Hans-Joachim Haustein

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Hans-Joachim Haustein (born December 13, 1942 in Oelsnitz ) is a former German cyclist .

Athletic career

Haustein began actively cycling in 1960 at BSG Astra Karl-Marx-Stadt . His coach was the former racing cyclist and later coach of Olaf Ludwig , Werner Marschner . In 1962 he moved to ASK Vorwärts Leipzig , where he also ended his career in 1972.

In 1969, Haustein was GDR champion in two-man team driving with his club-mate Horst Willgruber on the Berlin-Weißensee cycling track . In 1964 he was already second in this discipline. Also in 1969 and with Willgruber he won the international championship in two-man team driving on the track in Berlin's Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle . He won another title as a stayer in 1970 at the championships of the sports associations of the armies of the Warsaw Pact in Soviet Tula behind pacemaker Horst Aurich.

Haustein was a track specialist and occasionally also competed in road races, so he won the Grand Diamond Prize in his performance class in 1962.

Professional

Hans-Joachim Haustein completed an apprenticeship as a machine fitter . He later studied sports and graduated as a certified sports teacher . From 1974 to 1990 he worked as a trainer in Leipzig .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Wolfgang Taubmann, Johannes Zimoch, Wilfried Schulz (eds.): Stand up again and again . Spotless-Verlag (cooperation), Berlin 2007, ISBN 3-937943-03-X , p. 197 .
  2. ^ German Cycling Association of the GDR (ed.): The cyclist . No. 52/1969 . Berlin 1969, p. 8 .
  3. ^ German Cycling Association of the GDR (ed.): The cyclist . No. 8/1969 . Berlin 1969, p. 4 .
  4. Honor roll of the Grand Diamond Prize. Retrieved May 3, 2019 .

Web links