Paralympics"The boys want it just like us"

Tatjana Pokorny

 · 04.09.2012

Paralympics: "The boys want it just like us"Photo: onEdition
The races of the 2012 Paralympics regatta
Two days before the end of the Paralympics regatta, both GER teams are in second place. Coach Bernd Zirkelbach explains the leap in performance
  Great Britain's Helena Lucs is sailing for gold at the Paralympics regatta off Weymouth, Heiko Kröger (in front) is fighting for a medal once againPhoto: onEdition Great Britain's Helena Lucs is sailing for gold at the Paralympics regatta off Weymouth, Heiko Kröger (in front) is fighting for a medal once again

Just six months ago, things were going less well for Heiko Kröger in his 2.4mR and Jens Kroker's Sonar team. The Paralympics winners from 2000 (Kröger) and 2008 (Kroker/Prem/Mainka) were no longer sailing in the top group of their respective disciplines as they once did. There were many who no longer believed the two teams were capable of winning another medal. And now this: both teams are in second place two days before the end of the Paralympic regatta in the Olympic area between Weymouth and Portland. Both can win a medal. For the helmsmen in the single-handed keelboat class 2.4mR, two races are on the programme on Wednesday and one more on Thursday. The Sonars are scheduled to sail three races on Wednesday and one final race on Thursday.

  Kröger trainer Bernd ZirkelbachPhoto: tati Kröger trainer Bernd Zirkelbach

"The spark has been lit," says coach Bernd Zirkelbach from Sailing Team Germany, who has been coaching Heiko Kröger since 1996 with an interruption of two years, "I promised that I would do something for this success. Not everyone believed that." Now the chance has come. "Our measures have taken full effect," says a delighted Zirkelbach, as does Sonar coach Christian Bittner, a former competitive sailor from the Yacht Club Berlin-Grünau.

  The sonar team of Jens KrokerPhoto: onEdition The sonar team of Jens Kroker

The performance explosion of the two GER teams has been achieved thanks to many helpers and very focussed work. "We were able to activate sailors such as Dieter Below, Lucas Zellmer and Robert Stanjek to support us as sparring partners with their experience," explains Zirkelbach, "our two boats now have the right speed and sail performance." According to Zirkelbach, the latter is also thanks to the intensive collaboration with sailmaker Faber & Münkner. In addition to the sailors and the two coaches, the core team of German Paralympic sailors also includes Thomas Dehler, who has a BFD (Federal Volunteer Service) position in Sailing Team Germany.

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Both Heiko Kröger and the Sonar team have significantly increased their training programme ahead of the Paralympics. "We did three times as much as usual, and it wasn't always met with approval," says Zirkelbach, "but our sailors trust us and have invested a lot. For example, Jens Kroker, who lives and works in Brazil, flew back to Berlin many, many weekends for training."

  Britannia rules the waves: Helena Lucas sails for gold off Weymouth, Kröger is the hunterPhoto: onEdition Britannia rules the waves: Helena Lucas sails for gold off Weymouth, Kröger is the hunter

Zirkelbach describes the state of mind of the four German Paralympic sailors shortly before the final as "highly motivated and relaxed": Heiko Kröger, Jens Kroker, Robert Prem and Siegmund Mainka have switched to attack mode. "They want the medal just as much as we do," says Zirkelbach. The fact that in the 2.4mR Helena Lucas from Great Britain is already far ahead of Heiko Kröger in the battle for gold is partly due to Lucas' strong performance and partly due to the prevailing light winds. "In strong winds, we might have been able to pull our jokers out of our sleeves even more easily." Zirkelbach, who twelve years ago was the most successful coach at the Games, winning two medals at the same time with Kröger's gold and Kroker's silver, says shortly before the exciting final of the 2012 Paralympics regatta: "If we could maintain the current result, we would be very, very happy. We want to win two medals here and will do everything we can to achieve this." Will it be the medals that Germany's Olympic sailors so painfully narrowly missed out on?

Tatjana Pokorny

Tatjana Pokorny

Sports reporter

Tatjana “tati” Pokorny is the author of nine books. As a reporter for Europe's leading sailing magazine YACHT, she also works as a correspondent for the German Press Agency (DPA), the Hamburger Abendblatt and other national and international media. In summer 2024, Tatjana will be reporting from Marseille on her ninth consecutive Olympic Games. Other core topics have been the America's Cup since 1992, the Ocean Race since 1993, the Vendée Globe and other national and international regattas and their protagonists. Favorite discipline: Portraits of and interviews with sailing personalities. When she started out in sports journalism, she was still intensively involved with basketball and other sports, but sailing quickly became her main focus. The reason? The declared optimist says: “There is no other sport like it, no other sport with such interesting and intelligent personalities, no other sport so diverse, no other sport so full of energy, strength and ideas. Sailing is like a constantly refreshing declaration of love for life."

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