Alfons Bērziņš
Alfons Bērziņš (7 November 1916 in Riga – 16 December 1987) was a Latvian long track speed skater. He competed at the 1936 Winter Olympics (got 14th place in the 500 m event). In 1939 he became overall champion at the European Championships.[1]
Personal information | |
---|---|
Birth name | Alfons Elmārs Bērziņš |
Born | Riga, Russian Empire | 7 November 1916
Died | December 16, 1987 71) Riga, Latvian SSR | (aged
Sport | |
Country | Latvia |
Sport | Speed skating |
Club | Universitātes sports |
Retired | 1940s |
Biography
Alfons Bērziņš was born 7 November 1916 in Riga. He started his training in speed skating in 1932. His first coach was former Olympic Latvian speed skater Alberts Rumba. In 1938 he graduated Riga city gymnasium No.2. During second half of the 1930s he was a member of the University team Universitātes sports (University sport). Before World War II he married Olympic Latvian mountain skier Mirdza Martinsone.
In 1942 he started engineering studies in University of Latvia however he never graduated. During World War II Bērziņš was conscripted in Latvian Legion in 1944 and served as a platoon commander in anti-aircraft unit (SS-Flak-Abteilung 506). In April 1944 he was awarded Iron Cross II class. With the capitulation of Courland Pocket in May 1945 Bērziņš entered soviet captivity. He was sentenced with 10 years of hard labour in GULAG camp. He was released in 1955 and returned to Latvia. He started to work as a skating coach. One of his most famous pupils was Latvian speed skater Lāsma Kauniste.
Alfons Bērziņš died on 16 December 1987 in Riga. He was interred in the Riga Forest Cemetery.
Personal records
- 500 m – 42,9
- 1500 m – 2.16,4
- 5000 m – 8.32,8
- 10 000 m – 17.47,2[2]
References
- "LOC profile" (in Latvian). Olimpiade.lv. Archived from the original on June 20, 2012. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
- Alfons Berzinš at speedskatingnews.info
External links
- Alfons Bērziņš at the Latvijas Olimpiskā Komiteja (in Latvian)
- Alfons Berzins at the International Olympic Committee
- Alfons Bērziņš at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)