Occupation
Athlete, Student
Education
Physics - Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
Spoken languages
German
Club
SC Berlin [Germany]
Coach
Andreas Hirsch [national], GER (faz.net, 05 Oct 2017)
International senior debut
2014 for Germany (dtb-online.de, 20 Sep 2015; hauptstadtsport.tv, 08 Oct 2016)
Injuries
In May 2019 he injured his neck after falling. He tore the anterior longitudinal ligament between the fourth and fifth cervical vertebrae. He recovered in time for the German championships in August 2019. (taz.de, 23 Jul 2019)
In 2011 part of a disc between the fifth and sixth cervical vertebrae had to be removed and replaced with two fused vertebrae. He temporarily retired from gymnastics. (taz.de, 23 Jul 2019)
National Team
2014 (hauptstadtsport.tv, 08 Oct 2016)
Start sporting career
He took up the sport at age seven. (hu-berlin.de, 03 Aug 2016)
Reason for taking up the sport
"A coach from SC Berlin came to search for talent at my school. I remember that they asked me to come and do a try-out training session. I went and never looked back." (hauptstadtsport.tv, 08 Oct 2016)
Ambitions
To compete at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. (morgenpost.de, 19 Apr 2017)
Trainings
He trains twice a day, for a total of six hours. He uses the rest of the day for recovery, including physiotherapy and sauna sessions. (taz.de, 23 Jul 2019; tagesspiegel.de, 12 Jul 2019)
Hero / Idol
German gymnasts Fabian Hambuchen and Marcel Nguyen. (taz.de, 23 Jul 2019)
Additional information
General
BREAK FROM GYMNASTICS
In 2011 he had surgery on his neck, removing a disc and replacing it with two fused vertebrae. He said he had given up on continuing the sport. His trainer convinced him to return to the gym and he took part in the 2014 World Championships in Nanning, People's Republic of China. "At first I was afraid that it would lead to paraplegia, because I could not move. In my head, I had finished. I abandoned the sport." (taz.de, 23 Jul 2019)
ALTERNATE IN RIO
He was an alternate for the German team at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. "I was able to experience everything with the team, but I missed out on competing. At the next Olympic Games I want to be competing. That is my biggest dream." (hauptstadtsport.tv, 08 Oct 2016)
NOT ABOUT WINNING
He says he competes in gymnastics to improve and feel good, not to win. "I'm not in gymnastics for winning. When doing gymnastics, the smallest details are needed to make complicated and spectacular exercises possible. If it comes off, that's a fantastic feeling. Actually, all I care about is getting better and getting that feeling. What also makes the sport so attractive is the range of movement patterns. I could never imagine being a [track and field] athlete or a swimmer and monotonously running or swimming laps." (tagesspiegel.de, 12 Jul 2019)
Last update : 2020-03-18