Edit Buchholz
Edit Buchholz (later Edit Wetzel ) (born April 19, 1941 in Neumünster ) was one of the best German table tennis players in the 1960s and 1970s . The three-time German champion won the European championship twice with the women's team.
The Kiel TTK Green-White Association
Edit's mother Luise Buchholz was a strong table tennis player and a lifelong member of the Kieler TTK Grün-Weiß . From her, Edit Buchholtz inherited the talent for playing table tennis and loyalty to the club: Edit always played at the KTTK Grün-Weiß.
With the Kiel team, the defender reached the final of the German championship every year from 1961 to 1974 (with the exception of 1971 and 1973). Mostly DTC Kaiserberg was the opponent. They won the German championship three times, namely in 1961, 1964 and 1974, and were runner-up ten times.
Edit Buchholz won the German Cup three times with Kiel, and they came second six times.
National and international level
From 1960, Edit Buchholz regularly took part in national and international tournaments with success. She won the German championship three times in singles, seven times in doubles and twice in mixed.
Between 1962 and 1977 she was appointed to international matches for the German women's national team 73 times. She played at 5 world championships and 7 European championships. In 1962 and 1968 she won the gold medal with the women.
From 1982 Edit - she had married in 1970 and was now called Edit Wetzel - took part in senior gaming operations. She won the German senior championship several times and was also the German senior team champion in 1984 with Kiel. Even today (2004) Edit Wetzel plays actively with the second team from Kiel in the regional league.
In between, Edit Wetzel had given up table tennis for two years in favor of tennis, but then found back to table tennis.
Awards
In 1966 the state of Schleswig-Holstein awarded Edit Wetzel the sports badge of the state of Schleswig-Holstein . She also received the gold pin of honor and the Victor Barna Prize from the DTTB in 1964 . On 2011 she received the Federal President's Medal of Merit of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Private
Edit Wetzel's entire family plays table tennis.
Her mother Luise Buchholz was the top player in the Kiel TTK Grün-Weiß in the 1950s . She was still active at the age of 80 and reached the 3rd place at the state championships for senior citizens (75+) in Flensburg. Her father was a ladies' manager at the Kiel TTK.
Edit Wetzel successfully played handball with her twin sister Ellen in the early 1960s for the Holstein Kiel club . Later she concentrated on the sport of table tennis.
With her husband Uwe Wetzel she won the mixed championship of Schleswig-Holstein in 1982, with her sister Ellen Haack (around 1960 Oberliga with TTK Kiel) she won this tournament in doubles; She also won the German championship for senior citizens (U40) in doubles with her in 1983 and 1984. Edit Wetzel has a second sister and two brothers.
Edit Wetzel has two children. Her daughter Sabine (born April 1, 1973) is also a strong TT player. At the end of the 1980s she played at TTK Kiel in the 2nd Bundesliga, later in Berlin in the 2nd BL, then at Rapid-Kappel Chemnitz in the Regional League. She is married to Michael Schmidt. Edit Wetzel's son Thorsten is also active at TTK Kiel.
