Heidemarie Wycisk

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Heidemarie Wycisk in February 1975

Heidemarie "Heidi" Wycisk (born February 2, 1949 in Groß Marzehns as Heidemarie Räbiger ) is a former athlete from the German Democratic Republic (GDR). In 1977 she won the bronze medal in the long jump at the European Indoor Championships.

She began training in school and had her first successes in the long jump as a student at the Pioneer Championships in 1964 and at the I. Children's and Youth Spartakiad in 1966, where she won with 5.66 m.

In 1969 she took second place as Heidi Räbiger at the GDR championships in the long jump behind Kristina Hauer , in 1972 she took third place. In 1971 and 1972 she came third in the hall.

After a long break from competition she returned in 1975 as Heidi Wycisk, at the GDR indoor championships she took second place behind Marianne Voelzke . In 1976 she reached third place indoors, outdoors she was runner-up behind Angela Voigt with 6.67 m . At the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal Voigt won with 6.72 m, Wycisk finished seventh with 6.39 m. In 1977 Heidi Wycisk drove as GDR indoor champion to the European Indoor Championships in San Sebastián, with 6.40 m she won bronze behind Jarmila Nygrýnová from Czechoslovakia and Ildikó Erdélyi from Hungary. Outdoors, Wycisk was second in the GDR championships behind Brigitte Künzel in 1977 with a personal best of 6.76 m . In 1978 she won her second GDR indoor title, at the European Indoor Championships in Milan she finished fifth with 6.38 m. After a third place at the GDR championships, she went to Prague for the European championships , where she finished eighth with 6.44 m.

Her best performance was the 6.76 m, which she jumped in Dresden in 1977. Heidemarie Wycisk started for the SC Chemie Halle , with a height of 1.69 m, her competition weight was 60 kg. In the documents on state doping in the GDR that became public after the reunification , the name of Wycisk was also found among the doped athletes. She was a trained specialist in data processing.

literature

  • Klaus Amrhein: Biographical manual on the history of German athletics. 1898-2005. Volume 2: Lehnertz - Zylka. 3rd edition, 12. – 21. Hundred. German Athletics Promotion and Project Society, Darmstadt 2005.
  • Fritz Steinmetz and Manfred Grieser : German records. Development from 1898 to 1991. Kassel 1992

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Brigitte Berendonk : Doping. From research to fraud . Reinbek 1992, ISBN 3-499-18677-2 , p. 184

Web links