Marita Koch

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Marita Koch

Medal record
Women's Athletics
Competitor for East Germany East Germany
Olympic Games
Gold 1980 Moscow 400 m
Silver 1980 Moscow 4x400 m relay
World Championships
Gold 1983 Helsinki 200 m
Gold 1983 Helsinki 4x100 m relay
Gold 1983 Helsinki 4x400 m relay
Silver 1983 Helsinki 100 m

Marita Koch (born 18 February 1957 in Wismar, East Germany, married name Marita Koch Meier), is a former German sprint track and field athlete. During her career she collected a remarkable sixteen world records in outdoor sprints, as well as 14 world records in indoor events. Her record of 47.60 in the 400 metres, set October 6, 1985 still stands. Only once since then (Marie-José Pérec winning the 1996 Olympics) has another athlete even come within a second of her time. Perec was also coached later on in her sprinting career by Wolfgang Meier (Koch's Coach).

Biography

Marita Koch and Silke Gladisch (background) in Karl-Marx-Stadt, June 18, 1983

Marita Koch displayed exceptional speed even as a young child, defeating boys much older than herself in sprint races whilst at school. By the time Koch had turned 15 years old, she was training under Wolfgang Meier. Meier worked as a Naval Engineer, but also coached athletics part-time. Koch and Meier moved to Rostock and Koch began to study Medicine, but she decided to stop her studies and focus on running instead.

Koch was coached by Meier for her entire career and they later married. She retained her maiden name and is now known as "Marita Koch-Meier". Koch and her Husband Wolfgang Meier have a Daughter "Ulrike".

Track and Field TV Commentators from the early 1980s would frequently refer to Koch as "SUPREME CHAMPION".

She has held world records over several distances from 50 m to 400 m. Some of Koch's best Performances are as follows:

100 m 10.83 seconds (+1.7) Berlin (GER) 8/6/1983... 200 m 21.71 seconds (+0.7) Karl Marx Stadt (GDR) 10/6/1979... 400 m 47.60 seconds, Bruce Stadium, Canberra (AUS) 6/10/1985

Koch ran in the 400 m quarter final at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal (51.87 seconds), but withdrew due to injury.

Koch set her first world record in 1977 in Milan, when she ran 400 m indoors in 51.8 seconds. The following year, she set her first outdoor record at 400 m in 49.19 seconds. She topped this with another two world records within a month.

In 1979 Koch became the first woman to run 200 m in under 22 seconds. Her time of 21.71 seconds set at Karl Marx Stadt stood as the world record for nine years. However, Koch's 200m WR was equaled twice in 1986 by Heike Drechsler. One of Drechsler's 21.71 second 200m performances was achieved into a headwind where as Koch's WR of 21.71 had a tail wind. Drechsler also competed for East Germany specialising in the longjump, 100m and 200m sprints.

At the Moscow Olympics of 1980 she won the gold medal in the individual 400 m and silver medal in the 4 x 400 m relay race.

Three weeks before the 1984 Olympic Games she tied her own record, but the East German boycott prevented her from competing in the games.

Koch set the current 400 m world record of 47.60 seconds, a time considered far out of reach of even the best present athletes,[1] on 6 October 1985 at Bruce Stadium in Canberra, Australia, at that years World Cup meet. Canberra, Australia's capital city, is at 605 metres altitude. [2][3]

Koch's 1985 world record 400 m run had been well planned and her basic speed and speed endurance proven in several training runs in the weeks prior. 1 week prior to her 400m WR run anectdotal reports suggest that Koch had ran 200m in 21.56 seconds (Fully Automatic time). This 200m performance was never verified by the IAAF and remains unofficial.

The 400m WR run

Koch running in lane 2 came out of the blocks at a scorching pace, destroying the stagger on most of her competitors by the end of the first bend. Her 100 m split time was reported to be 11.3 seconds, while her 200 m split time was reported to be 22.4 seconds. At the half-way point in the race she had completely disregarded most of a world class field. Her 300 m split was reported to be 34.1 seconds (HT).

During the final stages of Koch's WR 400 m race the original video footage only captured Koch and Olga Bryzhina (née Vladykina) of the Former USSR, trailing behind but closing the gap. The rest of the field had been left so far behind, they were not panned by the camera as Koch and Vladykina crossed the finishing line. Vladykina running in lane 1 displayed exceptional speed endurance over the final 100m of the race but Koch had gained too much advantage in the early stages of the race and she was unable to pull in Koch before the finish line. Vladykina also ran her all time best performance (48.27 seconds) in that race on 6th Oct 1985.[2][3]

An interesting fact is that Koch also holds the 300 m womans all time best performance of 34.1 seconds (HT), which was achieved at the 300 m point of her 400 m WR run on 6th Oct 1985.

Almost 30 years on Koch's 400 m record has stood the test of time. In recent times perhaps the only woman sprinter to have demonstrated enough speed and speed endurance to come close to possibly challenging Koch's 47.60 sec record run is Allyson Felix. Felix clocked 47.8 secs in the 4 x 400 m relay leg at the London Olympics 2012.

In a 400 m laned race the only Women to have broken the 48sec barrier are Marita Koch and Jarmila Kratochvílová (47.99 seconds, Helsinki 1983). Kratochvílová was Koch's main rival over the 400m distance and also a 400m WR holder in the early 1980s and the 400m WR kept changing between the two of them. Kratochvílová was also a superb 800m runner and she still holds the 800m WR set in 1983, which is the oldest standing track & field WR set by an individual.

As a member of East Germany's relay teams, Koch set more world records. They set new world records over 4 x 100 m in 1979 and 1983. The same team, with Koch part of it, that won silver over 4 x 400 m in the 1980 Olympic Games, set world records over the same distance in 1980, 1982 and 1984.

Koch retired from running in 1987. She had suffered from an achilles tendon injury and she wanted to focus on family life. Her former coach, and now current husband Wolfgang Meier, owns a sports goods store in Rostock.

Marita Koch in Berlin, August 21, 1986

Koch also won the European Championships at 400 m in 1978, 1982 and 1986, before retiring in 1987 as one of Germany's most successful athletes. She remains the European record holder over 200 m.

Drug use controversy

Koch's achievements, along with the extraordinary performances of many other East German female athletes, aroused suspicion that they were achieved with the aid of performance-enhancing drugs.[4] These drugs were and remain illegal, but were not detectable at the time. In 1991 German anti drug activists Brigitte Berendonk and Werner Franke were able to save several doctoral theses and other documents written by scientists, working for the East German drug research program. The documents list the dosage and timetables for the administration of anabolic steroids to many athletes of the former GDR, one of them being Marita Koch. According to the sources Koch did use the anabolic steroid Oral-Turinabol (4-Chlorodehydromethyltestosterone) from 1981 to 1984 with dosages ranging from 530 to 1460 mg/year. Koch never publicly admitted to this. However, a letter to the head of the state-owned pharmaceutical company Jenapharm (which became a subsidiary of Schering AG, not to be confused with Schering-Plough) was discovered by researcher Werner Franke, in which Marita Koch complained that Bärbel Wöckel received larger doses of steroids than herself, because she had a relative working in the company.

Wöckel (GDR) had won gold medals over 200 m at Montreal 1976 and again in Moscow 1980. However even when Wöckel was in her "Prime", it was Koch who held the world record over 200 m (21.71)from 1979-1988. Wöckel had a best performance 200 m of 21.85 (+ 0.3) Potsdam (GDR)21.07.1984

See also

  • German all-time top lists - 100 metres
  • German all-time top lists - 200 metres

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
East Germany Rosemarie Ackermann
East German Sportswoman of the Year
1978 1979
Succeeded by
East Germany Maxi Gnauck
Preceded by
East Germany Rosemarie Ackermann
Women's Track & Field Athlete of the Year
1978 1979
Succeeded by
East Germany Ilona Briesenick
Preceded by
East Germany Ute Geweniger
East German Sportswoman of the Year
1982 1983
Succeeded by
East Germany Katarina Witt
Preceded by
East Germany Katarina Witt
East German Sportswoman of the Year
1985
Succeeded by
East Germany Heike Drechsler
Preceded by
United States Tracy Caulkins
United Press International
Athlete of the Year

1979
Succeeded by
Liechtenstein Hanni Wenzel
Preceded by
United States Chris Evert Lloyd
United Press International
Athlete of the Year

1982
Succeeded by
Czechoslovakia Jarmila Kratochvílová
Preceded by
United States Evelyn Ashford
Women's Track & Field Athlete of the Year
1982
Succeeded by
Czechoslovakia Jarmila Kratochvílová
Preceded by
United States Evelyn Ashford
Women's Track & Field Athlete of the Year
1985
Succeeded by
United States Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Poland Irena Szewińska
Women's 200 m Best Year Performance
1978 1979
Succeeded by
East Germany Bärbel Wöckel
Preceded by
United States Evelyn Ashford
Women's 200 m Best Year Performance
1982 1985
Succeeded by
East Germany Heike Drechsler
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