Kathrin Weßel

(Redirected from Kathrin Ullrich)

Kathrin Wessel (née Ullrich; born 14 August 1967) is a retired German long-distance runner who specialized in the 10,000 metres. She was the 1987 World Championship bronze medallist, the 1990 European Championship silver medallist, and won the 1989 World Cup title. She also competed at three Olympic Games (Seoul 1988, Barcelona 1992, and Atlanta 1996).

Kathrin Weßel
Ullrich winning the Fritz Weineck memorial cross country race in Halle in 1986
Medal record
Women's athletics
Representing  East Germany
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place1987 Rome10,000 m
European Championships
Silver medal – second place1990 Split10,000 m

Biography

Wessel was born in Annaberg-Buchholz, Saxony, East Germany and competed for the club SV Dynamo. She first came to international prominence in 1987, as Kathrin Ullrich, when she won the European Cup 10,000 metres in only her second attempt at the distance. The 1987 season culminated in her winning a bronze medal at the World Championships in Rome, finishing ahead of Olga Bondarenko and Liz McColgan, who placed fourth and fifth respectively.

In the 1988 Olympic final in Seoul, she followed the early break by world record holder Ingrid Kristiansen, only to find herself with a 30 metres lead when Kristiansen dropped out after six laps due to injury. She would eventually finish fourth.

Wessel had one of her biggest career wins in 1989, at the World Cup in Barcelona, when she outkicked Kristiansen in the final 200 metres to win comfortably.

During the early 1990s, Wessel would remain one of the best 10 km runners in the world[according to whom?]. At the 1990 European Championships, she won the silver medal behind Yelena Romanova. In 1991, she ran her best ever time of 31:03, which put her fourth on the all-time list behind Kristiansen, McColgan, and Bondarenko. She ended the 1991 season by finishing fourth at the World Championships in Tokyo, won by McColgan.

In 1992, now competing as Kathrin Wessel, she looked set to be a major medal contender at the 1992 Olympics, when she won the German title in June of that year in 31:20, just ahead of Uta Pippig, but in Barcelona she failed to finish her qualifying heat. From this point, she would cease to be a major force on the world stage, although she did manage fourth place at the 1994 European Championships and competed in her third and final Olympics in 1996.

Late in her career, she moved up in distance to the Marathon, achieving her best time of 2:28:31, in 2001 at the Berlin Marathon.

Achievements

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  East Germany
1987European CupPrague, Czech Republic1st10,000 m32:42.05
World ChampionshipsRome, Italy3rd10,000 m31:11.34
1988Olympic GamesSeoul, South Korea4th10,000 m31:29.27
1989European CupGateshead, United Kingdom1st10,000m32:17.88
World CupBarcelona, Spain1st10,000 m31:33.92
1990European ChampionshipsSplit, Yugoslavia2nd10,000 m31.47.70
Representing  Germany
1991European CupFrankfurt, Germany1st10,000 m31:03.62
World ChampionshipsTokyo, Japan4th10,000 m31.38.96
1992Olympic GamesBarcelona, Spainheats10,000 mDNF
1993World ChampionshipsStuttgart, Germany13th10,000 m32:27.38
1994European CupBirmingham, United Kingdom1st10,000 m32:26.85
European ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland4th10,000 m31:38.75
1995World ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden10th10,000 m31:55.04
1996European CupMadrid, Spain1st5000 m15:40.36
Olympic GamesAtlanta, United Statesheats10,000 m33:31.67

Personal bests

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Women's 5.000m Best Year Performance
1989
Succeeded by