Kornelia Ender
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Born:
- October 25, 1958, Plauen, East Germany [now Germany] (age 65)
- Awards And Honors:
- Olympic Games
Kornelia Ender (born October 25, 1958, Plauen, East Germany [now Germany]) is an East German swimmer who was the first woman to win four gold medals at a single Olympics.
Ender’s natural ability was spotted when she was a child playing on family vacations, and she was trained from a young age by demanding East German coaches who included weight lifting in her training. She was 13 years old when she won two silver medals at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, West Germany. At the 1976 Games in Montreal, at age 17, she won four gold medals (in the 100-metre freestyle, the 200-metre freestyle, the 100-metre butterfly, and the 4 × 100-metre medley relay) and a silver medal (in the 4 × 100-metre freestyle relay). In three of the events she set new world records (all since broken) and in the fourth equaled an existing world record. Though Ender had excellent freestyle and butterfly strokes, it was her strong starts and expert turns that most often made the difference in her victories. Her Olympic gold medals were the first won by an East German woman swimmer. She retired soon after the Olympics, having broken 23 world records in her career.
During the 1976 Olympics there were many accusations that Ender and her teammates had been using illegal performance-enhancing anabolic steroids. In 1991 a number of East German coaches admitted that some of the women swimmers had been given steroids, although Ender was never named. She was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1981.