Malte Mohr

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Malte Mohr athletics

Malte Mohr (2012)
Mohr 2012 in Munich

nation GermanyGermany Germany
birthday July 24, 1986
place of birth Bochum , Germany
size 192 cm
Weight 82 kg
Career
discipline Pole vault
society TSV Graefelfing
Trainer from October 2018 Touch the Clouds Team
status active
Medal table
Indoor world championships 0 × gold 2 × silver 0 × bronze
European Indoor Championships 0 × gold 0 × silver 2 × bronze
Indoor world championships
silver 2010 Doha 5.70 m
silver 2014 Sopot 5.80 m
European Indoor Championships
bronze 2011 Paris 5.71 m
bronze 2013 Gothenburg 5.76 m
last change: March 8, 2014

Malte Mohr (born July 24, 1986 in Bochum ) is a German pole vaulter .

Career

Malte Mohr began his career at USC Bochum and competed for TV Wattenscheid in 2004 and 2005 . In autumn 2005 he moved to TSV Bayer 04 Leverkusen , where he trained with Leszek Klima , from January 1, 2010 he was part of the training group around Tim Lobinger and Fabian Schulze and started for the LG Stadtwerke München until he returned to TV Wattenscheid in 2012. His coach was Chauncey Johnson until the summer of 2018. Since October 2018 he has been writing his own training plans and the technical training is supervised by the Bavarian state trainer pole vault Matthias Schimmelpfennig from the TtC team.

Mohr won the German Youth Indoor Championships in 2005 and by then had a best performance of 5.30 m, in 2006 he catapulted himself into the top German class with a jump of 5.71 m. A torn ligament and several small injuries in 2007 barely allowed regular training and competitions. In 2008 he continued his previous performance and rose to 5.76 m in a competition in Żary, Poland . However, he narrowly missed his goal of qualifying for the Olympic Games in Beijing , with Danny Ecker , Raphael Holzdeppe and Tim Lobinger being nominated.

In the following year he improved further and qualified for the 2009 World Championships in Berlin with a jump over 5.80 m . In the qualification he jumped 5.65 m, but had only one valid attempt at 5.5 m in the final and was fourteenth. At the indoor meeting in Leipzig in February 2010, Mohr crossed 5.83 m and two weeks later secured the title of German indoor champion ahead of Alexander Straub and Raphael Holzdeppe. He qualified for the World Indoor Championships in Doha together with Straub . There he won the silver medal behind the Australian Steve Hooker and ahead of Straub. At the opening competition for the Diamond League on May 23, 2010 in Shanghai , Mohr was the only one to jump the 5.70 m and secured the premiere victory in this series of events. At the German Championships 2011 in Kassel, he won with a crossed height of 5.72 m. At the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, he was fifth with a crossed 5.85 m.

On May 31, 2012 he qualified with the required standard of 5.72 m at the Diamond League Meeting in Rome for the Olympic Games in London . A week later he also won the first Jump and Fly in Munich with 5.72 m . He was able to defend his title at the German championships with a height of 5.82 m. A week before the European Championships in Helsinki he set a new personal best on June 22nd in Ingolstadt with 5.91 m, but just missed a medal at the European Championships in fourth with a height of 5.77 m. At the Olympic Games in London he was ninth.

Mohr won the bronze medal at the 2013 European Indoor Championships in Gothenburg. As in 2011 in Daegu , he finished fifth at the World Championships in August, this time with a jump of 5.82 m.

On March 1, 2014, he set a new personal indoor record at ISTAF indoor Berlin with a height of 5.90 m.

Private

Malte Mohr completed an apprenticeship as an office clerk and has been a member of the Bundeswehr since autumn 2009.

Top performances

  • Pole vault (open air): 5.91 m, June 22, 2012, Ingolstadt
  • Pole vault (hall): 5.90 m, March 1, 2014, Berlin

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. pm / fc: Malte Mohr - increase by 41 centimeters . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. July 20, 2006. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
  2. ^ A b Daniela Städter: Malte Mohr - dream of Olympia lives again . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. February 4, 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
  3. Ernst Schnitzler: 5.76 meters - Malte Mohr shocks the competition . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. June 2, 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
  4. Peter Middel / ah: Malte Mohr jumps with 5.80 meters World Cup norm . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. May 24, 2009. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
  5. ^ A b Christian Fuchs / pm: Malte Mohr lets action follow . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. February 14, 2010. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
  6. Anja Herrlitz / sid: Malte Mohr wins in Shanghai with 5.70 meters . Deutsche Leichtathletik Promotion- und Projektgesellschaft mbH - www.leichtathletik.de. May 23, 2010. Retrieved May 23, 2010.