- Nicole Uphoff
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Nicole Uphoff Personal information Born January 25, 1967 Medal recordEquestrian Olympic Games Competitor for West Germany
Gold 1988 Seoul Dressage, Individual Gold 1988 Seoul Dressage, Team Competitor for Germany
Gold 1992 Barcelona Dressage, Individual Gold 1992 Barcelona Dressage, Team Nicole Uphoff-Selke (born January 25, 1967 in Duisburg, Nordrhein-Westfalen) is a German equestrian, and four times Olympic champion. She has won two gold medals at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and two gold medals at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona with her horse Rembrandt.[1] In 2007, she married Andreas Selke.
World championships
Nicole Uphoff won two gold medals at the Dressage World Championship in Stockholm, 1990, both individually and as a member of the winning team from Western Germany. In the 1994 championships in Den Haag she won gold with the German team.
References
- ^ Profile: "Nicole Uphoff" databaseOlympics.com (Retrieved on January 21, 2008)
Olympic Equestrian Champions in Individual Dressage 1912: Carl Bonde (SWE) • 1920: Janne Lundblad (SWE) • 1924: Ernst Linder (SWE) • 1928: Carl Freiherr von Langen (GER) • 1932: Xavier Lesage (FRA) • 1936: Heinz Pollay (GER) • 1948: Hans Moser (SUI) • 1952 – 1956: Henri Saint Cyr (SWE) • 1960: Sergei Filatov (URS) • 1964: Henri Chammartin (SUI) • 1968: Ivan Kizimov (URS) • 1972: Liselott Linsenhoff (FRG) • 1976: Christine Stückelberger (SUI) • 1980: Elisabeth Theurer (AUT) • 1984: Reiner Klimke (FRG) • 1988: Nicole Uphoff (FRG) • 1992: Nicole Uphoff (GER) • 1996: Isabell Werth (GER) • 2000 – 2004 – 2008: Anky van Grunsven (NED)
Olympic Equestrian Champions in Team Dressage 1928: Germany (von Langen, Linkenbach, Lotzbeck) • 1932: France (Lesage, Marion, Jousseaume) • 1936: Germany (Pollay, Gerhard, Oppeln-Bronikowski) • 1948: France (Jousseaume, Paillard, Buret) • 1952 – 1956: Sweden (Saint Cyr, Boltenstern, Persson) • 1964: Germany (Boldt, Klimke, Neckermann) • 1968: West Germany (Neckermann, Klimke, Linsenhoff) • 1972: Soviet Union (Petushkova, Kizimov, Kalita) • 1976: West Germany (Boldt, Klimke, Grillo) • 1980: Soviet Union (Kovshov, Ugryumov, Misevich) • 1984: West Germany (Klimke, Sauer, Krug) • 1988: West Germany (Klimke, Linsenhoff, Theodorescu, Uphoff) • 1992: Germany (Balkenhol, Uphoff, Theodorescu, Werth) • 1996: Germany (Balkenhol, Schaudt, Theodorescu, Werth) • 2000: Germany (Werth, Capellmann, Salzgeber, de Ridder) • 2004: Germany (Kemmer, Schmidt, Schaudt, Salzgeber) • 2008: Germany (Kemmer, Capellmann, Werth)
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