Ellen Streidt (née Stropahl later Wendland, born 27 July 1952) is a retired East German sprinter who specialised in the 200 metres and 400 metres.
At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, she finished fourth in the 200 m final, just one one-hundredth of a second behind bronze medallist Irena Szewińska. At the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, she won the bronze medal in the 400 metres and a gold medal in the 4 × 400 metres with her teammates Brigitte Rohde, Christina Brehmer and Doris Maletzki.[1]
Achievements
References
|
|---|
- 1972: Käsling, Kühne, Seidler, Zehrt (GDR)
- 1976: Maletzki, Rohde, Streidt, Brehmer (GDR)
- 1980: Prorochenko, Goyshchik, Zyuskova, I. Nazarova (URS)
- 1984: Leatherwood, S. Howard, Brisco-Hooks, Cheeseborough, Diane Dixon, D. Howard (USA)
- 1988: Ledovskaya, O. Nazarova, Pinigina, Bryzhina, Dzhyhalova (URS)
- 1992: Ruzina, Dzhyhalova, O. Nazarova, Bryzhina, Nurutdinova, Shmonina (EUN)
- 1996: Stevens, Malone-Wallace, Graham, Miles, Wilson (USA)
- 2000: Miles Clark, Hennagan, Colander, Anderson (USA)
- 2004: Trotter, Henderson, Richards, Hennagan, Robinson (USA)
- 2008: Wineberg, Felix, Henderson, Richards, Hastings (USA)
- 2012: Trotter, Felix, McCorory, Richards-Ross, Baker, Diamond Dixon (USA)
- 2016: Felix, Francis, Hastings, Okolo, Ellis-Watson, McCorory (USA)
- 2020: McLaughlin, Felix, Muhammad, Mu, Whitney, Jonathas, Ellis, Irby (USA)
- 2024: Little, McLaughlin-Levrone, Thomas, Holmes, Hayes, Butler, Brown (USA)
|
|
|---|
- 1969: Great Britain (Stirling, Lowe, Simpson, Board)
- 1971: East Germany (Kühne, Lohse, Seidler, Zehrt)
- 1974: East Germany (Rohde, Dietsch, Handt, Streidt)
- 1978: East Germany (Marquardt, Krug, Brehmer, Koch)
- 1982: East Germany (Siemon, Busch, Rübsam, Koch)
- 1986: East Germany (Siemon, Busch, Müller, Koch)
- 1990: East Germany (Derr, Hesselbarth, Müller, Breuer)
- 1994: France (Landre, Elien, Dorsile, Pérec)
- 1998: Germany (Feller, Rohländer, Rieger, Breuer)
- 2002: Germany (Ekpo-Umoh, Rockmeier, Marx, Breuer)
- 2006: Russia (Pospelova, Ivanova, Zaytseva, Veshkurova)
- 2010: Germany (Lindenberg, Cremer, Kohlmann, Hoffmann)
- 2012: Ukraine (Olishevska, Zemlyak, Pyhyda, Lohvynenko)
- 2014: France (Gayot, Hurtis, Raharolahy, Gueï)
- 2016: Great Britain (Diamond, Onuora, Doyle, Bundy-Davies)
- 2018: Poland (Hołub-Kowalik, Baumgart-Witan, Wyciszkiewicz, Święty-Ersetic)
- 2022: Netherlands (Saalberg, Klaver, De Witte, Bol)
- 2024: Netherlands (Klaver, Peeters, De Witte, Bol)
|
| Authority control databases: People | |
|---|