Anne Henning

Anne Henning

Anne Henning on a 1972 UAE stamp
Personal information
Born (1955-09-06) September 6, 1955
Raleigh, North Carolina, United States
Height 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Weight 66 kg (146 lb)
Sport
Sport Speed skating
Club Northbrook Speedskating Club

Anne Elizabeth Henning (born September 6, 1955) is a retired speed skater from the United States.

Anne Henning grew up in Northbrook, Illinois and started in short track speed skating, but then, like many short track speed skaters before and after her, switched to long track speed skating. In 1971, 15-year-old Henning won silver at the ISU Sprint Championships, the forerunner of the World Sprint Championships. During those championships, she set new world records in both her 500 m races.

In 1972, Henning broke the world records on the 500 m and the 1,000 m, which made her the favourite on those distances at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. During her 500 m race against Sylvia Burka at those Olympics, Henning was obstructed at the crossing by Burka, but she still set the fastest time and a new Olympic record (43.70). In her re-skate, which she was allowed to take according to the rules, she improved her time to 43.33. Aged 16, this made Henning the youngest Olympic Champion in the history of Olympic speed skating. On the 1,000 m, Henning took the bronze medal behind surprise winner Monika Pflug and only 0.01 seconds behind silver medallist Atje Keulen-Deelstra. After that season, a still only 16 year old Henning retired from speed skating.

Anne Henning currently is a teacher in Englewood, Colorado.[1]

World records

Over the course of her career, Henning skated four world records:

DistanceTimeDateLocation
500 m42.91February 20, 1971Inzell
500 m42.75February 21, 1971Inzell
500 m42.5 January 7, 1972Davos
1,000 m1:27.3 January 8, 1972Davos

Personal records

To put these personal records in perspective, the last column (WR) lists the official world records on the dates that Henning skated her personal records.[1]

DistanceTimeDateLocationWR
500 m42.5 January 7, 1972Davos42.75
1,000 m1:27.3 January 8, 1972Davos1:27.7 
1,500 m2:27.30January 16, 1972Madonna di Campiglio2:15,8 
3,000 m5:25.9 December 5, 1970Innsbruck4:50.3 

References

  1. 1 2 Anne Henning. sports-reference.com

Sources and external links


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