Karen Forkel Explained

Karen Forkel
Nationality:
Birth Place:Wolfen, Saxony-Anhalt, East Germany
Height:1.72 m
Weight:63 kg
Headercolor:lightsteelblue
Sport:Athletics
Country:
Event:Javelin throw
Club:SV Halle
Pb:71.20 (1991)
Show-Medals:yes

Karen Forkel (born 24 September 1970 in Wolfen) is a German track and field athlete and an Olympic medal winner. In the 1990s she was among the world's best javelin throwers. Her biggest success came in the 1992 Summer Olympics when she took the bronze medal with a throw of 66.86 meters.[1]

Her personal best throw with the new-type-javelin was 65.17 metres, achieved in July 1999 in Erfurt.[2] This ranks her fifth among German javelin throwers, behind Christina Obergföll, Steffi Nerius, Tanja Damaske and Linda Stahl.[2] With the old javelin type she threw 70.20 metres in May 1991 in Halle. This ranks her fifth among German old-type-javelin throwers, behind Petra Felke (who held the world record), Antje Kempe, Silke Renk and Beate Koch.[3]

Forkel represented SC Chemie Halle, which after the German reunification was renamed SV Halle. During her career she was 1.72 meters tall and weighed 63 kilograms.

International competitions

Representing
1987Birmingham, United Kingdom3rd57.00 m
1988Sudbury, Canada1st61.44 m
1989Varaždin, Yugoslavia1st70.12 m
1990Split, Yugoslavia2nd67.56 m
Representing
1991Tokyo, Japan12th57.90 m
1992Barcelona, Spain3rd66.86 m
1993Stuttgart, Germany2nd65.80 m
1994Helsinki, Finland2nd66.10 m
1995Gothenburg, Sweden6th64.18 m
1996Atlanta, United States6th64.18 m
1997Athens, Greece14th60.70 m
1999Seville, Spain12th54.65 m

Notes and References

  1. Karen Forkel. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417174937/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/fo/karen-forkel-1.html . dead . 17 April 2020 .
  2. Web site: Alltime toplist javelin throw . 4 April 2010 . 4 April 2010 . IAAF.
  3. Web site: "Ewige" Bestenliste der deutschen Leichtathletik . "Eternal" list of the best in German athletics . leichtathletik.de . . 1 September 2006 . 4 April 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080413183552/http://www.leichtathletik.de/dokumente/ergebnisse/images/ewige_dlv_bestenliste.pdf . 13 April 2008.