Karin Büttner-Janz
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Full name | P.D. Dr. hab. of Orth.
Karin Büttner-Janz |
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Date of birth | February 17, 1952 | |
Place of birth | Hartmannsdorf, GDR | |
Specialty | Gymnastics | |
Previous Teams | SC Dynamo Berlin | |
Championships as Player | 20 | |
Height | 1,55 m | |
Weight | 55 kg |
Olympic medal record | |||
Competitor for East Germany | |||
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Women's artistic gymnastics | |||
Gold | 1972 Munich | Vault | |
Gold | 1972 Munich | Uneven bars | |
Silver | 1968 Mexico City | Uneven bars | |
Silver | 1972 Munich | Team competition | |
Silver | 1972 Munich | All-around | |
Bronze | 1968 Mexico City | Team competition | |
Bronze | 1972 Munich | Balance beam | |
World Championships | |||
Gold | 1970 Ljubljana | Uneven bars | |
Silver | 1970 Ljubljana | Team competition | |
Silver | 1970 Ljubljana | Vault | |
European Championships | |||
Gold | 1969 Landskrona | All-around | |
Gold | 1969 Landskrona | Uneven bars | |
Gold | 1969 Landskrona | Vault | |
Gold | 1969 Landskrona | Balance beam | |
Silver | 1967 Amsterdam | Uneven bars | |
Silver | 1969 Landskrona | Floor exercise | |
Bronze | 1967 Amsterdam | Vault |
Karin Büttner Janz (born 17 February 1952 in Hartmannsdorf a district of Lübben (Spreewald), German Democratic Republic (GDR, commonly:East Germany) is a habilitated doctor, Olympic medal winner in artistic gymnastics and, since March 1990, chief physician of the orthopedic Vivantes hospital in Friedrichshain.
Contents |
[edit] Life
[edit] Sporting career
Her first coach was her father Guido Janz, who taught her excellent basics. Karin moved to a sports school in Forst, where she trained under Klaus Helbeck. Her final coach was Jürgen Heritz.
In 1967, at the age of fifteen, Karin Janz was nominated as East German Athlete of the Year despite not yet having had any international success. She went on to win the silver medal on the asymmetric bars and a bronze medal as part of the country's gymnastics team at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
At the 1970 world championships she overcame Ludmilla Tourischeva on the asymmetric bars to win the gold medal. She delivered another gold medal winning performance on the asymetric bars at the 1972 Munich Olympics, defeating Olga Korbut on her favourite apparatus. She also won the gold medal on the vault, a silver medal as part of the East German women's gymnastic team, and bronze on the balance beam. She was the most successful sports woman of the GDR (German Democratic Republic) at the 1972 Summer Olympics and was recognized there as Sportswoman of the Year in 1972. After these successes she announced her intention of ending her competitive career to turn to the study of medicine to become a physician.
Karin has an uneven bars element named after her, the Janz Salto, which she first performed in competition at the SV Dynamo Spartakiade in East Berlin, 1971.
[edit] Academic physician
Karin Janz studied at the Humboldt University in East Berlin beginning in 1971 and earned her diploma in emergency medicine. Later, she conducted her clinical semester at the orthopedic hospital of the Charité and went on to specialize in orthopaedics. She obtained her doctorate and habilitation through her work on the development of an artificial spine disk, known as the Charité Disc. She is co-owner of a patent on the device[1] with her colleague Kurt Schellnack. Subsequently, Büttner-Janz moved to the clinic of Hellersdorf.
[edit] Honours
- 1967 - European vice-champion on the asymmetric bars, bronze medal on vault.
- 1968 - silver medal at the Olympics on the asymmetric bars, bronze medal in the team competition.
- 1969 - four time European champion (all-round, vault, uneven bars, balance beam), vice-champion in floor exercise.
- 1970 - world champion on the asymmetric bars, vice-champion on vault and in the team competition.
- 1972 - European champion on vault and the asymmetric bars, silver medal in the all-round and in the team competition, bronze medal on the balance beam.
- 1984 - first OI, where their invention, Charite artificial spine disk was used.
- 1987 - honorary member of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine; consolation prize of the Olympic Committee “in appreciation of her outstanding sports and academic career”[citation needed].
- 2000 - nominated as "Gymnast of the Century"[citation needed].
- 2003 - inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.[2]
[edit] External links
- Meeting of the champions
- Trainer
- interview
- portrait
- Retro
- Karin Janz at the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique profile page
- The dangerous Janz-Salto WC Lubjana 1970
- Video
- Video floor
[edit] References
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Gabriele Seyfert |
East German Sportswoman of the Year 1967 |
Succeeded by Margitta Gummel |
Preceded by Karin Balzer |
East German Sportswoman of the Year 1972 |
Succeeded by Kornelia Ender |