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Monika Pflug

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German speed skater

Monika Pflug
Pflug at the 1974 World Championships
Personal information
Born1 March 1954 (1954-03) (age 71)
Munich, West Germany
Height173 cm (5 ft 8 in)
Weight64 kg (141 lb)
Sport
SportSpeed skating
ClubDEC Frillensee, Inzell
Achievements and titles
Personalbest(s)500 m – 40.53 (1988)
1000 m – 1:23.47 (1984)
1500 m – 2:11.26 (1986)
3000 m – 4:54.49 (1981)
Medal record
Representing West Germany
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place1972 Sapporo1000 m
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1972 EskilstunaSprint
Bronze medal – third place1973 OsloSprint
Bronze medal – third place1974 InnsbruckSprint
Bronze medal – third place1982 AlkmaarSprint
Pflug on a stamp ofAjman

Monika Pflug (born 1 March 1954), also known asMonika Holzner-Pflug andMonika Gawenus-Pflug, is a German formerspeed skater. She was born inMunich and competed for Germany.[1]

Pflug's talent for speed skating was discovered in 1968 and the very next year, she already became junior national champion. In 1970, she set a national record on the 1000 m and in 1971, she became national sprint champion. The next year, 1972, was her best year; she first became national allround champion, then, one month later, she won gold on the 1000 m at the1972 Winter Olympics ofSapporo, and two weeks after that, she becameworld sprint champion.[1]

After getting married, Pflug started competing asMonika Holzner-Pflug in the 1974–75 season. The marriage was short-lived, however, and after her divorce she competed asMonika Pflug again. In 1984, Pflug married fellow speed skater Fritz Gawenus, a multiple national champion. From then on, she competed asMonika Gawenus-Pflug.[1]

Pflug would compete in a total of five Winter Olympics between 1972 and 1988, but did not win any more Olympic medals. At the World Sprint Championships, she won three more medals, all bronze, in 1973, 1974 and 1982. She interrupted her speed-skating career for a while to become a mother. Pflug ended her speed-skating career abruptly in 1988 after a new personal and national record on the 500 m in an otherwise disappointing season. By that time, she had gathered 16 national titles and had skated a national record 65 times.

Medals

[edit]

An overview of medals won by Pflug at important championships she participated in, listing the years in which she won each:

ChampionshipsGold medalSilver medalBronze medal
Winter Olympics1972 (1000 m)
World Allround
World Sprint19721973
1974
1982
World Cup
European Allround
West German Allround1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1981
1982
West German Sprint1975
1979
1981
1982
1983
1984
1986
1987

World records

[edit]

Over the course of her career, Pflug skated oneworld record:

EventResultDateVenue
Sprint combination183.08527 February 1972Eskilstuna

Personal records

[edit]

To put these personal records in perspective, the columnWR lists the official world records on the dates that Pflug skated her personal records.

EventResultDateVenueWR
500 m40.5322 February 1988Calgary39.39
1000 m1:23.4730 December 1983Inzell1:19.31
1500 m2:11.266 March 1986Inzell2:03.34
3000 m4:54.4926 February 1981Inzell4:31.00
Mini combination178.95926 February 1981Inzell171.149
Sprint combination166.57523 February 1986Karuizawa161.120

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcMonika Gawenus-Holzner-Pflug. sports-reference.com

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMonika Pflug.
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