peoplepill id: johannes-vetter-1
JV
Germany
1 views today
1 views this week
Johannes Vetter
German javelin thrower

Johannes Vetter

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
German javelin thrower
Work field
Gender
Male
Star sign
AriesAries
Birth
26 March 1993, Dresden, Dresden Directorate District, Saxony, Germany
Age
31 years
Residence
Offenburg, Ortenau, Freiburg Government Region, Germany
Stats
Height:
188 cm
Weight:
105 kg
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Johannes Vetter ([joˈhanəs ˈfɛtɐ]; born 26 March 1993) is a German athlete who competes in the javelin throw. He is the 2017 World Champion. His personal best of 94.44 m is the German record. It also ranks him second on the overall list. He currently trains under Boris Obergföll and is a member of LG Offenburg's track and field squad. He was previously with SV Saar 05 Saarbrücken and Dresdner SC.

Personal life

Vetter was born and raised in Dresden. Upon receiving his Abitur, he joined the Landespolizei Sachsen [de] ("Saxony State Police") and has been a Sportsoldat [de] ("Sport Soldier") since September 2014. He has a tattoo of an Ancient Greek javelin thrower on his back.

Career

In 2011, Vetter competed in the European Junior Championships. He made it through the qualifying round with a personal best 71.60 m throw. He then finished 12th in the final with a throw of 65.87 m. Zigismunds Sirmais won the event with a throw of 81.53 m.

In July 2015, Vetter took part in the European U23 Championships. He finished fourth, throwing the javelin 79.78 m. Kacper Oleszczuk won gold with a throw of 82.29 m. In August 2015, he competed in the IAAF World Championships. He finished seventh with a throw of 83.79 m. Julius Yego won the competition with a throw of 92.72 m.

Vetter competed for Germany at the 2016 Summer Olympics, along with Julian Weber and eventual gold medalist Thomas Röhler. Leading up to his maiden Olympics, Vetter unleashed the javelin with a personal best of 88.23 m to top the field and attain the Olympic entry standard (83.00 m) by a five-centimetre margin at the Kuortane Games in Finland. Coming to the final with the second best throw at 85.96 m from the qualifying stage, Vetter opened the competition with an 85.32 m throw on his first attempt to seize an early lead, but Röhler, along with 2015 World Champion Julius Yego of Kenya and defending Olympic Champion Keshorn Walcott of Trinidad and Tobago overtook him for the medal positions. Unable to improve his mark in the remaining attempts, Vetter finished in fourth place, outside the podium by just six centimetres. Less than a month after his disappointment at the Olympics, Vetter finished first in a world-class field at the 2016 ISTAF Berlin, throwing a personal best of 89.57 m.

In July 2017, he won the German Championship with a throw of 89.35 m. This was his first victory in the German Championship (he finished fifth in 2014, second in 2015 and fourth in 2016). Two days later, he recorded throws of 90.75 m, 91.06 m, 93.06 m and a personal best 94.44 m at the 2017 Spitzen Leichtathletik Luzern. The 94.44 m throw was also a German record, besting Röhler's 93.90 m throw from May 2017. In August 2017, he won gold at the World Championships in London with a throw of 89.89 m. Vetter finished his season at the 2017 ISTAF Berlin, where he won gold with an 89.85 m throw, nearly four metres ahead of second place Röhler. On 14 October 2017, he won the 2017 European Athlete of the Year Trophy.

In March 2018, he won gold at the European Throwing Cup, throwing 92.70 m, twelve metres ahead of second place. In July, he won bronze at the 2018 German Athletics Championships, with a throw of 87.83 m. In August, he competed in the 2018 European Athletics Championships. He won the qualifying round with an 87.39 m effort, then placed fifth in the final with a throw of 83.27 m. Röhler won gold with 89.47 m.

Vetter represented Team Europe at The Match Europe v USA in September 2019. He won gold with a throw of 90.03 m, his best performance since May 2018. At the 2019 World Athletics Championships, Vetter had the best throw in the qualifying round, with 89.35 m. He then won bronze in the final, throwing 85.37 m.

Competition record

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Germany
2011European Junior ChampionshipsTallinn, Estonia12thJavelin throw65.87 m
2015European U23 ChampionshipsTallinn, Estonia4thJavelin throw79.78 m
World ChampionshipsBeijing, China7thJavelin throw83.79 m
2016European ChampionshipsAmsterdam, Netherlands16th (q)Javelin throw79.98 m
Olympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil4thJavelin throw85.32 m
2017World ChampionshipsLondon, England1stJavelin throw89.89 m
2018European Throwing CupLeiria, Portugal1stJavelin throw92.70 m CR
European ChampionshipsBerlin, Germany5thJavelin throw83.27 m
2019World ChampionshipsDoha, Qatar3rdJavelin throw85.37 m

Seasonal bests by year


YearPerformancePlaceDate
201051.77 metresNabeul, Tunisia10 April
201171.60 metresTallinn, Estonia21 July
201261.39 metresDresden, Germany10 June
201383.73 metresSchutterwald, Germany5 August
201479.75 metresHaldensleben, Germany21 June
201585.40 metresJena, Germany31 May
201689.57 metresBerlin, Germany3 September
201794.44 metresLuzern, Switzerland11 July
201892.70 metresLeiria, Portugal11 March
201990.03 metresMinsk, Belarus10 September
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 14 Jul 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Johannes Vetter is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Johannes Vetter
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes