Antje Möldner-Schmidt
Antje Möldner-Schmidt | |
nation | Germany |
birthday | 13th June 1984 (age 36) |
place of birth | Potsdam , German Democratic Republic |
size | 173 cm |
Weight | 57 kg |
job | Chief of Police |
Career | |
---|---|
discipline | 3000 meter obstacle course |
Best performance | 3000 m obstacle: 9: 18.54 min (2009) |
society | LC Cottbus , first club: SC Potsdam |
Trainer | Beate Conrad, first trainer: Thomas Schelk |
status | resigned |
End of career | 2020 |
Medal table | |
last change: January 24, 2020 |
Antje Möldner-Schmidt , née Antje Möldner (born June 13, 1984 in Potsdam-Babelsberg , GDR ), is a former German athlete . Originally a middle distance runner , she switched to the 3000 meter obstacle course in 2008 . Her greatest success is winning the 2014 European Championship title . She was German champion thirteen times outdoors and indoors.
career path
Möldner-Schmidt belonged to a sports promotion group of the federal police and was an officer of the federal police sports school Kienbaum with the official title of police chief . After saying goodbye to competitive sports, she works as a control and patrol officer for the federal police .
Athletic career
As Antje Möldner, she completed her first competition season at the age of twelve in 1996 at the OSC Potsdam / LG Potsdam LSH (airship port).
In 1999, at the age of fifteen, she won her first national title as German B youth champion (U18) in the 800-meter run . In 2002 Möldner became German A youth champion (U20) in the 1500 meter run .
In 2003 she was able to defend her title in the A-Youth (U20) over this distance and become German Junior Champion (U23) in the older age group .
In 2004 Möldner won two bronze medals over 1500 meters among the active athletes, both at the German Indoor Championships in Dortmund and at the German Championships in Braunschweig and was again German Junior Champion (U23).
In 2005 she won double gold in the active athletes in the 1500 meter distance. Möldner was both German indoor champion and German outdoor champion . Internationally, she came in 6th at the European Indoor Championships in Madrid and won bronze at the U23 European Championships in Erfurt .
In 2006 Möldner won the 1500 and 3000 meter titles at the German Indoor Championships . In the open-air season she was German runner-up over 1500 meters.
In 2007 she only competed in the hall over 3000 meters and became German indoor runner-up on this route . In the open air she won the second title at the German Championships after 2005 over 1500 meters .
In 2008 Möldner won the 1500 and 3000 meter titles at the German Indoor Championships . In the open-air season, she competed in her first 3000-meter obstacle course in Neerpelt, Belgium on May 31, and finished second behind the Ethiopian Sofia Assefa . Möldner improved Melanie Schulz's German record by over four seconds to 9: 34.21 minutes. In July she became German champion in the obstacle course. In the run-up to the Summer Olympics in Beijing , she improved her German record by more than four seconds to 9: 29.86 minutes, but there was not enough time to qualify for the final.
In 2009 Möldner was able to defend the titles as German indoor champion over 1500 meters and German champion over 3000 meters obstacle. On May 17th, she achieved a time of 6: 15.90 min at the international runners' meeting Krummestrecken in Pliezhausen on the rarely run 2000 meter obstacle distance and thus finished seventh in the all-time world best list. On June 1st, she improved her German obstacle course record again to 9: 27.22 minutes and thus fulfilled the qualification standard for the World Championships in Berlin . Three weeks later she won with the team at the European Team Championship in Leiria to which she contributed with a 1st place on the obstacle course. In the run-up to the World Championships, she managed to further increase her record to 9: 21.73 min. Möldner ran even faster two days later in the final, in which she initially came ninth with a national record of 9: 18.54 minutes. This time was only beaten in 2016 by Gesa Felicitas Krause at the Trier New Year's Eve run . In November 2015 Marta Dominguez , who came in first, was subsequently transferred by the International Sports Court (CAS) for doping and subsequently moved to 8th place.
In 2010 she was diagnosed with lymphoma in January , so she had to take a long break and could not start training again until October.
In 2011 Möldner returned to the obstacle course after a few preparatory competitions at the German Championships and finished fourth with 10: 28.74 min. A good three weeks later, she won the title at the German Police Championships over 1500 meters. In autumn she married and started as Möldner-Schmidt.
