Theodor Dieker

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Theodor Dieker is a former German modern pentathlete . Dieker belonged to a group of army athletes for whom the Army Officer School III in Munich was a training center. In 1963 and 1964 he was German men's champion in the modern pentathlon in Warendorf. Initially started for the Hanseatic city of Hamburg , he later moved to the state of North Rhine-Westphalia . In 1963 he reached 4,750 points and in 1964 5,190 points. In 1963 he started for the FRG as a representative of the Bundeswehr at the World Cup in Magglingen (Switzerland), where he finished 42nd with 3,787 points. At the World Cup in 1965 , Federal Defense Minister Kai-Uwe von Hassel refused to allow him and Herwig Wrede to start in Leipzig for political reasons, despite requests from FDP circles . At the 1983 World Cup in Warendorf, he was entrusted with the sporting implementation.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Rudi Trost: 100 Years of Modern Pentathlon Olympic, 1912–2012. From its founder and father, the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin to the savior of the Pentathlon as an Olympic discipline, the German Dr. Klaus Schormann . Meyer & Meyer, Aachen 2014, ISBN 978-3-89899-897-0 , p. 138.
  2. Army Officer School III: Army Officer School III Munich . Munich 1967, no p.
  3. Rudi Trost: 100 Years of Modern Pentathlon Olympic, 1912–2012. From its founder and father, the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin to the savior of the Pentathlon as an Olympic discipline, the German Dr. Klaus Schormann . Meyer & Meyer, Aachen 2014, ISBN 978-3-89899-897-0 , p. 298.
  4. Rudi Trost: 100 Years of Modern Pentathlon Olympic, 1912–2012. From its founder and father, the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin to the savior of the Pentathlon as an Olympic discipline, the German Dr. Klaus Schormann . Meyer & Meyer, Aachen 2014, ISBN 978-3-89899-897-0 , p. 139.
  5. Rudi Trost: 100 Years of Modern Pentathlon Olympic, 1912–2012. From its founder and father, the French Baron Pierre de Coubertin to the savior of the Pentathlon as an Olympic discipline, the German Dr. Klaus Schormann . Meyer & Meyer, Aachen 2014, ISBN 978-3-89899-897-0 , p. 241.
  6. Pentathlon . In: Der Spiegel 30/1965, July 21, 1965, p. 14.
  7. ^ Walter Grein: The modern pentathlon in Warendorf . fuenf-nrw.de, accessed on January 31, 2017.