Mihály Sáfrán Explained

Mihály Sáfrán
Fullname:Mihály Zoltán Sáfrán
Nationality:Hungarian
Birth Date:21 March 1985
Birth Place:Győr, Hungary
Website:http://mihalysafran.com/
Sport:Sprint canoeing
Club:Építők MDKC
Coach:Ligeti László, Soltész Árpád, Oláh Tamás, Szabó Attila, Ludasi Róbert, Szilárdi Katalin
Retired:2016
Pb:C-1 1000m 3:49, C-1 500m 1:49, C-2 1000m 3:32
Medaltemplates:
Height:1.87m (06.14feet)
Weight:89kg (196lb)

Mihály Zoltán Sáfrán (born 21 March 1985 in Győr, Hungary)[1] is a Hungarian former professional athlete in canoe sprint, fitness coach and health and fitness author. He is a two-times European champion of the 1000 metres race in C-2 and C-4 (2009, 2011), and a World Championship bronze medalist from 2011 in C-4 on the same distance. He has a 6th place from C-2 Canoe Marathon (2007) and C-4 1000m European Championship (2005), 5th place on WCh in C-2 1000m (2009). Two times national champion.

At age group events he has 2 gold medals from U23 European Championships in C-2 1000m (2007, 2008), 3 times bronze in C-2 500m (2007), C-2 1000m (2004), C-4 1000m (2006). He is a junior World Champion in C-1 1000m (2003), 2 times bronze medalist in C-4 1000m (2001) and C-4 500m (2003). 30 times national champion.

He also participated at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, finished at the semifinals of the C-2 500 m event.

He has a younger brother, Mátyás, who is also a sprint canoer and partners Mihály in the C-2 and C-4 boat as well.

After the elite sport career, he started writing books and articles about fitness, diet, cold adaptation, health, explained by quantum-biology science. He is also coaching people for general fitness and performance since 2014. His new sport hobby is the OCR (Obstacle Course Racing) and managed to win the 6km Bestial Race in Lanzarote (2022).

His hobbies are nature, camping, reading, guitar, SUP, windsurf, surfing, OCR competitions.

Studies

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mihály Sáfrán Biography and Olympic Results. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418085253/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/sa/mihaly-safran-1.html. dead. 18 April 2020. Sports Reference. 8 March 2012.