As of 2012, she no longer took part in the German Indoor Championships and no longer competed in 1500 meter runs. Over the obstacles Möldner-Schmidt was able to become German champion for the third time . At the European Championships in Helsinki , she first took bronze in 9: 36.37 minutes and thus won her first medal at international championships in the adult age group. In May 2015 the runner-up Switlana Schmidt (Ukraine) was convicted of doping and Möldner-Schmidt subsequently received the silver medal. At the Olympic Summer Games in London , she first took seventh place in the final run in a time of 9: 21.78 minutes, ahead of Gesa Felicitas Krause , who was eighth . Since the originally Russian first-placed Julija Saripowa was retroactively revoked the gold medal for doping abuse in 2016, the athletes not only moved up one place, but Möldner-Schmidt was also now the fastest European.
In 2013 she again took part in the European Team Championship in Gateshead and was able to achieve 2nd place behind Russia with the team, to which she contributed on the obstacle course with a 3rd place in personal season best. At the German championships Möldner-Schmidt won her fourth German championship title. At the World Championships in Moscow she was the second best European in the final with eighth place and was again one place ahead of Krause.
In 2014 Möldner-Schmidt came back to 1st place with the team at the European Team Championship in Braunschweig and had reached 2nd place in their competition. Then she won the championship title for the fifth time and the third in a row at the German championships , where they separated from the runner-up Krause 0.07 s. Möldner-Schmidt achieved the greatest success of her career when she won the European Championship in Zurich . In the same year she was voted athlete of the year . In winter she had problems with the Achilles tendon .
In 2015 Möldner-Schmidt could not take part in the competition. After the tendon problem, she trained again with a view to the German championships, but then had to have an over-leg surgically removed from her ankle in the middle of the year and announced her pregnancy a little later.
2016 was marked by the baby break and in 2017 she worked on her comeback with the long-term goal of getting precious metal at the home European championships in Berlin .
In 2018 Möldner-Schmidt again competed in several competitions and became German runner-up , this time behind Krause. She had her last international assignment at the European Championships in Berlin and then suffered another foot injury, this time on the other foot.
At the end of January 2020, Möldner-Schmidt turned his back on competitive sports after repeated injury breaks.
Club affiliations
Antje Möldner-Schmidt started for SC Potsdam and since 2012 for LC Cottbus . With a height of 1.73 m, her competition weight was 57 kg.
family
Möldner-Schmidt comes from a family of athletes: Her father was a walker , her sister Silke and her twin sister Berit were middle distance athletes . Her brother Olaf took third place in the 20-kilometer street at the GDR athletics championships in 1989 . She has been married since October 2011 and has a daughter (* 2016).
Awards
- 2014: Sportswoman of the year from Brandenburg
- 2014: Antje Möldner-Schmidt received at the ZDF-Gala Sportsman of the Year 2014 (Germany) as European champion in the obstacle course, in addition, the 40,000 euro “ Role Model in Sport ” award from the Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe . This recognized the fact that the top athlete, after suffering from a malignant tumor disease of the lymphatic system, overcame the cancer through treatment and hard training in 2010 and achieved top athletic performance again. Thanks to her success, her fairness and her charismatic demeanor, she is also a role model for young athletes. Möldner-Schmidt declared at the award ceremony that she was donating part of the prize money to the German Cancer Aid to support the fight against childhood cancer.
social commitment
Möldner-Schmidt has been involved in cancer education on a voluntary basis since 2014 through her own experience of having overcome cancer. As an ambassador for the "Movement Against Cancer" initiative of the German Cancer Aid, she and specialists at the German Cancer Congress 2018 in Berlin called for the increased inclusion of sporting exercises in cancer therapy. "Sport and exercise helped me a lot to get through the difficult time and overcome many hurdles," reported the athlete.
