Maria Kühn (born 14 February 1982) is a 1.0-pointwheelchair basketball player who plays for SV Reha Augsburg in the German wheelchair basketball league. She has also played in the German national team, with which she won two European titles, was runner-up at 2010 World Championships, and won a gold medal at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London. Having won the gold medal, President Joachim Gauck awarded the team the Silbernes Lorbeerblatt (Silver Laurel Leaf), Germany's highest sporting honour.
Personal
Kühn was born in Dresden, Germany on 14 February 1982.[1] At the age of 20, after finishing high school, she took a holiday in the United States. While horseback riding in Monument Valley, she had a bad fall and became paralysed from the fifth thoracic vertebra down.[2]
She earned a degree in management student from the Baden-Württemberg Cooperative State University (DHBW). Since 2011, she has worked in Human Resources at the Gesellschaft für Technische Überwachung (GTÜ) (Society for Technical Supervision).[2]
Wheelchair basketball
Kühn is a 1.0-pointwheelchair basketball player.[1] Before her accident, she was physically active with swimming, cycling and running. Afterwards, she took up wheelchair dancing as a form of exercise, but later switched to wheelchair basketball, although she had never been much interested in ball sports. She moved to Ludwigsburg to play for SV Reha Augsburg in the German national league in 2009,[2] but switched to the Frankfurt Mainhatten Skywheelers [de] for the 2011/12 season.[3] Since 2009, her coach has been Brigit Meitner.[1]
In June 2012, Kühn was named as one of the team that competed at the 2012 Summer Paralympic Games in London.[7] In the Gold Medal match, the team faced the Australia women's national wheelchair basketball team,[8] a team that had defeated them 48–46 in Sydney just a few months before.[9] They defeated the Australians 44–58 in front of a capacity crowd of over 12,000 at the North Greenwich Arena to win the gold medal,[8] the first that Germany had won in women's wheelchair basketball at the Paralympic Games since Stoke Mandeville in 1984.[10][11] They were awarded a Silbernes Lorbeerblatt (Silver Laurel Leaf), Germany's highest sporting honour, by President Joachim Gauck in November 2012,[12] named Team of the Year for 2012.[10]
Achievements
2009: Gold at the European Championships (Stoke Mandeville, England)[6]
2010: Silver at the Women's World Championships (Birmingham, England)[6]
2011: Gold at the European Championships (Nazareth, Israel)[7]
2012: Gold at the Paralympic Games (London, England)[8]
^ abc"Germany claim women's crown". Official site of the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. 7 September 2012. Archived from the original on 30 April 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2013.