Hans-Peter Ferner

Hans-Peter Ferner (born 6 June 1956, Neuburg an der Donau, Bavaria) is a (West) German former middle distance runner who won the gold medal over 800 m at the 1982 European Championships in Athletics in Athens where he unexpectedly defeated world-record holder Sebastian Coe. Those were Ferner's second and last European Athletics Championships, because he had competed already in the 1978 European Championships in Prague, where he had been eliminated in the 800-metre heats or semifinals.[1] Coe had suffered from injuries and a glandular sickness which made him underachieve in Athens.[2]

Biography

Ferner missed the 1980 Moscow Olympics because West Germany participated in the United States-led boycott.[3] Ferner's surprising European Championship at 800 metres in 1982 was his only major international victory, because he finished seventh in the 800 m final at the 1983 World Championships in Athletics in Helsinki.[4] At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles he was eliminated in the 800-metre semifinals.[5] After ending his competitive running career, Ferner has worked as a businessman - he was an engineering student while running 800 metres (a Finnish sports journalist's television commentary in the late 1980s or 1990s).[6]

References

  1. "European Athletics Championships 1978" / Yleisurheilun EM-kisat 1978, written by the "Runner" / Juoksija magazine's journalists and published in Finland in 1978
  2. Pat Butcher, The Perfect Distance: Coe&Ovett: The Record-Breaking Rivalry, London: Weidenfeld&Nicolson, 2004
  3. Butcher, The Perfect Distance
  4. "World Athletics Championships 1983" / Yleisurheilun MM-kisat 1983, written by the "Runner" / Juoksija magazine's journalists and published in Finland in 1983
  5. "The Big Olympic Book" / Suuri Olympiakirja, written by the "Runner" / Juoksija magazine's journalists and published in Finland in 1984
  6. Wolfgang Wünsche, The Heroes of Race Tracks, second edition, published in 1984

External links



This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.