Silke Lichtenhagen (original) (raw)

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German sprinter

Silke Lichtenhagen (born 20 November 1973 in Leverkusen) is a retired German sprinter.

She competed for TSV Bayer Leverkusen, training under Manfred Fink (1988–1994) and Wolfgang Thiele (1995–1998). She represented Germany at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.[1]

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing West Germany
1990 World Junior Championships Plovdiv, Bulgaria 3rd (h)[2] 4 × 100 m relay 44.95
Representing Germany
1991 European Junior Championships Thessaloniki, Greece 6th 100 m 11.77
1st 4 × 100 m relay 44.46
1992 World Junior Championships Seoul, South Korea 11th (sf) 100m 11.84 (wind: +1.2 m/s)
8th 200m 24.22 (wind: +0.3 m/s)
3rd 4 × 100 m relay 44.52
1994 European Championships Helsinki, Finland 12th (sf) 200m 23.45 (wind: +1.4 m/s)
1st 4 × 100 m relay 42.90
1995 World Indoor Championships Barcelona, Spain 4th 200 m 23.23
World Championships Gothenburg, Sweden 3rd 4 × 100 m relay 43.01
  1. ^ Olympic results
  2. ^ Did not finish in the final.
vteEuropean Athletics Championships champions in women's 4 × 100 metres relay
1938: Germany (Kohl, Krauß, Albus, Kühnel) 1946: Netherlands (v.d. Kade-Koudijs, Witziers-Timmer, Adema, Blankers-Koen) 1950: Great Britain (Hay, Desforges, Hall, Foulds) 1954: Soviet Union (Krepkina, Uliskina, Itkina, Turova) 1958: Soviet Union (Krepkina, Kepp, Polyakova, Maslovska) 1962: Poland (Ciepły, Sobotta, Szyroka, Piątkowska) 1966: Poland (Bednarek, Straszyńska, Kirszenstein, Kłobukowska) 1969: GDR (Höfer, Meissner, Podeswa, Vogt) 1971: FRG (Schittenhelm, Helten, Irrgang, Mickler) 1974: GDR (Maletzki, Stecher, Heinich, Eckert) 1978: Soviet Union (Anisimova, Maslakova, Kondratyeva, Storozhkova) 1982: GDR (Walther, Eckert, Rieger, Göhr) 1986: GDR (Gladisch, Rieger, Brestrich-Auerswald, Göhr) 1990: GDR (Möller, Krabbe, Behrendt, Günther) 1994: Germany (Paschke, Knoll, Zipp, Lichtenhagen) 1998: France (Benth, Bangué, Félix, Arron) 2002: France (Combe, Hurtis, Félix, Sidibé) 2006: Russia (Gushchina, Rusakova, Khabarova, Grigoryeva) 2010: Ukraine (Povh, Pohrebnyak, Ryemyen, Bryzhina) 2012: Germany (Günther, Cibis, Pinto, Sailer) 2014: Great Britain (Philip, Nelson, J. Williams, Henry) 2016: Netherlands (Samuel, Schippers, Van Schagen, Sedney) 2018: Great Britain (Philip, Lansiquot, B. Williams, Asher-Smith) 2022: Germany (Mayer, Haase, Lückenkemper, Burghardt) 2024: Great Britain (Asher-Smith, Henry, Hunt, Neita)

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