Part II of series.  Please remember this is copyrighted material.



DATE: Wednesday, September 13, 2000    EDITION: Chicago Sports Final
SECTION: Sports                        PAGE: 1                   ZONE: N
SOURCE: By Philip Hersh, Tribune Olympic Sports Writer.
MEMO: THE 2000 OLYMPIC GAMES.
SERIES: 10 YEARS LATER
        Germany's sports system a decade after reunification.
        Second in a series.


DATELINE: LEIPZIG, Germany

  EVEN WITH REDUCED STAFFING, THE RELIC OF A SORDID PAST CONTINUES TO PLAY A
           ROLE IN THE NATION'S PREPARATIONS FOR THE SYDNEY GAMES.

                    GERMANY MAINTAINS INSTITUTIONAL MEMORY

   Twelve years ago, not long before what would be East Germany's final
Olympics as an independent nation, the country's sports authorities ran a tour
for Western journalists. The point of the tour was to convince skeptical
Westerners that the sports system behind East Germany's "Miracle Machine," as
a Canadian author had called it, was based entirely on sophisticated talent
identification, experienced coaches, good sports science and motivated
athletes.
   During the tour's stop at the East German College for Physical Culture in
Leipzig, the journalists vainly insisted they weren't getting the whole
picture. As the dog-and-pony show continued, the questions were about what
wasn't being shown, the implication being the missing element was work with
performance-enhancing drugs.
   "Quite a number of people think we show them only 50 percent of the
college, and some people think there is another college underground where we
hide the secrets," the college's scientific research director said. "You may
go to the basement if you want."
   Twelve years later, not long before a unified German team will compete in
the 2000 Sydney Olympics that open Friday, this anecdote was recounted to a
top official of what has become the unified Germany's sports research
institute, the Institute for Applied Training Science (IAT). The story drew a
smile from Hartmut Sandner, who has worked the research institute since 1980.
   "I cannot imagine that a foreign journalist from the USA got permission to
visit the former research institute part," Sandner said. "That would have been
a great exception."
   "It was an arranged tour," Sandner was told.
   "Then certainly it was the campus across the field here," he said. "There
you probably visited some nice gyms and the library and something like that."
   That indeed had been the case. The real basement, in the old sports
medicine building of what then was the State Research Institution for Physical
Education, eventually would be visited through its meticulous files when they
were opened after the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989.
   What is now the IAT had been the inner sanctum of the system that
transformed the former East Germany, a country of 16.6 million people, into a
sporting power to rival the Soviet Union and the United States, with
populations then 18 times bigger.
   It was in Leipzig that the highly advanced research into sports science
would include what the East Germans called "supporting means"--giving banned
and potentially dangerous performance-enhancing drugs to athletes, often
without their knowledge, often beginning in their preteen years.
   At the recent East German doping trials, former athletes have testified to
the damaging effects these drugs have had on their own health and the
likelihood they also caused birth defects in some of their children. Given
such horrifying evidence, it seems surprising that the institute that
catalyzed and symbolized such abuse has continued to exist, even with a
radically altered mission controlled and entirely financed by the unified
Germany's Interior Ministry.
   "The old West Germany in the late 1980s would have liked to have such an
institute," IAT acting director Arndt Pfuetzner said. "Their alternative was
to create regional Olympic training centers in the west, but since they were
planned regionally they could not substitute for a central institute.
   "What these training centers did was more day-to-day dealing with
individual athletes. More basic research that could be commonly applied was
not done there.
   "The more progressive powers in the old West Germany tried to retain this
institute in this period of upheaval. Then it became an integral part of the
German unity contract."
   Interior Ministry spokeswoman Eva Schmierer confirmed the IAT's further
existence was guaranteed in the unification contract worked out between the
former German Democratic Republic, or East Germany, and the Federal Republic
of Germany, what West Germany was called before and after reunification
   "The Interior Ministry granted the IAT's further existence, not including
the doping part, because we recognized the technical and scientific support it
could provide were of specific importance to athletes," Schmierer said.
   Many other nations have such centers, although their emphasis is more on
training than applied research. The U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado
Springs has similar aspects--perhaps too similar, if there is any truth to
recent allegations by former USOC doping control chief Wade Exum, who said
superiors asked him to develop doping methods and ways to avoid detection.
   The IAT was closed for a year after German reunification. It reopened Jan.
1, 1992, on a significantly diminished scale. A staff of 650, including 35 who
worked on sports medicine, was cut to 85. Two employees are from the west, a
scientist and the administrative head.
   Computers and other high-tech resources have diminished some of the
manpower needs. Many people had used handwriting or typewriters to record
research results and keep secret files.
   "All the people working here now had nothing to do with doping," said
Pfuetzner, who has worked there 26 years.
   Previously spread over three buildings and a testing hall, the IAT has one
building and a testing hall. Its annual budget is down to about $4 million.
Funds were almost unlimited during East German's sports heydays in the 1970s
and 1980s.
   "This institute will still be needed in 10 or 20 years," Pfuetzner said.
"Whether it will still be here, I don't know."
   The irony was that the East German government turned Leipzig from a mere
physical education college into a Machiavellian research institute purely out
of a desire to show up West Germany at its own postwar coming-out party, the
1972 Munich Olympics. When whitewater canoeing was introduced at those
Olympics, the East Germans built an exact replica of the $4 million West
German slalom course. East Germany won all four whitewater gold medals.
   "The first task of East German national teams, even if they didn't win a
medal, was to be better than the West German teams," Sandner said.
   To that end the East Germans were brilliantly creative as well as
criminally unscrupulous.
   Training for the 1968 Olympics at 7,400-foot-high Mexico City showed how
altitude training could benefit performance even at sea level. That led East
Germany to devise the first hyperbaric chamber, now commonly used by athletes
who want to simulate altitude training. It was also a cost-saving device,
sparing the country from the expense of sending, housing and feeding athletes
at high-altitude training camps.
   "EPO wasn't known then," Pfuetzner said jokingly, referring to the
blood-doping drug that mimics the effect of altitude training.
   In 1967 the East Germans built in Leipzig what was believed to be the first
sophisticated treadmill, which still exists in the basement (where else?) of
the old sports medicine building. The treadmill has been further modified and
advanced for current use.
   East German researchers made written notes or video recordings of every
major international competition, creating an unparalleled library on sports
mechanics. If one of their wrestlers was to meet a Russian, the East Germans
could make a move-by-move analysis of the Russian's tactics and movements and
program it into wrestling robots that simulated an opponent's moves.
   More than 400 members of the old staff of 650 worked in 10- to 20-person
groups specializing in the science and mechanics of a specific Olympic sport.
Psychologists worked on team dynamics. The department of sports politics dealt
with matters such as the 1984 Soviet bloc boycott of the Los Angeles Olympics
and the indoctrination of athletes to the Communist party line.
   The now-suppressed department of endocrinology had 18 members working in
doping science. It developed such things as the steroid androstendione in a
nasal spray, a form that made it more rapidly effective and more difficult to
detect.
   Most former East German elite athletes would visit Leipzig four to five
times a year for performance analysis. Today such visits are far less
frequent, partly because athletes who make their living from sport have a much
more crowded competitive calendar.
   The IAT currently works with 16 Olympic sports. It has a partnership with
the Berlin Science and Development Center for Sports Equipment, allowing for
cooperation in the design of new equipment and the use of new equipment
designed elsewhere. The IAT helped former East German Gunda Niemann, the
world's greatest speedskater since reunification, in her difficult adaptation
to the clap skate.
   "Our greatest achievement from all these years was to transform the old
institute, or at least parts of it, into the new society," Pfuetzner said.
"Now society is structured in a different way, and there is really no room for
[the institute].
   "To put it negatively, the universities in the new Germany have more or
less the whole claim to sports science, which usually is limited to sports
medicine. No one outside of this institution is working with the applied
science of training methods."
   In East Germany the IAT provided the scientific basis of a holistic system
that took athletes from age 7 in some sports, such as figure skating and
gymnastics, to age 32 or 33.
   Sandner, director of the IAT's department of information and documentation,
said sports scientists from around the world have been told they can have
access to much of the old and new research but not training methodology or
information about particular athletes now covered by privacy laws. To erase
these names from typewritten documents, he said, would require more manpower
than the IAT has.
   There are 120,000 items in a database on the Web site: www.sport-iat.de.
Sandner said few are availing themselves of documents produced by a system he
clearly feels has unfairly been demonized.
   "Everybody is speaking about the great secrets of East Germany sports
science but these people are not trying to look at it," he said.
   "I consider the secret to be the system. Talent identification, training of
youngsters--that is the secret. One part certainly was medical support by
doping."
   Much of the doping records, kept by the army and the secret police (Stasi),
has been uncovered and published by West German scientist Werner Franke. Some
countries, including the U.S., have requested the International Olympic
Committee strip medals from athletes whose names were on the doping lists.
   The IOC has refused, which is not surprising. IOC President Juan Antonio
Samaranch gave an Olympic Order prize to former East German sports chief
Manfred Ewald, recently found guilty of systematic doping.
   While doping research was done in Leipzig, the results were applied and
administered locally, by coaches and doctors at the 21 elite sports clubs of
the old East Germany.
   Asked what percentage of East German success owed to doping, Pfuetzner
said, "It depends on the individual sports. You can't generalize. An integral
part of doping was to enable athletes to have better recovery time, so you
could practice a lot but feel OK."
   Such recovery capacity could be measured on the treadmill in the basement.
On the wall behind it is a colorful, bucolic scene, as if to give the athlete
a feeling of training in the woods. Outside the walls the institute's drab
buildings hunker against Leipzig's grayness.
   "The main difference between this and East German times is the picture was
black-and-white then," Sandner said. "With a high degree of red that is."
   ----------
   Part 3: How two former East German stars have coped with the changes in
their world.
GRAPHIC: The medals of the `Miracle Machine'
East Germany and West Germany sent separate teams to the Olympic Games for 20
years beginning in 1968. During that time, the East Germans won nearly three
times as many gold medals as West Germany in Games that were not boycotted.
Medal breakdowns for East and West Germany, U.S.S.R. and U.S., ranked by
number of gold medals:

1968
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. U.S.         45   28  34    107
2. U.S.S.R.     29   32  30     91
5. East Germany  9    9   7     25
8. West Germany  5   11  10     26

1972
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. U.S.S.R.     50   27  22     99
2. U.S.         33   31  30     94
3. East Germany 20   23  23     66
4. West Germany 13   11  16     40

1976
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. U.S.S.R.     49   41  35    125
2. East Germany 40   25  25     90
3. U.S.         34   35  25     94

1980
West Germany was one of 65 nations to boycott the Moscow Games.

1984
East Germany was one of 14 nations to boycott the Los Angeles Games.

1988
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. U.S.S.R.     55   31  46    132
2. East Germany 37   35  30    102
3. U.S.         36   37  27    100
4. West Germany 11   14  15     40

A combined German team began competing in the 1992 Barcelona Games.
1992
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. United Team* 45   38  28    111
2. U.S.         37   34  37    108
3. Germany      33   21  28     82

1996
RANK/NATION      G    S   B   TOTAL
1. U.S.         44   32  25    101
2. Russia       26   21  16     63


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