Jutta Müller

{{Short description|German figure skating coach (1928–2023)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}

{{expand German|topic=bio|date=December 2021|Jutta Müller}}

{{Infobox figure skater

|name = Jutta Müller

|image = Jutta Müller 2009.jpg

|caption = Müller in 2009

|fullname =

|altname = Jutta Lötzsch

|country = East Germany

|birth_date = {{nowrap|{{birth date|df=y|1928|12|13}}}}

|birth_place = Chemnitz, Saxony, Germany

|death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2023|11|02|1928|12|13}}

|death_place = Bernau bei Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany

|hometown =

|residence =

|height =

|formerpartner= Irene Salzmann

|formercoach =

|formerchoreographer =

|former skating club =

|formertraininglocations =

|beganskating =

|retired =

}}

Jutta Müller ({{née}} Lötzsch; 13 December 1928 – 2 November 2023) was a German figure skater and one of the most successful figure skating coaches worldwide.

Personal life

Jutta Lötzsch was born on 13 December 1928, to Marie Lötzsch (née Prusky) and Emil Lötzsch, the 1930 Saxony champion in wrestling. Her first marriage was to Wolfgang Seyfert. They had a daughter, Gabriele Seyfert, before divorcing. Her second husband was Bringfried Müller (1931–2016), an East German football player.

Müller died in Bernau bei Berlin on 2 November 2023, at the age of 94.[https://www.mdr.de/sport/andere_sportarten/eiskunstlauf-ikone-jutta-mueller-gestorben-100.html#:~:text=Das%20deutsche%20Eiskunstlaufen%20verliert%20die,Eiskunstlauftrainerin%20zahlreiche%20Welt%2D%20und%20Olympiasieger. Eiskunstlauf-Ikone Jutta Müller ist tot] {{in lang|de}}

Career

File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1988-0911-030, Katarina Witt, Jutta Müller.jpg in 1988]]

File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1984-1225-010, Jutta Müller, Katarina Witt, Simone Lang, Constanze Gensel.jpg, Katarina Witt, Constanze Gensel and Müller in 1984]]

In 1949, Müller won the East German Championships in women's pair skating with partner Irene Salzmann. This category was created because of the lack of men in Germany after World War II. In 1953, she won the ladies' singles bronze medal at the East German nationals.

After World War II, Müller became a teacher of German and sports. In 1946, she became a member of the SED, the former East German communist party. She studied at the Deutsche Hochschule für Körperkultur in Leipzig, and in 1955 she began coaching figure skating.

Müller's first student was her own daughter Gabriele Seyfert, who twice won the World Championships (1969 and 1970). She also coached, among men, Günter Zöller, Jan Hoffmann, Nils Köpp, Rico Krahnert and Ronny Winkler; and, among women, Sonja Morgenstern, Anett Pötzsch, Katarina Witt, Evelyn Großmann, Martina Clausner, Marion Weber, Constanze Gensel and Simone Lang. Altogether, her students won three Olympic gold medals and ten world championship titles. In comparison, Carlo Fassi's students won four Olympic gold medals and eight world championship titles.

In 2004, Müller was admitted into the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame.

References

{{Reflist|refs=

{{cite web | url = http://www.chemnitz.de/chemnitz/de/die-stadt-chemnitz/stadtportrait/ehrenbuerger/jutta-mueller/ | title = Jutta Müller | language = German | publisher = chemnitz.de | access-date = 23 April 2014 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160325161709/http://www.chemnitz.de/chemnitz/de/die-stadt-chemnitz/stadtportrait/ehrenbuerger/jutta-mueller/ | archive-date = 25 March 2016 | url-status = dead }}

}}

Sources

  • [https://www.amazon.de/sch%C3%B6nste-Sport-Welt-Eiskunstlauftrainerin-erinnert/dp/3360019490/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1249848465&sr=1-1 Eiskunstlauftrainerin erinnert]
  • various German newspapers, collected over 60 years

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Category:1928 births

Category:2023 deaths

Category:Figure skaters from Chemnitz

Category:German female single skaters

Category:German figure skating coaches

Category:Female sports coaches

Category:Recipients of the Order of Karl Marx

Category:Recipients of the Order of Merit of the Free State of Saxony

Category:Recipients of the Patriotic Order of Merit in gold

Category:20th-century German sportswomen