Hauke Fuhlbrügge
Hauke Fuhlbrügge | |
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Fuhlbrügge in 1987 | |
Born | (1966-03-21) 21 March 1966 (age 58) Friedrichroda in the former East Germany |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Middle-distance runner |
Known for | Bronze medalist (1500m) |
Medal record | ||
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Men's athletics | ||
Representing Germany | ||
World Championships | ||
1991 Tokyo | 1500 m |
Hauke Fuhlbrügge (born 21 March 1966) is a German former middle-distance runner.
Biography
He won the bronze medal at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo over 1500 metres. He also won a silver medal at the 1989 World Indoor Championships and a gold medal at the 1987 Summer Universiade. Fuhlbrügge qualified for the Olympic Games in Barcelona 1992 but went out in the semi-finals. He set personal bests of 1:45.15 minutes for 800 metres in 1989 and 3:34.15 minutes for 1500 metres in 1991. The latter result places him tenth on the German all-time performers list, behind Thomas Wessinghage, Harald Hudak, Jens-Peter Herold, Dieter Baumann, Rüdiger Stenzel, Jürgen Straub, Willi Wülbeck and Andreas Busse.[1]
Fuhlbrügge did not participate in the 1993 World Championships as he had come only fourth in the German championships.
Hauke Fuhlbrügge competed for East Germany before reunification and represented the sports club SC Turbine Erfurt.
References
- ^ Microsoft Word - Ewige DLV-Bestenliste.doc Archived 4 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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- 1959: Béla Szekeres (HUN)
- 1961: Tomás Salinger (TCH)
- 1963: John Whetton (GBR)
- 1965–1967: Bodo Tümmler (FRG)
- 1970: Francesco Arese (ITA)
- 1973: Frank Clement (GBR)
- 1975: Thomas Wessinghage (FRG)
- 1977: Jozef Plachý (TCH)
- 1979: Graham Williamson (GBR)
- 1981: Saïd Aouita (MAR)
- 1983: Claudio Patrignani (ITA)
- 1985: Chris McGeorge (GBR)
- 1987: Hauke Fuhlbrügge (GDR)
- 1989: Kipkoech Cheruiyot (KEN)
- 1991: Niall Bruton (IRL)
- 1993–1995: Abdelkader Chékhémani (FRA)
- 1997: Anthony Whiteman (GBR)
- 1999: Bernard Lagat (KEN)
- 2001: Pedro Antonio Esteso (ESP)
- 2003: Johan Pretorius (RSA)
- 2005: Ivan Heshko (UKR)
- 2007: Samir Khadar (ALG)
- 2009: Vyacheslav Sokolov (RUS)
- 2011: Imad Touil (ALG)
- 2013: Valentin Smirnov (RUS)
- 2015: Aleksey Kharitonov (RUS)
- 2017: Timo Benitz (GER)
- 2019: Michał Rozmys (POL)
- 2021: Benoît Campion (FRA)
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