IGNORANCE IS BLISS
Speaking for the first time since the fall of the Berlin Wall and
revelations that her coaches gave her performance-enhancing drugs, Kornelia
Ender tells Craig Lord that she recalls having been given injections after
training sessions
The bliss of ignorance, it seems, can survive even the most
thought-provoking revelations.
For Kornelia Grummt, who gained her reputation as Kornelia Ender, a
statement this week by 20 former East German coaches that swimmers took
performance-enhancing drugs, means looking back more in sadness than in
anger.
In the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, Ender, then aged 18, won four
gold medals to add to her eight world titles, four other Olympic medals and
four European titles.
Today, from her comfortable home in Schornsheim, a
village in southwest Germany, she says she never knew that she was being
given drugs to help her, but acknowledges that she was injected with
substances.
The coaches' statement came at the start of a week in which
Germany, at Gelsenkirchen, hosts the first European sprint championships,
and brings the success of the first wundermadchen of the East German sports
machine sharply back into focus.
Ender was the experiment that went right,
a role model for subsequent German generations. She was chosen by a state
talent scout at the age of ten as the girl who would become the fastest
woman sprint swimmer in the world; between 1973 and 1976, she set the world
record at 100 metres freestyle ten times (a record in itself, one more than
Dawn Fraser), lowering the time from 58.25sec to 55.65sec, and retired
unbeaten.
Before her arrival, it took ten years for the world record to
improve just under a second and in he 15 years since 1976 the record has
been reduced by only 0.92sec each of the four times by an East German, the
holder being Kristin Otto, who won six Olympic gold medals the year before
the Berlin Wall crumbled.
This year, Ender's time would have won the
European title and placed her third in the world. The town of Halle
housed
the Child and Youth Sports School where Ender, at ten, was taken to board.
From day one, the target was Olympic success. Ender spent two hours in the
water twice a day and did one hour of land work each day, and was rewarded
by an above-average lifestyle.
Caught up in the success of team and self, and believing that the "GDR
system was right and good", she says, in reference to drugs, she had "no
knowledge, nor any way of knowing, that such a problem existed".
She adds: "There was no mention of it and nobody spoke about
it. It was possible that we were given things in our food and drink. We
were
fed by a special kitchen at the school but we didn't know of anything. When
I was very young, we were never given pills or injections."
However, in
1975, as the pressure for success grew and training workloads increased to
more than 18km (about 11 miles) a day in water, she said she was
"astonished that I had grown so much. I put on eight kilos (about 18lb),
but in muscle, not height".
"Now, after all this time, I still ask myself
whether it could be possible they gave me things, because I remember being
given injections during training and competition, but this was explained to
me as being substances to help me regenerate and recuperate. It was natural
to think this way because the distance swimmers had more injections than we
did as sprinters," says Ender.
Of the coaches now speaking up and the
doctors who may still be hiding, she says: "It's very sad. The only losers
in that are the athletes. It is easy for them to state these things now the
finger of blame is pointed at us, not them, and we knew nothing of these
things, they did. They deserve punishing. The medical men are the real
guilty people. They know what they have done. When they gave us things to
help us 'regenerate' we were never asked if we wanted it, it was just
given."
That sadness, she insists, does not detract from the joy that is
still fresh in her memory of a swimming life in a system in which she
strongly believed.
The pressure to win translated into pressure to do as she
was told after her retirement, failure to do so costing her the chance to
revisit Montreal, at the invitation of the city, in 1986.
But she denies
her first marriage at 19 to Roland Matthes, the Olympic backstroke champion
in 1968 and 1972, was arranged to create a "superswimmer". The
relationship, she says, was genuine and Franziska was born to the couple in
1978.
The adage that parents live their dreams through their children may
be applied to the Grummt family, though the norm would be reversed. "I
don't pressure her to achieve what I did. I encourage her only to do the
things she likes, the things she has talent for," Ender said.
She travels 45
miles to get her daughter to training before going to work as a
physiotherapist.
A broken foot has forced Franziska to rest from the pool.
When healed, she will return to being a good club swimmer, though nothing
outstanding as yet, and training two, not five, hours a day.
Franziska and
her sister, Tiffany, aged six, will have freedom of choice but not the kind
of "advantages" bestowed on their mother. Ender, who left the east soon
after unification, is unperturbed. A good family life is all that counts,
she says.