Bernd Hahn
Hahn in 1972 | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Luge | ||
World Championships | ||
1974 Königssee | Men's doubles | |
1981 Hammarstrand | Men's doubles | |
European Championships | ||
1973 Königssee | Men's doubles | |
1978 Hammarstrand | Men's doubles | |
1980 Olang | Men's doubles | |
1975 Olang | Men's doubles |
Bernd Hahn (born 16 November 1954 in Elbingerode) is an East German luger who competed from the early 1970s to the early 1980s. He won two gold medals in the men's doubles event at the FIL World Luge Championships (1974, 1981).
Hahn also won four medals in the men's doubles event at the FIL European Luge Championships with three silvers (1973, 1978, 1980) and one bronze (1975).
Competing in two Winter Olympics, he earned his best finish of fourth in the men's doubles event at Lake Placid, New York, in 1980.
After retiring from luge, Hahn worked as a luge coach for Canada, France, and (since 2006) Russia.
References
- 2002 information on Hahn as a coach.
- 2006 information on Hahn leaving the French luge team for Russia. (in French)
- Hickok sports information on World champions in luge and skeleton.
- List of European luge champions (in German)
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Bernd Hahn". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020.
- Wallenchinsky, David. (1984). "Luge: Men's Two-seater". In The Complete Book the Olympics: 1896-1980. New York: Penguin Books. p. 576.
External links
- Media related to Bernd Hahn at Wikimedia Commons
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- 1955: Austria (Hans Krausner & Josef Thaler)
- 1957–58: West Germany (Fritz Nachmann & Josef Strillinger)
- 1960: Austria (Reinhold Frosch & Ewald Walch)
- 1961: Italy (Roman Pichler & Enrico Prinoth)
- 1962: Italy (Giovanni Graber & Giampaolo Ambrosi)
- 1963: Poland (Ryszard Pędrak-Janowicz & Lucjan Kudzia)
- 1965: East Germany (Wolfgang Scheidel & Thomas Köhler)
- 1967: East Germany (Klaus Bonsack & Thomas Köhler)
- 1969–70: Austria (Manfred Schmid & Ewald Walch)
- 1971: Italy (Paul Hildgartner & Walter Plaikner)
- 1973: East Germany (Horst Hörnlein & Reinhard Bredow)
- 1974: East Germany (Bernd Hahn & Ulrich Hahn)
- 1975–77: East Germany (Hans Rinn & Norbert Hahn)
- 1978: Soviet Union (Dainis Bremze & Aigars Kriķis)
- 1979: West Germany (Hans Brandner & Balthasar Schwarm)
- 1981: East Germany (Bernd Hahn & Ulrich Hahn)
- 1983–87: East Germany (Jörg Hoffmann & Jochen Pietzsch)
- 1989: East Germany (Stefan Krauße & Jan Behrendt)
- 1990: Italy (Hansjörg Raffl & Norbert Huber)
- 1991–95: Germany (Stefan Krauße & Jan Behrendt)
- 1996–97: Austria (Tobias Schiegl & Markus Schiegl)
- 1999–2000: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2001: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2003: Austria (Andreas Linger & Wolfgang Linger)
- 2004: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2005: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2007: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2008: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2009: Italy (Gerhard Plankensteiner & Oswald Haselrieder)
- 2011–12: Austria (Andreas Linger & Wolfgang Linger)
- 2013–16: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt)
- 2017–23: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
- 2024: Austria (Juri Gatt & Riccardo Schöpf)
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