Sporting successes
- Participation in 5 world championships
- 1959 in Dortmund: only individual competition
- 1963 in Prague: Round of 16 doubles with Ingrid Kriegelstein , 5th place with women's team
- 1965 in Ljubljana: Round of 16 singles, 6th place with women's team
- 1967 in Stockholm: quarter-finals doubles with Agnes Simon , round of 16 mixed, 7th place with women's team
- 1969 in Munich: quarter finals singles, 5th place with women's team
- Participation in 7 European championships
- 1962 in West Berlin: quarter-finals singles, quarter-finals doubles with Ursel Fiedler , quarter-finals mixed with Erich Arndt , 1st place with women's team
- 1964 in Malmö: 6th place with women's team
- 1966 in London: 3rd place doubles (with Agnes Simon ), 4th place with women's team
- 1968 in Lyon: Round of 16 singles, quarter finals doubles, 1st place with women's team
- 1970 in Moscow: Round of 16 singles, 7th place with women's team
- 1972 in Rotterdam: Round of 16 singles, 2nd place with women's team
- 1974 in Novi Sad: Round of 16 singles, quarter-finals doubles, 6th place with women's team
-
Europe TOP-12
- 1975 in Vienna: 10th place
- International championships
- 1960 Berlin (GER): 3rd place mixed (with Karl Wegrath )
- 1961 France: 2nd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin), 3rd place mixed (with Dieter Köhler)
- 1962 St.Ingbert (GER): 3rd place individual, 3rd place mixed (with Erich Arndt )
- 1962 Scandinavia: 3rd place singles, 3rd place doubles (with Ingrid Kriegelstein), 3rd place mixed (with Erich Arndt)
- 1963 Frankfurt / Main (GER): 3rd place mixed (with Erich Arndt )
- 1963 England: 3rd place singles
- 1963 Netherlands: 1st place singles, 1st place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla ), 3rd place doubles (Rosemarie Seidel)
- 1963 Scandinavia: 3rd place singles, 3rd place doubles (with Inge Harst)
- 1964 Romania: 3rd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin), 3rd place mixed (with Edvard Vecko)
- 1964 Wolfsburg (GER): 3rd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin )
- 1964 England: 3rd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin)
- 1964 Netherlands: 3rd place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla)
- 1964 Austria: 2nd place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla), 3rd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin)
- 1965 CSSR: 2nd place doubles (with Ingrid Kriegelstein)
- 1965 Netherlands: 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon )
- 1965 Hungary: 2nd place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1966 Lübeck (GER): 2nd place doubles (with Agnes Simon), 3rd place mixed (with Dieter Weitz )
- 1966 Austria: 3rd place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1966 Yugoslavia: 2nd place doubles (with Diane Schöler)
- 1967 CSSR: 3rd place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1967 Belgium: 3rd place singles, 2nd place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1967 Yugoslavia: 3rd place mixed (with Eberhard Schöler )
- 1968 Romania: 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1968 Netherlands: 2nd place singles, 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1969 England: 3rd place doubles (with Diane Schöler)
- 1970 Netherlands: 1st place doubles (with Diane Schöler )
- 1970 Austria: 3rd place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1972 Hagen (GER): 3rd place doubles (with Diane Schöler )
- 1972 CSSR: 3rd place singles, 2nd place doubles (with Wiebke Hendriksen)
- 1973 Poland: 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1974 Munich (GER): 2nd place singles, 3rd place doubles (with Wiebke Hendriksen )
-
National German championships
- 1962 in Freiburg: 4th place singles, 1st place doubles (with Heide Dauphin ), 4th place mixed (with Erich Arndt )
- 1963 in Lübeck: 2nd place singles, 1st place doubles (with Heide Dauphin ), 4th place mixed (with Erich Arndt )
- 1964 in Siegen: 3rd place single, 1st place double (with Heide Dauphin )
- 1965 in Wiesloch: 1st place singles, 2nd place doubles (with Heide Dauphin ), 1st place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla )
- 1966 in Osnabrück: 3rd place single, 1st place double (with Ingrid Kriegelstein ), 1st place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla )
- 1967 in Berlin: 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon ), 4th place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla )
- 1968 in Böblingen: 1st place singles, 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon), 4th place mixed (with Ernst Gomolla )
- 1969 in Hagen: 3rd place singles, 1st place doubles (with Agnes Simon)
- 1971 in Hanover: 2nd place singles, 2nd place doubles (with Brigitte Scharmacher )
- 1975 in Hanover: 1st place singles, 3rd place doubles (with Monika Block )
- 1976 in Essen: 3rd place singles, 3rd place doubles (with Monika Meyer-Block )
- 1977 in Berlin: 3rd place single, 3rd place mixed (with Eberhard Schöler )
- 1978 in Lübeck: 3rd place individual
- German Cup Championship with Kiel TTK Green-White
- 1963 in Oberlar: 1st place
- 1964 - 1969: 2nd place
- 1970 in Asbach: 1st place
- 1973 in Schwalmstadt: 1st place
-
Germany Cup
- 1970 in Witten: 1st place with Schleswig-Holstein
- 1972 in Osnabrück: 1st place with Schleswig-Holstein
- German team championship with Kiel TTK Grün-Weiß
- 1961 in Rheinfelden: 1st place
- 1962 in Duisburg: 2nd place
- 1963 in Kiel: 2nd place
- 1964 in Kiel: 1st place
- 1965-1970: 2nd place
- 1972 in Rendsburg: 2nd place
- 1974 in Koblenz: 1st place
-
National ranking tournaments
- 1963 in Mainz: 2nd place
- 1964 in Mölln: 1st place
- 1965 in Berlin: 3rd place
- 1966 in Wiesloch: 3rd place
- 1967 in Hagen: 4th place
- 1968 in Saarbrücken: 1st place
- 1969 in Siegen: 3rd place
- 1971 in Duisburg: 4th place
- 1974 in Löhne: 4th place
- 1975 in Hattersheim: 4th place
- 1976 in Elsenfeld: 3rd place
- Senior tournaments
- 1982 German Senior Championship in Essen: 1st place singles, 1st place doubles (with Lisa Danker), 1st place mixed (with Klaus Kreisel)
- 1983 German Over 40 Championship in Zweibrücken: 1st place singles, 1st place doubles (with Ellen Haak), 2nd place mixed (with Klaus Kreisel)
- 1984 German Over 40 Championship in Bad Schwartau: 1st place singles, 1st place doubles (with Ellen Haak), 1st place mixed (with Klaus Kreisel)
- 1985 German Championship 40+ in Krefeld: 2nd place singles, 2nd place doubles (with Ellen Haak), 1st place mixed (with Klaus Kreisel)
- 1986 German Championship 40+ in Baunatal: 1st place individual, 1st place mixed (with Klaus Kreisel)
- 1984 German team champion with Kiel TTK green-white
- 2013 Victory at the Senior European Championships in Bremen in the age group 70+ in doubles with Ellen Haak
- Leaderboards
- 1964: 1st place in the German ranking list
- 1968: 6th place in the European ranking
- 1968: 1st place in the German ranking
- 1969: 11th place in the ITTF world rankings
- societies
Results from the ITTF database
Association | competition | year | place | country | singles | Double | Mixed | team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FRG | European Championship | 1974 | Novi Sad | YUG | last 16 | Quarter finals | ||
FRG | European Championship | 1972 | Rotterdam | NED | last 16 | 2 | ||
FRG | European Championship | 1970 | Moscow | URS | last 16 | |||
FRG | European Championship | 1968 | Lyon | FRA | last 16 | Quarter finals | 1 | |
FRG | European Championship | 1966 | London | CLOSELY | Semifinals | |||
FRG | European Championship | 1962 | Berlin | FRG | Quarter finals | Quarter finals | Quarter finals | 1 |
FRG | EURO TOP12 | 1975 | Vienna | AUT | 10 | |||
FRG | World Championship | 1969 | Munich | FRG | Quarter finals | Agony | last 64 | 5 |
FRG | World Championship | 1967 | Stockholm | SWE | last 64 | Quarter finals | last 16 | 7th |
FRG | World Championship | 1965 | Ljubljana | YUG | last 16 | last 32 | last 16 | 6th |
FRG | World Championship | 1963 | Prague | TCH | last 32 | last 16 | last 32 | 9 |
FRG | World Championship | 1959 | Dortmund | FRG | last 32 | last 64 | last 128 |
literature
- Edit Buchholz has sport in her blood , DTS magazine , 1966/5 p. 6
- Wulf Danker: Edit Wetzel - Good with endurance , DTS magazine , 1997/12 p. 30
Individual evidence
- ↑ According to magazine DTS , 1977/9 edition southwest p.17 Edit Wetzel was born on 22 April.
- ↑ DTS magazine , 1964/14 West issue p. 1
- ↑ Award of the Medal of Merit to Edit Wetzel ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (accessed on December 13, 2011)
- ↑ DTS magazine , 1961/18 West issue p. 4
- ↑ DTS magazine , 1988/6 p. 24
- ↑ DTS magazine , 1988/8 p. 32
- ↑ Results of the Senior European Championship 2013 (accessed on June 4, 2013)
- ↑ Edit Buchholz results from the ITTF database on ittf.com (accessed on September 4, 2011)
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Buchholz, Edit |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Wetzel, Edit |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German table tennis player |
DATE OF BIRTH | April 19, 1941 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Neumunster |