Karin Ruckstuhl
Ruckstuhl in 2007 | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Women's athletics | ||
Representing the Netherlands | ||
World Indoor Championships | ||
2006 Moscow | Pentathlon | |
European Championships | ||
2006 Gothenburg | Heptathlon | |
European Indoor Championships | ||
2007 Birmingham | Pentathlon |
Karin Nathalie Ruckstuhl (born 2 November 1980 in Baden, Switzerland) is a former Dutch heptathlete.
Biography
[edit]Her first major championship was the 2002 European Athletics Championships, and she finished 13th in the heptathlon. She came close to the podium at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships, finishing fourth, and took part in her first Olympics at the 2004 Athens Games, where she was 16th in the final rankings with a national record of 6108 points. She again just fell short of the podium with a fourth place at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships and was eighth outdoors at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics later that season.
The 2006 season was a breakthrough for Ruckstuhl – she won silver medals at the 2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships and the 2006 European Athletics Championships in Gothenburg. Her new record performance of 6423 points at the European Championships (a Dutch record) meant that she was ranked fourth in the world in the heptathlon that year.[1] She also improved indoors, registering a national record of 4801 points in the women's pentathlon for the bronze medal at the 2007 European Athletics Indoor Championships. However, she did not manage to finish the heptathlon at that year's major competition – the 2007 World Championships in Athletics.
She suffered a herniated disc in her back and underwent surgery in 2008. Her time out from the sport was extended even further after she injured her Achilles tendon in February 2010. Following such serious injuries and some two and a half years away from top level competition, she decided to stop competing in multi-sport events and focused her efforts on just long jumping.[2]
Achievements
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Heptathlon 2006. IAAF (2007-05-12). Retrieved on 2010-04-29.
- ^ No more Heptathlons for Ruckstuhl[permanent dead link]. European Athletics (2010-04-28). Retrieved on 2010-04-29.
- Bijkerk, T. (2004) Olympisch Oranje. De Vrieseborch