Betty Heidler

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NationalityGerman
Born (1983-10-14) October 14, 1983 (age 42)
Betty Heidler
Personal information
NationalityGerman
Born (1983-10-14) October 14, 1983 (age 42)
EducationBachelor of Laws
Alma materUniversity of Hagen
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[1]
Weight83 kg (183 lb)[1]
Sport
Country Germany
SportAthletics
Event
Hammer throw
ClubLG Eintracht Frankfurt
Turned pro2004
Coached byBernd Madler
Achievements and titles
Olympic finals
World finals
Regional finals
Personal best
  • Hammer throw: 79.42 (2011, WR)
Medal record
Women's athletics
Representing Germany
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place2012 LondonHammer throw
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2007 OsakaHammer throw
Silver medal – second place2009 BerlinHammer throw
Silver medal – second place2011 DaeguHammer throw
European Championships
Gold medal – first place2010 BarcelonaHammer throw
Silver medal – second place2016 AmsterdamHammer throw
Universiade
Gold medal – first place2009 BelgradeHammer throw
Updated on 13 August 2012

Betty Heidler (born 14 October 1983) is a retired German track and field athlete who competed in the hammer throw. She held the world record from 2011 until 2014 with her personal best throw of 79.42 m (260 ft 6 in). She is the 2012 Olympic silver medallist, the 2007 World champion and the 2009 and 2011 World Championship silver medallist. She also finished fourth in the Olympic finals in 2004 and 2016.

Heidler now lives in Frankfurt and is a member of the Eintracht Frankfurt athletics team. She works for the German Federal Police where she is a member of the sports support group and started studying Bachelor of Laws at the Fernuniversität Hagen in 2007.

She put in a dominant performance at the 2010 European Cup Winter Throwing with a winning mark of 72.48 m, beating her nearest rival by more than three metres.[2]

Heidler won the inaugural IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge in 2010, finishing at the top of the rankings ahead of Anita Wlodarczyk.[3] She won the gold medal at the 2010 European Athletics Championships then went on to take the silver medal at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics. In May 2011, in Halle, she achieved a new world record hammer throw, of 79.42 m.[4] She began the 2012 season with a series of wins, performing at the Colorful Daegu Meeting, Golden Spike Ostrava, and Prefontaine Classic.[5]

Heidler won a medal at the 2012 London Olympics. The event was not without controversy as the referees first failed to correctly measure Heidler's bronze-winning throw.[6] She was later promoted to the silver medal position, after Tatyana Lysenko was disqualified for a doping violation in 2016 in reanalysis of her stored doping samples.[7]

Achievements

References

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