Fabienne Königstein
Fabienne Königstein in 2013
Personal information
Born (1992-11-25) 25 November 1992
Height168 cm (5 ft 6 in)
Weight52 kg (115 lb)
Sport
Country Germany
SportTrack and field
EventMarathon running
ClubMTG Mannheim
Coached byDr. Karsten Königstein
Achievements and titles
Personal bests

Fabienne Königstein (née Amrhein; born 25 November 1992) is a German Marathon and long-distance runner. Her major achievements by now were the 6th place at the World University Games 2017 over the Halfmarathon distance, the German Marathon Title 2018 and the 11th place at the European Athletics Championships 2018 in the Women's Marathon Competition. She also is a several times medalist in German National Championships.

Athletic career

Fabienne Königstein had her first overall appearance in 1997 at the age of 5 for the TSG Wiesloch. In 2001 at the age of 8 she joined SG Nußloch. During the following 5 years she received a basic combined athletic education. To focus on her particular talent for running, Königstein joined the Track and Field Team of Christian Stang at MTG Mannheim in 2006 at the age of 13. After her first appearance at German National Championships in 2008 over the 400m Hurdles (U16) she regularly participated in national and international championships.

In 2013, at the age of 20, Königstein accomplished the breakthrough in the German National Women's competition with a 5th place at the 5000m race and also had her debut for the German National Team at the European Cross-Country Championships in Belgrade. At the European Cross-Country Championships in Chia, Italy, in 2016 she placed 20th in the Women's competition.[1] Amrhein won the silver medal at the German Cross-Country Championships, placed 6th at the World University Games in Taipei over the 21.1 km[2] and celebrated her debut over the Marathon distance at the Berlin Marathon. In adverse weather conditions she finished 11th after 2h 34min and 14sec in a world class field led by Gladys Cherono. In spring 2018 Königstein finished 3d at the German Half Marathon Championships. Three weeks later at 29 April 2018 she won her first gold medal at the German Marathon Championships, finishing 2nd at the Düsseldorf Marathon behind Volha Mazuronak in 2h 32min and 34sec.

On her first appearance at European Marathon Championships in Berlin 2018, Königstein placed 11th, being the most successful German Athlete in this race. In December, Königstein concluded the season with a bronze medal at the SPAR European Cross-Country Championships in Tilburg. She placed 19th and, therefore, as the second-best German runner, although she had had a severe respiratory infection shortly before the race.

After a 18-months injury lay-off, Fabienne Königstein had a comeback in October 2020 at the World Half Marathon Championships in Gdynia, Poland, where she won the bronze medal with Team Germany. After another injury lay-off in 2021 and pregnancy in 2022 she had a second comeback in spring 2023, winning the bronze medal at the German National Half Marathon Championships and breaking her 10k PB at the Paderborner Osterlauf by 40 seconds (32:36 min, 10th place). Königstein had a sensational comeback on the Marathon distance after almost 5 years at the Haspa Marathon Hamburg. Only 9 months after giving birth to her child, she improved her PB by 7 minutes to 2:25:48h breaking the Olympic standard for the first time in her career, and placed herself on 6th place of the all-time German Marathon ranking.

Since 2022, Königstein is coached by her husband, Dr. Karsten Königstein.

Achievements

World Championships Honors

European Championships Honors

National Championships Honors

  • 2010 3rd 1500m (U20)
  • 2011 3rd 1500m (U20)
  • 2013 3rd 5000m (U23)
  • 2015 3rd Cross-Country (Women)
  • 2017 2nd Cross-Country (Women)
  • 2018 3rd Half Marathon
  • 2018 1st Marathon
  • 2023 3rd Half Marathon

Marathons

Personal bests

Awards

  • 2012, 2014, 2015 and 2017 Sports Award City of Mannheim
  • 2018 Rhein-Neckar Award (Publikumsliebling)
  • 2018 German Road Races Award (Best female Road Runner of the Year)

References

  1. "European Athletics competitions | European Athletics".
  2. World University Games Taipei
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