词条 | Emil Beck |
释义 |
Emil Beck (20 July 1935, Tauberbischofsheim – 12 March 2006) was a German fencing coach. BiographyEmil Beck was born in Tauberbischofsheim, in the Main-Tauber-District of Baden-Württemberg in Germany on 12 July 1935. The former hairdresser Emil Beck began in the mid 1950s with fencing. Fencing scenes from the movie The Three Musketeers had impressed the young man. In 1954 Emil Beck was the "founding father" of the Fencing-Club Tauberbischofsheim.[1] He created a school of fencing sometimes referred to as the "German school" since Beck's influence on German fencing was profound. As a fencing coach, Beck was largely self-taught.[2] Considering Becks medal success, he is one of the most successful coaches in the world (with 163 medals at Olympic Games, World Championships and European Championships).[3] Beck coined the reputation of the Fencing-Club Tauberbischofsheim in the 1970s as "Tauberbischofsheimer goldsmith" and "Mecca of fencing".[4] Beck trained fencers such as Matthias Behr, Alexander Pusch and Anja Fichtel. At the height of his career, the German fencers Anja Fichtel, Sabine Bau and Zita Funkenhauser – all from the FC Tauberbischofsheim – won gold, silver and bronze in foil at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul. Beck was succeeded as German fencing team leader by Matthias Behr. 12 March 2006 Emil Beck died of heart failure.[5] Honours
Beck as a name giver
Quotes about BeckSome quotes of famous personalities about Beck illustrate his life's work at the Fencing-Club Tauberbischofsheim: {{quote|He was a charismatic personality who not let someone indifferent. His life's work is outstanding, he has changed fencing and his hometown positively and that will reverberate for a long time.|Thomas Bach|[9]}}{{quote|Tauberbischofsheim would never have this reputation without Emil Beck.|Matthias Behr|[5]}}The honorary president of the German Fencing Association (DFeB), Gordon Rapp, paid tribute to Becks commitment as: {{quote|Unique in the world. Fencing in Germany and even international would not have this status without Emil Beck.|Gordon Rapp|[9]}}Works
References1. ^{{cite web |publisher=Fecht-Club Tauberbischofsheim e.V. |url=http://www.fechtentbb.de/fecht-club/geschichte/ |title=Geschichte des Fecht-Clubs Tauberbischofsheim |access-date=2015-05-19}} 2. ^Some Notes on "German" Épée and a Short Lesson Plan Coaches Compendium. Retrieved 8 February 2014. 3. ^{{cite web |publisher=FAZ |url=http://www.faz.net/aktuell/sport/mehr-sport/emil-beck-ehemaliger-bundestrainer-beck-gestorben-1303052.html |title=Ehemaliger Bundestrainer Beck gestorben |date=2006-03-13 |access-date=2015-05-02}} 4. ^Sport-Bild: „Das große Olympia Lexikon", Sport-Bild, 19. June 1996, page 36. 5. ^1 2 FAZ: Ehemaliger Bundestrainer Beck gestorben. Online auf www.faz.net. 13. März 2006. Abgerufen am 5. Mai 2015. 6. ^Spiegel Online:Wenn Emil pfeift ... Online auf www.spiegel.de. 16. Oktober 1989. Abgerufen am 5. Mai 2015. 7. ^{{cite web | url=https://www.mainpost.de/regional/main-tauber/Reinhold-Wuerth-erhaelt-Emil-Beck-Gedaechtnispreispreis;art775,6362541 |title=Reinhold Würth erhält Emil-Beck-Gedächtnispreispreis |date=2011-10-06 |publisher=Main-Post |access-date=2013-03-23}} – Nur Auszug frei verfügbar 8. ^Fränkische Nachrichten: Aus Pestalozzi-Halle wird Emil-Beck-Halle. Online auf www.fnweb.de. 27. März 2015. Abgerufen am 5. Mai 2015. 9. ^1 NTV: Emil Beck ist tot. Online auf www.ntv.de. 13. März 2006. Abgerufen am 5. Mai 2015. External links
4 : 1935 births|2006 deaths|People from Tauberbischofsheim|German male fencers |
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