Claudia Heill Explained

Claudia Heill
Birth Date:24 January 1982
Birth Place:Vienna, Austria
Death Place:Vienna, Austria
Height:1.76 m
Country:Austria
Rank:Black
Rank Ref:[1]
Dan:4
Club:JC Shiai-Do Wr. Neudorf Thermenregion[2]
Coach:Hupo Rohrauer[3]
Retired:June 2009
Worlds Rank:5
Worlds Year:2001
Worlds Weight:Women's 63 kg
Regionals Type:EU
Regionals Rank:2
Regionals Year:2001
Regionals Weight:Women's 63 kg
Regionals Year2:2005
Regionals Weight2:Women's 63 kg
Olympics Rank:2
Olympics Year:2004
Olympics Weight:Women's 63 kg
Updated:31 May 2023

Claudia Heill (24 January 1982 – 31 March 2011) was an Austrian judoka best known for winning the silver medal in the half-middleweight (63 kg) division at the 2004 Summer Olympics.[4]

Biography

In addition to her success at the 2004 Summer Olympics, Heill won silver medals[5] at the European Championships in 2001 and 2005 and bronze medals in 2002, 2003 and 2007. She placed fifth at the 2008 Summer Olympics and retired one year later. After retiring from competition, she began coaching junior judoka.[6]

Heill in 1998 aged 16 won the 63 kg category at the Senior Austrian National Championships.[7] Later that same year Heill won silver at the Junior World Championships (Cali) where she lost to the Japanese Keiko Maeda. Within a month Heill took the gold medal at the Junior European Championships (Bucharest). Heill’s position as a world-class judoka in the 63 kg category was developing quickly. In 2000, at the Junior World Championships (Nabul) she won bronze and at the Junior European Championships (Nicosia) she won silver. By 2001, Heill began concentrating on her senior career and she took a silver medal in the European Championships (Paris)[8] and placed fifth at the World Championships (Munich).

Heill spent the next seven years competing internationally. She was one of four Austrians (Sabrina Filzmoser, Ludwig Paischer and Andreas Mitterfellner making up the quartet) to take gold medals at the World Military Championships in 2006[9] helping her country top the medal table. Her finest hour was her silver medal-winning performance at the Olympic Games in Athens in 2004. “This had been her dream even as she began practicing her first judo attacks as a seven-year-old,” said her longtime coach Hubert Rohrauer.[10] Heill was part of the organizing committee at the European Championships in Vienna in 2010.

Heill committed suicide by jumping to her death from a 6th-story window in Vienna on 31 March 2011.[11] Shortly before her death, Heill was a commentator on JudoTV at the Judo World Cup in Oberwart. Her former teammate Ludwig Paischer was stunned by her tragic death, saying, "She was such a fun-loving, friendly person."

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023-03-06. Olympedia – Claudia Heill.
  2. Web site: Steckbrief Claudia Heill. derstandard.at. de-AT.
  3. Web site: 2023-05-22. 2014-08-05. de. Claudia Heill: Suizid nach Beziehungsdrama?.
  4. Web site: Claudia Heill Olympic Results . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418103710/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/he/claudia-heill-1.html . dead . 2020-04-18 . 2011-04-02 . sports-reference.com.
  5. Web site: 2011-03-31. Österreichische Olympia-Zweite nimmt sich das Leben. 2022-09-03. welt.de. de.
  6. Web site: 2011-03-31. Austria judo medallist Claudia Heill falls to her death. 2022-09-03. bbc.com. en.
  7. Web site: Claudia Heill. 2022-09-03. judoinside.com. en.
  8. Web site: 2015-09-19. Former Olympic Judo Silver Medalist Commits Suicide in Austria. 2022-09-03. foxnews.com. en.
  9. Web site: 2011-03-31. Sportwelt entsetzt über Selbstmord von Heill. 2022-09-03. heute.at. de.
  10. Web site: 2011-04-04. Judo-Österreich trauert um Claudia HeillJudo-Österreich trauert um Claudia Heill. 2022-09-03. judoaustria.at. de.
  11. Web site: 2011-03-31. Austrian judo medalist Heill, 29, jumps to death. 2020-06-14. ESPN.com. en.