Top performances
(As of January 28, 2020)
- Hall
- 800 meters: 2: 06.87 min, February 29, 2004 in Leipzig
- 1500 meters: 4: 10.83 min, March 5, 2005 in Madrid
- 3000 meters: 9: 01.07 min, March 5, 2006 in Liévin
- open air
- 800 meters: 2: 04.34 min, June 12, 2005 in Ulm
- 1500 meters: 4: 08.81 min, May 27, 2005 in Dessau
- 3000 meters: 9:00, 74 min, April 27, 2005 in Potsdam
- 5000 meters: 16: 05.82 min, May 23, 2007 in Koblenz
- 3000 meter obstacle: 9: 18.54 min, August 17, 2009 in Berlin
successes
- national
- 1999: German U18 champion (800 m)
- 2002: 5th place German U20 indoor championships (800 m)
- 2002: German U20 champion (1500 m)
- 2003: German U20 champion (1500 m)
- 2003: German U23 champion (1500 m)
- 2004: 3rd place German Indoor Championships (1500 m)
- 2004: 3rd place German Championships (1500 m)
- 2004: German U23 champion (1500 m)
- 2005: German indoor champion (1500 m)
- 2005: German Champion (1500 m)
- 2006: German indoor champion (1500 m and 3000 m)
- 2006: German Vice Champion (1500 m)
- 2007: German indoor runner-up (3000 m)
- 2007: German Champion (1500 m)
- 2008: German indoor champion (1500 m and 3000 m)
- 2008: German Champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2009: German indoor champion (1500 m)
- 2009: German Champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2011: 4th place German championships (3000 m obstacle)
- 2011: 1st place German Police Championships (1500 m)
- 2012: German champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2013: German champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2014: German champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2018: German runner-up (3000 m obstacle)
- international
- 2005: 6th place European Indoor Championships (1500 m)
- 2005: 3rd place U23 European Championships (1500 m)
- 2008: 17th place Olympic Summer Games (3000 m obstacle)
- 2009: 1st place team European championship (team and individual)
- 2009: 8th place world championships (3000 m obstacle)
- 2012: Vice European Champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2012: 6th place Olympic Summer Games (3000 m obstacle)
- 2013: 2nd place team European championship (team and 3rd place individual)
- 2013: 8th place World Championships (3000 m obstacle)
- 2014: 1st place team European championship (team and 2nd place individual)
- 2014: European Champion (3000 m obstacle)
- 2018: 27th place European Championships (3000 m obstacle)
literature
- Klaus Amrhein: Biographical manual on the history of German athletics 1898–2005. 2 volumes. Darmstadt 2005 (published by Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft )
Web links
- Antje Möldner-Schmidt in the database of World Athletics (English)
- Antje Möldner-Schmidt in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
- Titles, tears and tragedies - Farewell to Antje Möldner-Schmidt
- Athlete portrait on european-athletics.org
- EM 2014 Zurich team brochure of the DLV, p. 53 (pdf 3.8 MB)
- EM 2018 Berlin team brochure of the DLV, p. 45 (pdf 21.3 MB)
- Antje Möldner-Schmidt on sportschau.de
- Performance profile on Leichtathletik-datenbank.de
- Performance profile on Leichtathletik-datenbank.de
- Athlete profile (LC Cottbus) on ladv.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Svenja Sapper: Obstacle runner Antje Möldner-Schmidt ends her career , end of career, on: Leichtathletik.de, from January 23, 2020, accessed January 24, 2020
- ↑ Antje Möldner-Schmidt , on munzinger.de, accessed January 28, 2020
- ↑ Pamela Ruprecht: Flash News of the Day - In 15 Years: From the B-Youth Champion on Europe's throne , notes, on: Leichtathletik.de, from August 19, 2014, accessed January 28, 2020
- ↑ Antje Möldner jumps into the deep end , on: Leichtathletik.de, July 26, 2011.
- ↑ Doping: Saripowa loses obstacle gold , Olympia 2012, on: abendzeitung-muenchen.de, from November 21, 2016, accessed January 28, 2020
- ↑ a b Jan-Henner Reitze: World Cup summer 2015: Who trains? Who is suffering? Who is out? , Overview, from: Leichtathletik.de, June 4, 2015, accessed January 30, 2020
- ↑ a b Alexandra Dersch: Antje Möldner-Schmidt before returning from baby break , comeback plans, on: Leichtathletik.de, from November 22, 2016, accessed January 30, 2020
- ↑ Pamela Ruprecht: The great discipline check 2015 - obstacle women , review, on: Leichtathletik.de, November 2, 2015, accessed January 30, 2020
- ↑ EM 2018 Berlin , DLV team brochure, p. 45 (pdf 21.3 MB)
- ↑ Märkische Allgemeine , December 14, 2015, p. 16
- ↑ Press release of the German Olympic Sports Confederation of December 22, 2014 ( Memento of the original of March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Movement therapy highly effective for cancer patients , press release - February 23, 2018, accessed March 4, 2018, completed January 24, 2020
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Möldner-Schmidt, Antje |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Möldner, Antje (maiden name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German middle distance and obstacle runner |
DATE OF BIRTH | June 13, 1984 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Potsdam-Babelsberg , GDR |