Susanne Lahme

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Susanne Lahme
portrait
birthday September 10, 1968
place of birth Luckenwalde , GDR
size 1.83 m
Indoor volleyball
position Universal
societies
1980–1991
1991–1993
1993–1995
1995–1996
1996–1997
1997–1998
1998–1999
1999–2001
2001–2002
2002–2003
SC Dynamo Berlin / SC Berlin
CJD Berlin
Ecoclear Sumirago
Latte Rugiada Matera
Leites Nestle Sorocaba
Foppapedretti Bergamo
Medinex Reggio Calabria
Despar Perugia
Monte Schiavo Jesi
Cerdisa Reggio Emilia
National team
263 times A national team
successes
1983 - GDR Cup Winner
1984 - GDR Cup Winner
1985 - Champion and Cup Winner GDR
1985 - Vice European Champion
1986 - Champion and Cup Winner GDR
1987 - European Champion
1987 - Champion and Cup Winner GDR
1988 - 5th place Olympic Games
1988 - GDR Champion
1989 - Vice European Champion
1989 - Champion and cup winner GDR
1990 - GDR champion
1991 - Third place in the European Championship in
1991 - Champion and cup winner GDR
1992 - DVV cup winner
1992 - Volleyball player of the year
1993 - German champion and DVV cup winner
1993 - Volleyball player of the year
1994 - World Cup fifth
1996 - Champions League winner
1996 - 8th place Olympic Games
1997 - Brazilian champion
1998 - Italian champion
1998 - Italian cup winner
1998 - Italian Supercup winner
2000 - Winner European Cup Winners' Cup
2000 - 6th place Olympic Games
beach volleyball
Partner 2002–2005 Danja Müsch
2006–2007 Geeske Banck
successes
2002 - German runner-up in
2003 - Third place in the championship in
2003 - World Tour finalist
2004 - World Tour finalist
2004 - Olympic participant
2005 - German champion
As of August 20, 2014

Susanne Lahme (born September 10, 1968 in Luckenwalde ) is a former German volleyball and beach volleyball player .

Athletic career in indoor volleyball

Lahme began her career in 1980 in indoor volleyball at SC Dynamo Berlin , later CJD Berlin , with whom she was eight times GDR and German champions and nine times cup winner . She played 263 international matches for the German national team . She was European champion in 1987, two-time vice European champion in 1985 and 1989 and third in the 1991 European Championship. After moving to the Italian league, she won the Champions League in 1996 with Latte Rugiada Matera .

In the same year she moved to the Brazilian club Leites Nestle Sorocaba, with whom she was the best block player of the season, Brazilian champions and the South American championship. At the end of the season she returned to Italy, where she won the 1998 championship, cup and Supercup with Foppapedretti Bergamo . With Despar Perugia she won the European Cup Winners' Cup in 2000 .

At the Olympic Games in Seoul in 1988 she reached 5th place with the national team, 8th place in Atlanta in 1996, 6th in Sydney in 2000. In addition, she placed fifth at the 1994 World Cup in São Paulo . Susanne Lahme ended her indoor career after the 2002/03 season in Italy.

Career in beach volleyball

In 2001 Lahme started her beach volleyball career parallel to the game in the hall. From 2002 she formed a duo with Danja Müsch and reached the final of the German championship in the same year at Timmendorfer Strand and in 2003 she came third. At the 2003 World Tour she reached the final in Lianyungang . In 2004 she did the same in Mallorca and played at the Olympic tournament in Athens , which she finished in ninth place. In their last year together with Danja Müsch, she won the German championship title in 2005 and from 2006 she formed a new team with Geeske Banck. After a knee operation in August 2007, she ended her career as an athlete and trained and supervised the Geeske Banck / Anja Günther team in 2008 .

Private

Lahme is a trained primary school teacher . She lives alternately in Berlin and Ancona . Since December 2008 she has been running her own beach camps for beginners and advanced. She has been the owner of an insurance agency since 2012.

honors and awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Archived copy ( Memento of May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  2. Volleyball player of the year 1992 . volleyball.de, accessed on December 27, 2017 (PDF file; 1.3 MB)