Helga Haase Explained

Helga Haase
Fullname:Helga Haase-Obschernitzki
Headercolor:
  1. d7ecff
Occupation:Major of the Volkspolizei
Birth Date:9 June 1934
Birth Place:Danzig, Free City of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland)
Sport:Speed skating
Club:SC Dynamo Berlin

Helga Haase (Obschernitzki; 9 June 1934 – 16 June 1989) was a speed skater in East Germany. She was born in Danzig and died in East Berlin.

Career

Haase's career began 1952, when she introduced herself at 18 years at the SC Dynamo Berlin, which looked for high-speed ice skaters to the world and married thereupon her coach Helmut Haase.

From 1957 to 1967, Haase (hare) reached 15 GDR master skating titles on separate distances (Einzelstrecken), an additional seven titles in combination results (samalog, or Mehrkampf in German) and a further four on a very small indoor rink (Kleinbahn), a fore-runner of present indoor short track skating.

1960 Winter Olympics

In preparation for the Olympic Winter Games of 1960, she went to Davos with the ladies of the unified German team and broke the multi-combination world record in Davos, Switzerland.[1] With the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley,[2] she won, as the first German speed skater and as the first sportswoman of the GDR, a gold medal at the Olympic Winter Games, the gold medal over 500 m. That medal also was the first Olympic medal for any woman in speed skating, as it was not before on the Olympic program. She also won the silver medal over 1000 m and finished at a respectable 8th place over 1500 m, and all of this despite the prohibition of the entry for her husband/coach.

1964 Winter Olympics

In the Olympic season of 1964, she reached again peak performance, with a fourth place in the 1000 m and a fifth place over 1500 m with the Olympic Games in Innsbruck. In the course of her career, Haase skated 23 German records.[3]

Post-career

In 1978, her grandson Robert Haase was born. Starting from 1984 she retired because of disablement.[4] She worked also in the central guidance of the Sportvereinigung Dynamo.

Records

World records! Distance !! Result !! Location !! Date
mini combination 202.834 20 January 1960
Personal records! Distance !! Result !! Location !! Date
500 m 45.9 20 February 1960
1,000 m 1:34.3 22 February 1960
1,500 m 2:28.6 31 January 1964
3,000 m 5:19.7 1 March 1964
mini combination 200.516 30/31 January 1960
East-German records! Distance !! Result !! Location !! Date
1,000 m 1:42.5 9 March 1958
500 m 49.5 25 January 1959
1500 m 2:39.1 25 January 1959
1000 m 1:41.5 26 January 1959
mini combination 210.116 26 January 1959
500 m 47.3 31 January 1959
1000 m 1:37.7 2 February 1959
1500 m 2:37.1 28 February 1959
500 m 47.0 8 January 1960
1000 m 1:37.4 14 January 1960
1500 m 2:33.8 19 January 1960
3000 m 5:31.0 20 January 1960
mini combination 202.834 20 January 1960
500 m 46.8 30 January 1960
1500 m 2:33.4 30 January 1960
1000 m 1:35.4 31 January 1960
3000 m 5:29.3 31 January 1960
mini combination 200.516 31 January 1960
500 m 45.9 20 February 1960
1500 m 2:31.7 21 February 1960
1000 m 1:34.3 22 February 1960
1500 m 2:28.6 31 January 1960
3,000 m 5:19.7 1 March 1964
[5]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Die deutsche Eisschnelllauf-Seite: Geschichte des Eisschnelllaufens . 10 July 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070708061530/http://www.desg.de/df_historie.php . 8 July 2007 .
  2. Web site: Nachrichten drucken . 10 July 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030705113445/http://www.desg.de/akt_news_print.php?newsid=306 . 5 July 2003 .
  3. Web site: Deutsche Eisschnelllauf- und Shorttrack-Gemeinschaft e.V..
  4. Web site: DESG: Athleten vorgestellt . 10 July 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030904145421/http://www.desg.de/skater.php?anzeige=skater&skater=11 . 4 September 2003 .
  5. Zickow 1992, pp. 295–297.