Jana Perlberg

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Jana Perlberg (born January 11, 1966 in Brandenburg an der Havel ) is a former German judoka . In 1993 she was European champion, 1996 European Championship and 1990 European Championship Second Third, while in 1990 the German Democratic Republic took.

Athletic career

The 1.53 m tall Jana Perlberg fought in the super lightweight, the weight class up to 48 kilograms. In 1984 and from 1986 to 1990 she was GDR champion in this weight class, starting for SG Dynamo Brandenburg . In 1990 she took part in the European Championships for the first time in Frankfurt am Main and lost her opening match against the British Karen Briggs . With three wins in the round of hope, she reached the fight for a bronze medal, which she won against Michaela Bornemann from Austria.

After reunification , Jana Perlberg competed for SC Berlin and became German champion in 1994 and 1996. At the 1991 World Championships in Barcelona she defeated the Spaniard Yolanda Soler in the quarter-finals , but then lost in the semifinals to the French Cécile Nowak and in the battle for a bronze medal against the Cuban Legna Verdecia . At the European Championships in Athens in 1993 , she defeated the French Martine Dupond in the quarter -finals, the Greek Evangelista Vassiliou in the semifinals and the Russian Tatyana Kuwtschinowa in the final . In the following year at the European Championships in Gdansk in 1994 , she defeated the Yugoslav Leposava Marković in the quarterfinals , lost in the semifinals to Yolanda Soler and in the battle for bronze against Tatiana Kuwchinowa. In 1995 Perlberg finished seventh at the European Championships . In 1996 at the European Championships in The Hague, she defeated Tatiana Kuwtschinowa in the quarter-finals and the French Sylvie Meloux in the semi-finals , and in the final she lost to Yolanda Soler. At the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996, she lost to the Pole Małgorzata Roszkowska with a small score (Koka) in her first fight .

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ GDR championships on sport-komplett.de, the year 1989 is missing there, but can be found on judoinside.com
  2. Match balance at judoinside.com
  3. ^ German championships at sport-komplett.de
  4. Volker Kluge : Olympic Summer Games. Chronicle IV. Seoul 1988 - Atlanta 1996. Sportverlag Berlin, Berlin 2002, ISBN 3-328-00830-6 . P. 759