighth was not qualified for the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney. As in 1996, Landvoigt competed in a four-man without a helmsman in Sydney and finished eleventh.

After Ike Landvoigt had become German champion in two without a helmsman together with Detlef Kirchhoff in 1999 , he was able to repeat this success in 2001 and 2003 with Jan Herzog and in 2002 with Kirchhoff. In 2005 and 2006 Ike Landvoigt was German eighth champion twice.

Ike Landvoigt is the son of the Olympic rowing champion Jörg Landvoigt and the nephew of Viola Goretzki and Bernd Landvoigt , Bernd Landvoigt was also Ike's coach for many years. Ike Landvoigt began his rowing career at the Potsdamer Ruder-Gesellschaft and later moved to the Berlin Rowing Club . He is a lawyer in Berlin.

literature

  • National Olympic Committee for Germany: Atlanta 96. The German Olympic team . Frankfurt am Main 1996
  • National Olympic Committee for Germany: Sydney 2000. The German Olympic team . Frankfurt am Main 2000

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. German championships in the eighth
  2. German championships in foursome without
  3. German championships in two-man without