Christa Vahlensieck
Christa Vahlensieck (née Kofferschläger; born 27 May 1949) is a German former long distance runner and pioneer in the marathon for women. During her running career, from 1973 to 1989, she simultaneously achieved a world record in the 10,000 metres, in the 25k road race and the marathon; she holds 17 German champion titles.[1]
Biography
On 28 October 1973, Vahlensieck became the first German woman to complete the marathon in under three hours (2:59:26), as a youth in a German Forestrun. She set another German record (2:53:00) at the Boston Marathon on 15 April 1974. Both times were also European bests.
In the same year, she won the Essen Marathon in 2:42:38. The time was not recognized as a world record because the course was 745 m too short.
On 3 May 1975, she succeeded at setting the world record at Dülmen with a time of 2:40:16. In the same year, she was the first German winner at the Schwarzwald Marathon in 2:45:43, a time that still stands as the course record.
On 10 September 1977, her victory at the Berlin Marathon in 2:34:48 gave her another world record.
At the 1983 World Championship in Helsinki she placed 19th (2:40:43).
From 1973 to 1989, she won 21 marathons, among them the 1977 Berlin Marathon, five times at the Košice Peace Marathon (1981, 1984, 1986 - 1988) and the 1989 Vienna Marathon. In 1988 Vahlensieck ran in the special event "Friendship Run Wuppertal-Košice", a course over 1765 km, trespassing the Iron curtain: "an awesome experience", as she remembers.[2]
Other Records
- World record in the hour run: 16,872 meters, 24 May 1975 in Bochum
- World record in the 10000 metres: 34:01.4, 20 August 1975 in Wolfsburg
- World record in the 20000 metres: 1:10:50.2, 25 October 1975 in Essen
- Four world records in 25km road race: 1:31:52, 23 March 1975 in Düren; 1:31:01, 13 September 1975 in Rheydt; 2 May 1976 in Ameln; 1:28:33, 22 November 1978 in Griesheim
- World record in the Marathon: 2:40:15.8, 3 May 1975 in Dülmen; 2:34:47.5 10 September 1977 in Berlin
- German Record in 100km run: 7:50:37, 4 September 1976 in Unna
She won 11 West German national titles:
- in Marathon: 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978 and 1980
- in 25 Kilometer Road race: 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1980
- in 15-Kilometer Road race: 1988
- in Cross country 1978
Achievements
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representing West Germany | |||||
1977 | Berlin Marathon | Berlin, West Germany | 1st | Marathon | 2:34:48 |
1982 | Osaka Ladies Marathon | Osaka, Japan | 3rd | Marathon | 2:34:42 |
1983 | World Championships | Helsinki, Finland | 19th | Marathon | 2:40:43 |
New York City Marathon | New York City, United States | 6th | Marathon | 2:35:59 | |
1986 | California International Marathon | Sacramento, United States | 1st | Marathon | 2:39:31 |
New York City Marathon | New York City, United States | 9th | Marathon | 2:38:12 | |
1989 | Vienna Marathon | Vienna, Austria | 1st | Marathon | 2:34:47 |
References
- ^ "Online portal 'Leichtathletik' 'Was macht eigentlich Christa Vahlensieck?' (By the way, how is Christa Vahlensieck doing?)" (in German). 11 May 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
- ^ "Westdeutsche Zeitung, May 26th 2009, 'Lauflegende Christa Vahlensieck: "Doping kannten wir nicht" (Running Legend Christa Vahlensieck: "Doping we didn't know"" (in German). 26 May 2009. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
External links
- Portrait auf laufreport.de (in German)
Records | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Women's Marathon World Record Holder 3 May 1975 – 12 October 1975 10 September 1977 – 22 October 1978 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- 1974: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1975: Kristin Bochröder (FRG)
- 1976: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1977: Christa Vahlensieck (FRG)
- 1978: Ursula Blaschke (FRG)
- 1979: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1980: Gerlinde Püttmann (FRG)
- 1981: Angelika Stephan (FRG)
- 1982: Jean Lochhead (GBR)
- 1983: Karen Holdsworth (GBR)
- 1984: Ágnes Sipka (HUN)
- 1985: Magda Ilands (BEL)
- 1986: Charlotte Teske (FRG)
- 1987: Kerstin Preßler (FRG)
- 1988: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1989: Päivi Tikkanen (FIN)
- 1990: Uta Pippig (GDR)
- 1991: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1992: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1993: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1994: Katrin Dörre-Heinig (GER)
- 1995: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1996: Colleen De Reuck (RSA)
- 1997: Catherina McKiernan (IRL)
- 1998: Marleen Renders (BEL)
- 1999: Tegla Loroupe (KEN)
- 2000: Kazumi Matsuo (JPN)
- 2001: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2002: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2003: Yasuko Hashimoto (JPN)
- 2004: Yoko Shibui (JPN)
- 2005: Mizuki Noguchi (JPN)
- 2006: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2007: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2008: Irina Mikitenko (GER)
- 2009: Atsede Habtamu (ETH)
- 2010: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2011: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2012: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2013: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2014: Tirfi Tsegaye (ETH)
- 2015: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2016: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2017: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2018: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2019: Ashete Bekere (ETH)
- 2020: Not held
- 2021: Gotytom Gebreslase (ETH)
- 2022: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- 2023: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- World Marathon Majors
- Berlin Marathon – List (M/W)
- Boston Marathon – List (M/W)
- Chicago Marathon – List (M/W)
- London Marathon – List (M/W)
- New York City Marathon – List (M/W)
- Tokyo Marathon – List (M/W)