Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Tokyo 2020: Germany's Max Hartung, the mature athlete

He is known for fights on and off the piste. Fencer and spokesman Max Hartung is calling time on his career at the Tokyo Olympics and talked to DW about messages, rights and a unicorn.

-

"When I was waiting in line for laundry, I happened to meet a French female athlete representa­tive and we had a 20minute talk. That's hardly possible here otherwise," said Max Hartung.

Like all athletes at the Tokyo Olympics, German fencer Max Hartung has felt the effect of the strict COVID-19 rules. What normally makes the world's largest sporting event so unique, namely the cross-sports encounters and the interactio­n among elite athletes, has been reduced to coincidenc­es in the Japanese capital.

There would be so much to discuss, too. The strict hygiene rules, the heat, doping through skin contact or even the political messages sent by some Olympic athletes.

"I think it's great that athletes as social figurehead­s use their platform and reach to improve coexistenc­e and influence young people in particular," explained the four-time European champion and world team champion in an interview with DW.

What is the need for independen­t athlete representa­tive bodies?

The Russian doping scandal, fairness in sports, the controvers­ial reform of competitiv­e sports in Germany — these were topics that Hartung confronted five years ago at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. At the time, athletes were represente­d within the

German Olympic Sports Federation (DOSB), but there was no independen­t representa­tion of their interests.

"I wanted to have a stronger lobby for athletes," Hartung said.

The idea came to fruition and in 2017, he co-founded Athletes Germany, an organizati­on that represents more than 1,000 athletes. Their goal: to bring about

fundamenta­l changes in German and internatio­nal sports practices.

In general, it is about the participat­ive management, protection and perspectiv­e of the athletes as it looks to address questions such as: Who determines the coach? How is the money distribute­d among the respective sports? Where are there Olympic bases? Why is there so little support for female athletes during and after pregnancy? Why are athletes not allowed to elect the bodies of their federation­s?

Why are so few athletes fighting for their rights?

"For my coach, it wasn't always easy to accept all the extra traveling and other things on my mind, given that I was doing so much besides fencing," Hartung reflected. Sometimes, he said, that had an impact on

his athletic performanc­e.

"The worst was at the 2017 World Championsh­ips in Leipzig, in the team competitio­n," the 31-year-old recalled. "Because I had worked so hard. I had just become an athlete spokesman, shortly after becoming European champion, but I was completely flat and I fell into a hole."

Hartung said he was particular­ly hurt by the feeling of having let his team down. "It's

tough when you don't perform as well as you could. But when that happens in team competitio­n? That was the day that hurt the most and where I had to learn to take better care of myself and say no sometimes."

Germany's 'unicorn'

In the meantime, Athletes Germany has gone on to employ five full-time staff members and receives financial support from the federal government. This makes the organizati­on a "unicorn" worldwide, as Hartung puts it. Most countries have athlete’s representa­tive bodies, but they are not always independen­t and are not nearly as well-positioned in terms of personnel and funding.

The work is arduous, and progress is often minimal. Take Rule 40 of the Olympic Charter, for example, which deals with advertisin­g rights. Hartung even met with Thomas Bach, president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, to discuss matters. "We were not able to get our wish that the athletes who provide the images should also have a monetary share."

Building pressure

To initiate lasting reforms, Athletes Germany needs input from sportspeop­le. Further public support and media attention are helpful in building pressure on governing sports bodies such as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, as demonstrat­ed by athletes' expression­s of solidarity in Tokyo.

Hartung himself had also thought about making a statement — his last appearance at the Olympics with the team on July 28 would have lent itself to that. It was also his last fight as an active athlete.

"But I would have found it difficult to raise one issue above all others," Hartung said. That is why he decided that his commitment to Athletes Germany was his contributi­on.

cerned, there is no better time for a rethink.

"We have shown that when we did what we did, we got a lot of support," she said. "Any other team or athlete will get the same support. Now we have gotten this topic out in the air, there's a lot of focus on it. This really is the time to make a change."

 ??  ?? Fight for bronze: Despite his comeback Hartung, right, lost with his team against Hungary
Fight for bronze: Despite his comeback Hartung, right, lost with his team against Hungary
 ??  ?? Max Hartung is competing at the Olympics for the final time at Tokyo 2020
Max Hartung is competing at the Olympics for the final time at Tokyo 2020

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany