United Team of Germany at the 1956 Summer Olympics
United Team of Germany at the 1956 Summer Olympics | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Olympic" Flag of Germany, defaced with white Olympic rings, used 1960, 1964 (and 1968 by separated teams) | |||||||||
IOC code | EUA | ||||||||
NOC | United Team of Germany | ||||||||
in Melbourne/Stockholm | |||||||||
Competitors | 158 in 15 sports | ||||||||
Flag bearer |
Karl-Friedrich Haas (Melbourne) Fritz Thiedemann (Stockholm) | ||||||||
Medals Ranked 7th |
| ||||||||
Summer Olympics appearances (overview) | |||||||||
Other related appearances | |||||||||
Germany (1896–1936, 1992–) East Germany (1968–1988) West Germany (1968–1988) |
Germany was represented at the 1956 Summer Olympics by a United Team of Germany of athletes from the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) (West Germany) and, for the first time at Summer Games, also from the German Democratic Republic (GDR) (East Germany) which had not joined in 1952. Also, the Saarland athletes who had to enter as a separate team in 1952 could now join in even though the accession of their state was not yet in effect. Thus, this was the only Olympic team ever to comprise athletes from three German states.
Most of the Games were held in Melbourne, Australia, but due to Australian quarantine regulations the equestrian events were held five months earlier in Stockholm, Sweden. 158 competitors, 134 men and 24 women, took part in 95 events in 15 sports.[1]
Events
The greatest German heroes of the Games were the miracle horse Halla, carrying injured rider Hans Günter Winkler to two Gold medals, and one more in 1960 for an all-time record.
Heinz Fütterer, who had tied the 100m world record and set some European records, had been a favorite for medals, but was injured before the games in an event held in the GDR.
Compared to 1952, where no Gold had been won, the Germans improved significantly, but still won more than twice as many Silver than Gold, being ranked joint 4th in Total medals.
Medalists
Gold
- Wolfgang Behrendt — Boxing, Men's Bantamweight
- Michael Scheuer and Meinrad Miltenberger — Canoeing, Men's K2 1.000m Kayak Pairs
- Hans-Günter Winkler — Equestrian, Jumping Individual
- Hans-Günter Winkler, Fritz Thiedemann, and Alfons Lütke-Westhues — Equestrian, Jumping Team
- Helmut Bantz — Gymnastics, Men's Long Horse Vault
- Ursula Happe — Swimming, Women's 200m Breaststroke
Silver
- Karl-Friedrich Haas — Athletics, Men's 400 metres
- Klaus Richtzenhain — Athletics, Men's 1.500 metres
- Christa Stubnick — Athletics, Women's 100 metres
- Christa Stubnick — Athletics, Women's 200 metres
- Gisela Köhler — Athletics, Women's 80m Hurdles
- Harry Kurschat — Boxing, Men's Lightweight
- Fritz Briel and Theo Kleine — Canoeing, Men's K2 10.000m Kayak Pairs
- Therese Zenz — Canoeing, Women's K1 500m Kayak Singles
- August Lütke-Westhues — Equestrian, Three-Day Event Individual
- August Lütke-Westhues, Otto Rothe, and Klaus Wagner — Equestrian, Three-Day Event Team
- Liselott Linsenhoff, Anneliese Küppers, and Hannelore Weygand — Equestrian, Dressage Team
- Karl-Heinrich von Groddeck, Horst Arndt, and Rainer Borkowsky — Rowing, Men's Coxed Pairs
- Wilfried Dietrich — Wrestling, Men's Greco-Roman Heavyweight
Bronze
- Heinz Fütterer, Leonhard Pohl, Lothar Knörzer, and Manfred Germar — Athletics, Men's 4 × 100 m Relay
- Marianne Werner — Athletics, Women's Shot Put
- Michael Scheuer — Canoeing, Men's K1 10.000m Kayak Singles
- Reinhold Pommer, Horst Tüller and Gustav-Adolf Schur — Cycling, Men's Team Road Race
- Liselott Linsenhoff — Equestrian, Dressage Individual
- Günther Brennecke Hugo Budinger, Werner Delmes, Hugo Dollheiser, Eberhard Ferstl, Alfred Lücker, Helmut Nonn, Wolfgang Nonn, Heinz Radzikowski, Werner Rosenbaum, and Günther Ullerich — Field Hockey, Men's Team Competition
- Eva-Maria ten Elsen — Swimming, Women's 200m Breaststroke
Athletics
Men's 110m Hurdles
- Heat — 14.2s
- Semifinals — 14.4s
- Final — 14.5s (→ 4th place)
- Berthold Steines
- Heat — 14.3s
- Semifinals — 14.5s (→ did not advance)
Men's Marathon
- Lothar Beckert — 2:42:10 (→ 19th place)
- Kurt Hartung — 2:52:14 (→ 28th place)
- Klaus Portadnik — did not finish (→ no ranking)
Boxing
Canoeing
Cycling
- Friedrich Neuser
Günther Ziegler — 10th place
- Horst Tüller
Gustav-Adolf Schur
Reinhold Pommer — 27 points (→ Bronze Medal)
- Horst Tüller — 5:23:16 (→ 4th place)
- Gustav-Adolf Schur — 5:23:16 (→ 5th place)
- Reinhold Pommer — 5:24:38 (→ 18th place)
- Erich Hagen — 5:26:38 (→ 22nd place)
Fencing
One fencer represented Germany in 1956.
Football
Gymnastics
Hockey
Rowing
Sailing
Shooting
Two shooters represented Germany in 1956.
Swimming
Water polo
Weightlifting
Wrestling
References
- ↑ "Germany at the 1956 Melbourne Summer Games". sports-reference.com. Retrieved 2010-10-16.