Jump to content

Antje Harvey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BrownHairedGirl (talk | contribs) at 09:08, 15 January 2017 (diffusing, replaced: Category:German biathletesCategory:German female biathletes, removed: Category:Female biathletes using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Antje Harvey

Medal record
Women's biathlon
Representing  Germany
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 1992 Albertville 15 km individual
Silver medal – second place 1992 Albertville 7.5 km sprint
Silver medal – second place 1992 Albertville 3 × 7.5 km relay
Silver medal – second place 1994 Lillehammer 4 × 7.5 km relay
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1995 Antholz-Anterselva 4 × 7.5 km relay
Bronze medal – third place 1991 Lahti 3 × 7.5 km relay
Women's cross-country skiing
Representing  East Germany
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1985 Seefeld 4 × 5 km relay

Antje Harvey (born May 10, 1967 in Magdeburg, as Antje Misersky) is a former German cross country skier and biathlete.

She began her career as cross country skier and was a member of the East German team that won the 4 × 5 km bronze medal at the 1985 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Seefeld. When her father, Henner Misersky, who worked as a trainer of the East-German team until 1985, refused to give steroid substances to his daughter and other team members, he was fired. Antje Misersky was then put under pressure and had to end her career in the GDR.[1]

In 1989, she started biathlon. At the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, she won the gold medal in 15 km individual and two silvers in the 7.5 km sprint and in the 3 × 7.5 km. At the 1994 Winter Olympics at Lillehammer she won another relay silver medal (4 × 7.5 km). Harvey also won two medals in the relay at the World Championships (1995: gold, 1991: bronze).

In the spring of 1993, she married American biathlete Ian Harvey whom she had met 15 months earlier at the Biathlon World Cup in Ruhpolding, Germany. In 1995, she retired from competitive sports and moved to Utah where she lives with her daughters, Hazel (*1996) and Pearl (*2001). In 2000, she became an American citizen.

For her refusal to take part in the systematic doping in the GDR, Antje Harvey received the Heidi-Krieger-Medal in 1995, in Berlin. The Heidi-Krieger-Medal is a prize of the association Doping-Opfer-Hilfe from Germany.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ Barbara Bürer, Nils Klawitter: Doping macht vergeßlich Archived December 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Die Zeit, 13/1998 (German)
  2. ^ Friedhard Teuffel: Auszeichnung für Dopingopfer' Der Tagesspiegel, 22. Juli 2005 (German)
  3. ^ Grit Hartmann: Nicht um jeden Preis Berliner Zeitung, 21. Juli 2005 (German)