News Archive

News Archive

Christian Schenk is ready to fight

Christian Schenk is ready to fight for a bright future of the ISTAF. The

decathlon Olympic champion from Seoul 1988 was appointed meeting director of

this year’s IAAF Golden League final, which will take place on 6th

September in Berlin.

Following the financial collapse of the ISTAF GmbH, which was in charge for

Germany’s most prestigious athletics meeting for several years, a new

company has been set up immediately. News of the financial difficulties of the

ISTAF GmbH were originally made public by a falsed fax, which substantially

harmed Berlin’s chances in the race for the IAAF World Championships in

2005. Police in Berlin is still investigating the matter. There are supposed to

be clues which should lead to the person who sent the fax. Despite all the

trouble and rumours this year’s ISTAF is safe.

„I don’t look back to what happened in the past – I am

working on the future“, Christian Schenk says. While the former ISTAF

GmbH belonged to three local clubs which did not get on with each other very

well, the new company looks much more professional. The president of the Berlin

Association of Industry and Commerce, Werner Gegenbauer, holds a major part of

the Leichtathletik-Veranstaltungs-GmbH (LVG), which is the new owner of the

ISTAF. The marketing company of the Deutscher Leichtathletik-Verband (DLV) is,

among others, also involved.

If he had ever thought of turning down the offer for the job because of the

bad news the ISTAF GmbH produced in the past, Christian Schenk was asked.

„This is no question for a former decathlete!“, he said and added:

„I will do my very best for the ISTAF.“ The 37-year-old Schenk, who

moved from Rostock to Berlin some time ago, is the owner of a sports marketing

and promotion agency. Two things make him optimistic concerning the ISTAF,

although there are just three months left for preparations: „When I was

in Nairobi for the presentation of the Berlin bid I realised for the first

time, that it is possible for Berlin politicians, the local economy and

athletics‘ officials to pull together.“ The other decisive question

for Schenk was, whether the organisers in the background would continue working

with the LVG. „As this is the case, I can’t see any problems

concerning the limited time left until 6th September.“

As Christian Schenk has never been a meeting director for an event as

prestigious as the ISTAF before, he will receive help by a prominent man in the

sport: Svein Arne Hansen. The meeting director of the IAAF Golden League in

Oslo has agreed to support the ISTAF. „Svein Arne Hansen is like a

godfather for us. The meeting in Oslo is in a similar situation as we are. They

also have not the biggest budget and still produce a very good meeting“,

Christian Schenk said. So after the meeting in Oslo on 28th June Svein Arne

Hansen will care about the ISTAF. Especially concerning the contracts for the

athletes Hansen could be a great help for the ISTAF. The new ISTAF company has

also agreed to pay all the athletes who were still waiting for their money from

last year.

The new ISTAF company will face yet another task this year. Due to the

rebuilding of the Olympic Stadium, which will be finished by the end of 2004,

this year’s meeting will be moved to the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark.

This will be an exception for this year only, as in the Olympic Stadium the

whole infield is lowered by about two and a half metres during the summer break

of the German football season. Additionally the spectators‘ seats of home

straight are broken up for rebuilding. So instead of having the IAAF Golden

League final on a building site organisers chose to change to the Jahn-Stadium.

It is the same arena that saw the Olympischer Tag in former times. It was the

IAAF’s Grand Prix Meeting I meeting in the GDR. And it was here, where

Uwe Hohn threw his javelin to the famous mark of 104,80 metres in 1984. The

stadium was partly rebuilt four years ago, when the German championships were

held there. It has around 19,000 seats.

„The stadiums in Oslo and Zurich also are not much bigger“,

Christian Schenk said and added: „In a full stadium we will have a great

atmosphere. And spectators will be very near to the athletes.“ As in the

old Olympic Stadium the track will not be a very hard one and there is always

the chance of a head wind in the Jahn-Stadium. But for middle and long distance

events as well as the throwing contests this could be a great place. So after

quite some trouble during the last year the new ISTAF team seems to have found

back on the way to success.

 

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