Max Hartung

Maximilian Hartung (born 8 October 1989) is a German sabre fencer and athlete activist. He is a four-time European Champion, team World Champion and two-time Olympic participant. He is chairman of the Athletes Commission[1] in the DOSB and founding president of Athleten Deutschland e.V. He was a member of the Sporthilfe supervisory board for four years, four years in the board of the German Fencing Federation and two years in the board of the German Olympic Comitee as the voice of the athletes. He completed his studies in politics, sociology and economics at the Zeppelin University in Friedrichshafen and the Universteit Gent.

Max Hartung
Full nameMaximilian Hartung
Born (1989-10-08) 8 October 1989
Aachen, Germany
NationalityGerman
Height1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)
Weight88 kg (194 lb; 13.9 st)
Websitemax-hartung.de
Sport
SportFencing
WeaponSabre
Handright-handed
National coachVilmoș Szabo
ClubTSV Bayer Dormagen
Head coachVilmoș Szabo
FIE rankingcurrent ranking

With Athletes Germany, Hartung achieved a victory over IOC before the Federal Cartel Office. The advertising guidelines for German athletes at Olympic Games have been relaxed.[2] Following public criticism, the German Armed Forces have changed their sports promotion program after talks between Minister of Defense Ursula von der Leyen, Silke Kassner and Max Hartung. The Athletes Germany e. V, which he co-founded, is supported by the federal government with 450,000 euros per year and is the first athlete representation worldwide that is independent of the NOK.[3] In addition, on the initiative of Athletes Germany, the federal government has introduced direct athlete support of 7 million euros for the first time and passed a pension package for athletes.

Hartung drew attention to himself around the postponement of the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. He was the first athlete in the world to declare before the official decision of the IOC that he would not compete in the Summer Olympics in July 2020 due to the corona pandemic out of consideration for the population living in Japan and global health protection.[4] Shortly thereafter, athletes from Canada and Australia also cancelled their participation in the 2020 Summer Olympics. The Summer Olympics of the 32nd Olympiad of Modern Times have been postponed to July 23, 2021.[5] Hartung, who has already qualified for individual and team events, is currently preparing to participate.

Sports career

At the Olympic Games in London, Max Hartung took seventh place in the individual competition and fifth place with the team. At the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Hartung took 10th place.

Probably his greatest sporting success is the historic win of the world championship with the team in 2014 - a feat that no German team has ever achieved before. In 2017 he won the European championship title in Tbilisi in the individual competition and was able to defend this title in Novi Sad in 2018. In 2019 he became European champion with the German team in a dramatic final in front of his home crowd in Düsseldorf.

Hartung starts in Germany for TSV Bayer Dormagen. He was able to win 15 national titles during his fencing career.

Voluntary commitment

In 2013 he was elected athlete spokesman of the German Fencing Federation. Since September 2014, Hartung has also been a member of the Athletes' Commission of the DOSB, since February 2017 he has been its chairman. He is also a member of the supervisory board of the Stiftung deutsche Sporthilfe.

He is the founding president of Athleten Deutschland e.V. After the challenges of the athletes' representatives in the DOSB in the years 2014 to 2016, the Athletes' Commission decided to found an independent association, independent of the DOSB, to strengthen the athletes' interests. Decisive factors for the founding of the association were the dissatisfaction with the doping scandal in Russia, the many cases of sexualized violence in sports, the competitive sports reform with a strong medal focus and the introduction of the anti-doping law. Athletes Germany today has 450,000 Euro annually and employs five staff.

The club fights for a German sports system that offers athletes the best conditions in the world for developing their sporting and personal potential and respects them as human beings. It fights for athletes in all arenas and encourages them to shape the future of their sport themselves.

The organization aims to enable athletes to improve communication between athletes and institutions. Athletes Germany shall represent the interests of the athletes towards the federations, but also towards all other actors in sports, politics and society and develop the legal relationship and the nomination procedures between athletes and federations. The association has set itself the goal of promoting athlete support that enables athletes to embark on a competitive sports career without having to fear disadvantages or existential fears, and that promotes fair and clean sports.

Podcast

With his team mate Matyas Szabo, Hartung runs the largest German-language fencing podcast. On the way to the Olympic Games in Tokyo 2020, the two of them recorded more than 40 episodes and let the audience take a look behind the mask. During the lockdown, the team also recorded training videos for children who had no access to their gyms and published them on YouTube. They have been awarded for this project by Beyond Crisis and Germany Land of Ideas.

References

  1. Butler, Nick (2018-05-28). "DOSB Athletes' Commission chair suggests all Olympians be paid participation grant". www.insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  2. Butler, Nick (2018-05-23). "German panel urge Bach to change Rule 40 and give athletes more money". www.insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  3. "German athlete group secures independent government funding". playthegame.org. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  4. Panja, Tariq; Rich, Motoko (2020-03-23). "U.S. Olympic Committee Urges Postponing Summer Games in Tokyo". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  5. Anonym. "Coronavirus pandemic: top fencer Hartung rules out Olympic start | tellerreport.com". www.tellerreport.com. Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  • Profile at the European Fencing Confederation
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