Skip to content
Germany · MAG · 1988 – 2000

Andreas Wecker

Andreas Wecker competed for Germany in men's artistic gymnastics, 1988–2000. Career medals: 2 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze.

5
career medals

Career, in brief

Andreas Wecker was a four-time Olympian for Germany in men's artistic gymnastics, competing from 1988 through 2000. He won four Olympic medals — one gold, one silver, and two bronze.

Timeline

Career arc, year by year.

Olympic — 4 appearances

Sydney 2000 Olympic Games

Sydney
Team Qual
All-Around Qual 56.011 — did not advance 30th
Pommel Horse Qual 9.675
Still Rings Qual 9.250 — did not advance 58th
Parallel Bars Qual 9.550
Horizontal Bar Qual 9.662
Floor Exercise Qual 8.962
Vault Qual 8.912 — did not advance 75th

1996 Atlanta Olympics

Jul 20 → Aug 4 · Atlanta
All-Around Qual 114.474 — 9th, advanced Final 57.412 — 13th 13th
Pommel Horse Qual 18.650
Still Rings Qual 19.350 Final 9.762 — 5th 5th
Parallel Bars Qual 18.950
Horizontal Bar Qual 19.387 — 3rd, advanced Final 9.850 GOLD
Floor Exercise Qual 18.975 — did not advance 32nd
Vault Qual 19.162

1992 Barcelona Olympics

Jul 26 → Aug 9 · Barcelona
All-Around Qual 116.875 — 4th, advanced Final 58.450 — 4th 4th
Pommel Horse Qual 19.550 — 3rd, advanced Final 19.550 BRONZE
Still Rings Qual 19.750 — 2nd, advanced Final 19.750 BRONZE
Parallel Bars Qual 19.375 Final 19.375 — 7th 7th
Horizontal Bar Qual 19.600 — 2nd, advanced Final 19.600 SILVER
Floor Exercise Qual 19.475 Final 19.475 — 7th 7th
Vault Qual 19.125

1988 Seoul Olympics

Sep 20 → Oct 3 · Seoul
All-Around Qual 116.300
Pommel Horse Qual 18.900
Still Rings Qual 19.600
Parallel Bars Qual 19.250
Horizontal Bar Qual 19.700
Floor Exercise Qual 19.550
Vault Qual 19.300

World — 1 appearance

1995 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships (30th, Sabae)

Oct 1 → 8 · Sabae
Horizontal Bar Final GOLD

On This Day

Jan 2, 1970 · Andreas Wecker was born

Team affiliations

Keep exploring

More from Germany

See all from Germany

Competing in the 1980s — men's artistic gymnastics

See all 1980s men's artistic gymnastics
Russia · MAG · 1995 – 2004

Alexei Nemov

10 olympic medals1 named element
Unified Team → Belarus · MAG · 1992 – 1996

Vitaly Scherbo

9 olympic medals1 named element
China · MAG · 1984 – 1988

Ning Li

5 olympic medals5 named elements
Soviet Union → Ukraine · MAG · 1991 – 1996

Hryhoriy Misiutin

4 olympic medals
China · MAG · 1999 – 2008

Li Xiaopeng

4 olympic medals2 named elements
China · MAG · 1992 – 1996

Li Xiaoshuang

4 olympic medals
Soviet Union · MAG · 1988 – 1989

Vladimir Artemov

4 olympic medals
Bulgaria · MAG · 1992 – 2012

Yordan Yovchev

4 olympic medals
China · MAG · 1984 – 1988

Yun Lou

4 olympic medals
Soviet Union · MAG · 1983 – 1988

Dmitry Bilozerchev

3 olympic medals1 named element
Spain · MAG · 2000 – 2008

Gervasio Deferr

3 olympic medals
Romania · MAG · 1994 – 2004

Marius Urzică

3 olympic medals3 named elements
Soviet Union · MAG · 1988 – 1988

Valery Lyukin

3 olympic medals
China · MAG · 2000 – 2008

Yang Wei

3 olympic medals
Greece · MAG · 2000 – 2004

Dimosthenis Tampakos

2 olympic medals
East Germany · MAG · 1988 – 1988

Holger Behrendt

2 olympic medals
China · MAG · 1989 – 1992

Jing Li

2 olympic medals
Italy · MAG · 1988 – 2004

Jury Chechi

2 olympic medals
South Korea · MAG · 1992 – 2000

Lee Joo Hyung

2 olympic medals
Poland · MAG · 2000 – 2008

Leszek Blanik

2 olympic medals1 named element
Romania · MAG · 2000 – 2021

Marian Drăgulescu

2 olympic medals1 named element
USA · MAG · 2000 – 2004

Paul Hamm

2 olympic medals
East Germany · MAG · 1988 – 1992

Sven Tippelt

2 olympic medals2 named elements
Hungary · MAG · 1992 – 2002

Szilveszter Csollany

2 olympic medals

Sources

Sources olympics.com (Atlanta 1996, Barcelona 1992) · olympedia.org (Sydney 2000, Atlanta 1996, Barcelona 1992, Seoul 1988) · usagym.org (Sabae 1995)
Last verified 2026-05-26 · corrections welcome at hello@gleaminggymnast.com