Monique Garbrecht-Enfeldt

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Monique Garbrecht-Enfeldt Speed ​​skating
Monique Garbrecht
nation Germany
birthday December 11, 1968
place of birth PotsdamGDR
Career
status not active
End of career 2005
Medal table
Olympic medals 0 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
World Cup medals 9 × gold 2 × silver 0 × bronze
National medals 15 × gold 9 × silver 7 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
bronze Albertville 1992 1000 m
silver Salt Lake City 2002 500 m
ISU Individual distance world championships
silver Heerenveen 1999 1000 m
gold Nagano 2000 500 m
gold Nagano 2000 1000 m
gold Salt Lake City 2001 1000 m
silver Salt Lake City 2001 500 m
gold Berlin 2003 500 m
ISU Sprint World Championships
gold Inzell 1991 sprint
gold Calgary 1999 sprint
gold Seoul 2000 sprint
gold Inzell 2001 sprint
gold Calgary 2003 sprint
 

Monique Garbrecht-Enfeldt , b. Garbrecht, (born December 11, 1968 in Potsdam ) is a former German speed skater , trained physiotherapist and advertising clerk who started for the Berlin TSC .

Monique Garbrecht spent her childhood in Kleinmachnow near Berlin . After moving to Halle with her parents Erika and Peter Garbrecht, she discovered speed skating in 1979 and made so much progress in the first season that she switched to the children's and youth sports school in Berlin. On July 1, 2000, she married her manager Magnus Enfeldt.

In her career she was five times sprint world champion (1991, 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2003), twice world champion over 500 m (2000 and 2003) and twice world champion over 1000 m (2000 and 2001). At the Olympic Games she won a bronze medal in the 1000 m in Albertville and a silver medal in the 500 m in Salt Lake City . She set four world records during her career. For this she was awarded the Silver Laurel Leaf on May 6, 2002 .

On December 1, 2005, Monique Garbrecht-Enfeldt announced her resignation from active competitive sport.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Press release of the Office of the Federal President of May 6, 2002 on the occasion of the awarding of the Silver Laurel Leaf to the medal winners of the 2002 Winter Olympics