Jörg Peter
Jörg Peter.
Jörg Peter (born 23 October 1955 in Dresden) is a former German long-distance runner. He held the German record over the marathon distance from 1988 till 2015.
Biography
Peter won in 1978 at the 3000 m. run. In 1980 he competed for the DDR at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow in the men's 10,000-meter run and finished in 6th place.
In February 1988, he won the Tokyo International Men's Marathon with a 2:08:47, which remained the German Record until October 25, 2015, when Arne Gabius improved the time by 14 seconds. Peter started until 1990 for the SC unit Dresden. He was East German champion in 5000-meter run in the years 1976, 1977, 1978 and 1980, in the 10,000-meter run in 1977 and in 1985 by his marathon victory at the Leipzig Marathon.
In 1990 and 1991 he won the Hamburg Marathon.
Achievements
Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes |
Representing East Germany |
1977 |
IAAF World Cup |
Düsseldorf, West Germany |
2nd |
5000 m |
28:34.00 |
1978 |
European Indoor Championships |
Milan, Italy |
3rd |
3000 m |
7:50.1 |
1980 |
Summer Olympics |
Moscow, Soviet Union |
6th |
10,000 m |
28:05.5 |
1985 |
Leipzig Marathon |
Leipzig, East Germany |
1st |
Marathon |
2:12:32 |
1986 |
European Championships |
Stuttgart, West Germany |
17th |
Marathon |
2:18:05 |
1987 |
Košice Peace Marathon |
Košice, Czechoslovakia |
1st |
Marathon |
2:14:59 |
1988 |
Olympic Games |
Seoul, South Korea |
— |
Marathon |
DNF |
1989 |
Leipzig Marathon |
Leipzig, East Germany |
1st |
Marathon |
2:31:38 |
Representing Germany |
1990 |
Hamburg Marathon |
Hamburg, West Germany |
1st |
Marathon |
2:11:49 |
1991 |
Hamburg Marathon |
Hamburg, Germany |
1st |
Marathon |
2:10:43 |
World Championships |
Tokyo, Japan |
— |
Marathon |
DNF |
References
External links
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- 1924: Karol Halla (TCH)
- 1925: Pál Király (HUN)
- 1926: Hans Hempel (GER)
- 1927–28: József Galambos (HUN)
- 1929: Hans Hempel (GER)
- 1930: István Zelenka (HUN)
- 1931: Juan Carlos Zabala (ARG)
- 1932–33: József Galambos (HUN)
- 1934: Josef Šulc (TCH)
- 1935: Arthur Motmillers (LAT)
- 1936: György Balaban (AUT)
- 1937: Désiré Leriche (FRA)
- 1939: József Kiss (HUN)
- 1941: József Gyimesi (HUN)
- 1942: József Kiss (HUN)
- 1943: Géza Kiss (HUN)
- 1944: Rezső Kövári (HUN)
- 1945: Antonín Špiroch (TCH)
- 1946: Mikko Hietanen (FIN)
- 1947: Charles Heirendt (LUX)
- 1948: Gösta Leandersson (SWE)
- 1949: Martti Urpalainen (FIN)
- 1950: Gösta Leandersson (SWE)
- 1951: Jaroslav Śtrupp (TCH)
- 1952: Erkki Puolakka (FIN)
- 1953: Walter Bednář (TCH)
- 1954: Erkki Puolakka (FIN)
- 1955: Evert Nyberg (SWE)
- 1956: Thomas Hilt Nilsson (SWE)
- 1957: Ivan Filin (URS)
- 1958: Pavel Kantorek (TCH)
- 1959: Sergei Popov (URS)
- 1960: Samuel Hardicker (GBR)
- 1961: Abebe Bikila (ETH)
- 1962: Pavel Kantorek (TCH)
- 1963: Buddy Edelen (USA)
- 1964: Pavel Kantorek (TCH)
- 1965: Aurèle Vandendriessche (BEL)
- 1966: Gyula Tóth (HUN)
- 1967: Nedjalko Farčić (YUG)
- 1968: Václav Chudomel (TCH)
- 1969: Demissie Wolde (ETH)
- 1970: Mikhail Gorelov (URS)
- 1971: Gyula Tóth (HUN)
- 1972: John Farrington (AUS)
- 1973: Vladimir Moyseyev (URS)
- 1974: Keith Angus (GBR)
- 1975: Choe Chang Sop (PRK)
- 1976: Takeshi So (JPN)
- 1977–78: Go Chun Son (PRK)
- 1979: Jouni Kortelainen (FIN)
- 1980: Alexey Lyagushev (URS)
- 1981: Hans-Joachim Truppel (GDR)
- 1982: György Sinkó (HUN)
- 1983: František Višnický (TCH)
- 1984: Ri Dong Myong (PRK)
- 1985: Valentin Starikov (URS)
- 1986: František Višnický (TCH)
- 1987: Jörg Peter (GDR)
- 1988: Michael Heilmann (GDR)
- 1989: Karel David (TCH)
- 1990: Nikolay Kolesnikov (URS)
- 1991: Vlastimil Bukovjan (TCH)
- 1992–93: Wiesław Pałczyński (POL)
- 1994: Petr Pipa (SVK)
- 1995–96: Marnix Goegebeur (BEL)
- 1997: My Tahar Echchadli (MAR)
- 1998: Andrzej Krzyścin (POL)
- 1999: Róbert Štefko (SVK)
- 2000: Ernest Kipyego (KEN)
- 2001–02: David Kariuki (KEN)
- 2003: Grigoriy Andreyev (RUS)
- 2004: Adam Dobrzyński (POL)
- 2005: David Maiyo (KEN)
- 2006: Edwin Kipchom (KEN)
- 2007: William Biama (KEN)
- 2008: Dejene Yirdaw (ETH)
- 2009: Jacob Kipkorir Chesire (KEN)
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