Joakim Assenmacher (born 10 January 1963) is a retired West German long jumper.
He finished fourteenth at the 1987 European Indoor Championships. [1] He represented the sports club USC Mainz, and won bronze medals at the West German championships in 1985 and 1989. [2]
His personal best jump was 8.03 metres, achieved in May 1988 in Bensheim. [3]
Robert Emmiyan is a retired long jumper who represented the USSR and Armenia. He is the fourth best long jumper in history and the best long jumper not of African descent. His personal best jump of 8.86 metres, which he achieved in Tsaghkadzor in May 1987, is the current European record.
László Szalma is a retired Hungarian long jumper. He won six medals at the European Indoor Championships—two gold, three silver and one bronze—and finished fourth at the 1980 Olympic Games and the 1983 World Championships. His career best jump of 8.30 metres, achieved in July 1985 in Budapest, is the current Hungarian record.
Hans Baumgartner is a retired West German long jumper.
Frank Wartenberg is a retired East German long jumper.
Gerd Nagel is a retired West German high jumper.
Carlo Thränhardt is a retired German high jumper. He excelled at indoor competitions, setting the world indoor record on three occasions between 1984 and 1988. His best mark of 2.42 metres ranks him second on the indoor all-time list one-centimetre behind world record holder Javier Sotomayor of Cuba. The only superior outdoor performances are Sotomayor's world record of 2.45 m, and Mutaz Essa Barshim's clearance of 2.43 m in 2014. Like all modern high jumpers, Thränhardt used the Fosbury Flop style, but of the 16 men in history to have cleared 2.40 m or higher, he was only the second to do so jumping off his right leg. The first was Igor Paklin. At the European Indoor Championships, he won a gold medal in 1983 and four silver medals. Outdoors, his best championship result was winning a bronze medal at the 1986 European Championships. He also reached the Olympic finals in 1984 and 1988.
Joachim Busse is a retired West German long jumper.
Jörg Klocke is a retired West German long jumper.
Jens Knipphals is a retired West German long jumper.
Peter Bouschen is a retired West German triple jumper.
Zdzisław Hoffmann is a retired triple jumper from Poland. He is best known for winning the gold medal at the inaugural 1983 World Championships, for which he was named Polish Sportspersonality of the Year at the end of the year.
Ron Beer is a retired East German long jumper.
Henry Lauterbach is a retired East German high jumper and long jumper.
Andrea Breder is a retired West German high jumper, born in Saarbrücken.
Sebastian Bayer is a German long jumper best known for having history's second longest indoor long jump.
Stanisław Jaskułka is a retired Polish long jumper.
Dimitrios Hatzopoulos is a retired Greek long jumper.
André Schneider-Laub is a retired (West) German high jumper.
The West German Indoor Athletics Championships was an annual indoor track and field competition organised by the German Athletics Association, which served as the national championship for the sport in West Germany. Typically held over two days in February during the German winter, it was first held in 1954.
Kersten Wolters is a retired German triple jumper.