Tim Lobinger

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Medal record
EAA European Championships
Silver 1998 Budapest Pole Vault
Bronze 2002 Munich Pole Vault
Silver 2006 Gothenburg Pole Vault

Tim Lobinger (born September 3, 1972 in Rheinbach, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a German pole vaulter.

His discipline is pole vault and he has been an elite competitor since the 1990s. His best results came in 1997 and 1999 when he jumped over 6.00 meters. His best medals so far have been silver at the 1998 European Athletics Championships and the 2006 European Athletics Championships. He has also won bronze at the 2002 European Championships in Athletics and the 2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships.

Tim Lobinger in 2007
Tim Lobinger in 2007

Success has eluded him at the Olympics however. In Atlanta in 1996 he placed 7th. In Sydney in 2000 he achieved 13th, and in Athens in 2004, 11th. At the 2005 World Championships in Helsinki he jumped over only 5.50 meters, well under his abilities.

In 2003 he courted controversy when he bared his backside at the crowd after winning the World Athletics Final in Monaco. The IAAF withheld US$5,000 of his winnings as punishment.

He currently has a sponsorship with the sportswear manufacturer Puma.

Tim Lobinger is married to triple jumper Petra Lobinger although they are now separated. He is the father of two children Kendra (born 1995) and Lex (born 1998). He is now partnered to journalist Alina Baumann. His critics say that he never wins the important world events, rather that he is concerned with other things. He has been described as the "Anna Kournikova of pole-vaulting."[citation needed]

[edit] See also


Sporting positions
Preceded by
Flag of Australia Dmitriy Markov
Men's Pole Vault Best Year Performance
alongside Jeff Hartwig (USA)

2002
Succeeded by
Flag of France Romain Mesnil



World champions in men's pole vault
Outdoor
1983: Sergei Bubka | 1987: Sergei Bubka | 1991: Sergei Bubka | 1993: Sergei Bubka | 1995: Sergei Bubka | 1997: Sergei Bubka | 1999: Maksim Tarasov | 2001: Dmitri Markov | 2003: Giuseppe Gibilisco | 2005: Rens Blom | 2007: Brad Walker
Indoor
1985: Sergei Bubka | 1987: Sergei Bubka | 1989: Rodion Gataullin | 1991: Sergei Bubka | 1993: Rodion Gataullin | 1995: Sergei Bubka | 1997: Igor Potapovich | 1999: Jean Galfione | 2001: Lawrence Johnson | 2003: Tim Lobinger | 2004: Igor Pavlov | 2006: Brad Walker

[edit] External links

This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.