Jan Hoffmann
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- For the Danish footballer, see Jan Hoffmann (footballer).
Olympic medal record | |||
Figure skating | |||
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Silver | 1980 Lake Placid | Men's singles |
Jan Hoffmann (* 26 October 1955 in Dresden) is a German figure skater, two-time World Champion and silver medallist at the 1980 Winter Olympics.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Jan Hoffmann's first coach was Annemarie Halbach in Dresden. He changed later to coach Jutta Müller in Karl-Marx-Stadt (today Chemnitz). He represented the former East Germany in competition.
In 1974, Hoffmann won the World and European Championships for the first time. After that he had a surgery of his meniscus, which slowed down his career and caused him to miss the entire 1975 season. He won his second World Championship title in 1980 at the end of his skating career.
Hoffmann competed at 4 Olympic Games. At the 1968 Winter Olympics he was just 12 years old. At the 1972 Games he finished 6th, at the 1976 Winter Olympics he was 4th, and he won the silver medal in 1980. At these Olympics Robin Cousins (GBR) won gold and Charles Tickner (USA) won bronze. Jan Hoffman also won the European Championship four times.
Hoffmann studied medicine after his figure skating career and is today an orthopaedic specialist. He is still active in figure skating as a judge and was also a member of the managing board of the Deutsche Eislauf-Union (German Figure skating Union).
In spite of his other achievements in skating, in the United States Hoffmann is unfortunately probably best known as the judge singled out by CBS television as being responsible for Oksana Baiul winning over Nancy Kerrigan at the 1994 Winter Olympics, allegedly owing to his common Eastern bloc background with the Ukrainian Baiul. In fact, there were four other judges who also placed Baiul first, and the decision required a majority of the panel. CBS figure skating commentator Scott Hamilton strongly objected to this attempt to paint Hoffmann's judging as biased and politically motivated, but was overruled by the event producers. Four years later, Hoffman also judged the ladies competition at the 1998 Winter Olympics and gave his first-place ordinal to Michelle Kwan.
Jan Hoffmann is married and has one daughter.
[edit] Results
[edit] Olympic Games
[edit] World Championships
- 1970 - 10. Place
- 1971 - 4. Place
- 1972 - 6. Place
- 1973 - 3. Place
- 1974 - 1. Place
- 1975 - not participated due to meniscus surgery
- 1976 - 3. Place
- 1977 - 2. Place
- 1978 - 2. Place
- 1979 - 3. Place
- 1980 - 1. Place
[edit] European Championships
- 1970 - 9. Place
- 1971 - 4. Place
- 1972 - not participated
- 1973 - 3. Place
- 1974 - 1. Place
- 1975 - not participated due to meniscus surgery
- 1976 - 3. Place
- 1977 - 1. Place
- 1978 - 1. Place
- 1979 - 1. Place
- 1980 - 2. Place
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Scott Hamilton, Landing It. ISBN 1-57566-466-6.
[edit] Navigation
1891: Oskar Uhlig | 1892-1894: Eduard Engelmann jr. | 1895: Tibor von Foldvary | 1898-1900: Ulrich Salchow | 1901: Gustav Hügel | 1904: Ulrich Salchow | 1905: Max Bohatsch | 1906-1907: Ulrich Salchow | 1908: Ernst Herz | 1909-1910: Ulrich Salchow | 1911: Per Thorén | 1912: Gosta Sandahl | 1913: Ulrich Salchow | 1914: Fritz Kachler | 1922-1923: Willy Böckl | 1924: Fritz Kachler | 1925-1928: Willy Böckl | 1929-1936: Karl Schäfer | 1937-1938: Felix Kaspar | 1939: Graham Sharp | 1947: Hans Gerschwiler | 1948: Richard Button | 1949: Edi Rada | 1950: Ede Király | 1951-1952: Helmut Seibt | 1953-1954: Carlo Fassi | 1955-1957: Alain Giletti | 1958-1959: Karol Divin | 1960-1961: Alain Giletti | 1962-1964: Alain Calmat | 1965-1968: Emmerich Danzer | 1969-1973: Ondrej Nepela | 1974: Jan Hoffmann | 1975: Vladimir Kovalev | 1976: John Curry | 1977-1979: Jan Hoffmann | 1980: Robin Cousins | 1981: Igor Bobrin | 1982-1983: Norbert Schramm | 1984: Alexander Fadeev | 1985-1986: Jozef Sabovčík | 1987-1989: Alexander Fadeev | 1990-1991: Viktor Petrenko | 1992: Petr Barna | 1993: Dmitri Dmitrenko | 1994: Viktor Petrenko | 1995: Ilia Kulik | 1996: Viacheslav Zagorodniuk | 1997: Alexei Urmanov | 1998-1999: Alexei Yagudin | 2000-2001: Evgeny Plushenko | 2002: Alexei Yagudin | 2003: Evgeny Plushenko | 2004: Brian Joubert | 2005-2006: Evgeny Plushenko | 2007: Brian Joubert |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Hoffmann, Jan |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | German figure skater |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 26, 1955 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Dresden, Saxony, Germany |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: 1955 births | Living people | German figure skaters | Figure skaters at the 1976 Winter Olympics | Figure skaters at the 1972 Winter Olympics | Figure skaters at the 1968 Winter Olympics | Figure skaters at the 1980 Winter Olympics | Olympic competitors for East Germany | Figure skating officials