Rico Krahnert
German television production manager and former figure skater
Rico Krahnert | |
---|---|
Figure skating career | |
Country | East Germany |
Skating club | SC Karl-Marx-Stadt |
Retired | c. 1989 |
Rico Krahnert is a German television production manager and former figure skater who competed for East Germany. He is the 1988 Golden Spin of Zagreb champion, the 1988 Karl Schafer Memorial silver medalist,[1] and a two-time East German national medalist (silver in 1988, bronze in 1989).[2]
Krahnert represented East Germany at the 1987 World Junior Championships in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada, and 1988 European Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia. He belonged to SC Karl-Marx-Stadt (Chemnitz).[2]
Krahnert has worked as a production manager for German television shows.[3]
Competitive highlights
International | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Event | 1985–86 | 1986–87 | 1987–88 | 1988–89 |
European Champ. | 18th | |||
Golden Spin of Zagreb | 1st | |||
Schäfer Memorial | 2nd | |||
International: Junior | ||||
World Junior Champ. | 14th | |||
Blue Swords | 5th J | 2nd J | ||
National | ||||
East German Champ. | 2nd | 3rd |
References
- ^ "Results Book, Volume 2: 1974–current" (PDF). Skate Canada. pp. 88, 91. Archived from the original on 20 September 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ a b "Historie Eiskunstlaufen - DDR - Meisterschaften (Herren)" [History: East German Figure Skating Championships (Men)]. sport-komplett.de (in German). Archived from the original on 16 April 2017.
- ^ "Rico Krahnert". IMDb.
- v
- t
- e
- 1973:
Sergey Volkov
- 1977:
Gert-Walter Gräbner
- 1978:
Jean-Christoph Simond
- 1981:
James Santee
- 1982:
Masaru Ogawa
- 1983:
Scott Hamilton
- 1984:
Scott Williams
- 1985:
Heiko Fischer
- 1986:
Viktor Petrenko
- 1987:
Scott Kurttila
- 1988:
Rico Krahnert
- 1989:
Sergei Dudakov
- 1990:
Aren Nielsen
- 1996:
Roman Serov
- 1997:
Roman Serov
- 1998:
Yevgeny Martynov
- 1999:
Roman Serov
- 2000:
Ryan Bradley
- 2001:
Sergei Davydov
- 2002:
Gheorghe Chiper
- 2003:
Ma Xiaodong
- 2004:
Hugh Yik
- 2005:
Gregor Urbas
- 2006:
Gregor Urbas
- 2007:
Gregor Urbas
- 2008:
Yasuharu Nanri
- 2009:
Denis Ten
- 2010:
Denis Leushin
- 2011:
Tatsuki Machida
- 2012:
Vladislav Sezganov
- 2013:
Sergei Voronov
- 2014:
Denis Ten
- 2015:
Denis Ten
- 2016:
Alexei Bychenko
- 2017:
Morisi Kvitelashvili
- 2018:
Jason Brown
- 2019:
Jason Brown
- 2021:
Keegan Messing
- 2022:
Camden Pulkinen
- 2023:
Jin Boyang