Wolfgang Grünwauld Meureer was born in 1967, in the city of Darmstadt, in Hessen.
His father, a researcher of the Institut fuer Produktionstechnik und Tomsted Werkanchen,
of the conceptualized Technische Academy Darmstadt, soon perceived his son’s instinctive
interest in sports biomechanics.
Still an adolescent, Meureer carried out experiments with gears and pulleys to optimize
his muscular explosion. Applying principals of physics to human physiology, Meureer
developed the fundamentals of the sport which today is known as handcranking.
Meureer used himself in experiments with levers, pulleys and cranks and
thanks to his perfect and very rare angulations between humerus, ulna and radius,
Meureer was able to rotate his forearm in relation to his elbow, at a higher speed
than normal. His agility is comparable only to the legendary jazz drummer Jimmy Druppa.
His career as an athlete began in the swimming pools of the Abbergard Club, of the
city where he was born. Propelled by the Wolfgang’s handcranking, the swimming team
of the club soon became one of the best in the country.
Wolfgang was part of various teams in different countries and helped to break a
long series of records. This period became known as Goldenstaten – the golden era
of the European swimming.
The evolution from swimming to other sports was natural in Wolfgang’s career.
Specialized literature registers his participation in breaking various continental
records from weight lifting, cycling, rowing and high jump to running.
Apart from becoming a celebrity, the handcranker does not speak about his personal
life. We only know that he is married with an ex-swimmer from Brazil. But when the
subject is the controversy which surrounds handcranking, Meureer takes on the airs
of a militant politician. When not competing, he travels the world giving lectures
to demystify the sport.
Handcranking was always surrounded by controversy as it was considered by
purists as an anti sporting practice. But the biggest debate on the modality
happened during the Games of 1994 when the large television companies decided
to digitally wipe out the handcranker in their transmissions of the swimming
competitions. The artifice worked for a while. However, the series of records
which were broken in assorted competitions soon drew the attention of the
specialized press.
Pressured by Wolfgang’s declarations in his television program and by public
opinion, the television companies retreated and ended up liberating the complete
images of the events. From night to day, Wolfgang became a worldwide headline in
newspapers, and handcranking was definitively consecrated.
“What Meureer does, challenges the laws of physics”. That’s the beginning of
the document developed by the Indians Viukram Kemil and Rajan K. Behru, pioneers
in the study of the biomechanics of handcranking.
Electromagnetic sensors were put on Meureer’s body, and via special software
for this sport, his movements were analyzed. The system registered everything:
the rotation of his shoulders, elbows, hips and thighs.
Does this matter? Kemil replies: “it is the perfect synchronism of all the body
articulations which result in the ideal force on the crank”.
When the athlete makes a wrong movement, the software makes a small noise, similar
to an electronic whistle. In Meureer’s case, in several months of tests, he never
indicated any imperfection.
According to the study, Meureer is the first athlete capable of making a perfect
Uniform Circular Movement. This signifies that his speed is frighteningly constant
in the whole movement, even if the angle varies in function of some external factor.
Thanks to this regularity, Meureer maintains rates of low lactic acid for much more
time than other handcrankers. This translates into up to 37% more resistance and 56%
more torque.
Such indices were not attained even by the best golfers in the history of the WGG. It
is a well known fact that for more that 50 years, professional golfers have been models
of regularity in the biomechanics of movement.
Handcranking is a sport which requires physical force and concentration.
Each modality requires a technique, which goes from brusque pulls in weight
lifting to frequent and continuous movements in swimming events. This explains
Meureer’s perfectionism.
For 8 years the athlete has been training with the Belgian duo Tobias Schuneiter
and Manfred Schultzer. His daily exercise routine does not change even on weekends.
They are composed of 6 hours of muscle building and running, apart from 3 hours of
handbike, 5 times a week. A fanatic for this sport, Meureer adapted the structure of
the pedals to the handlebar of all the DazSprint bicycles of his collection.
Obsessed with perfection, Meureer lived in Havana for six months so that he
could be the assistant of Hector Sanches – the famous Cuban fisher of Blue Marlins.
Meureer admits that a great part of his technique for wrist movement was inspired by
Hector’s incredible ability to use a fishing reel to bring in fish of more than half
a ton into his boat.
In training periods, his diet is normal. Even during lighter practice sessions, the
athlete drinks isotonics before, during the practice and afterwards to keep his body
hydrated.
Despite receiving offers from several brands, his exclusive sponsor is Gatorade.
Questioned by Athleten World Magazine about this fidelity, Wolfgang said: “Gatorade
is my only sponsor because it’s great to hydrate my body and it gives me more disposition
during training sessions and competitions. Besides, it’s the brand that believed in me
since the beginning of my career.”
To maintain balance and be in total harmony with his race partners, the athlete is adept
of Yoga and Transcendental Meditation. These practices brought out the virtue of humility
in Wolfgang, essential for the success of a handcranker. As Zen-Buddhism says:
A prosperous wind comes with no ego.
Handcranking has already been adopted by more than 47 types of sport throughout the world,
and was adapted in accordance to the specific bio technique necessary for each of them.
In swimming, for example, the handcranker is positioned at the opposite end of the swimmer
of your team. Apart from pulling your companion the length of the pool, the handcranker must
arrive at the other extreme of the pool before the swimmer, moving frenetically during the
whole competition.
The events of pole vault are much more complex, as they require the construction of a platform
2, 5 m above the bar. The platform is so small that there is hardly any space for the handcranker’s
equipment. In rowing, the ends are submersed, fixed at the extremity of the competitors’ oars.
In weight lifting, two ends are fixed to the extremities of the central bar in a way that the
traction obtained by the handcranker is distributed in a homogeous way throughout the movement.
The fundamental rule applied to all modalities, imposed by the International Federation of Universal
Sports – is that it requires that the handcranker is responsible for the maximum of 35% of
the performance of the official athlete – the one whose name is on the docket of the competition.
Meureer defines himself as an “eternal self motivator”. His inflamed speeches thrill
even those who are not sports fans.
After memorable lectures in universities such as Voldweg-Maxmilians-Universität and
Vourdgan International Graduate School of Social Sciences, the athlete was called to
present a program on Radio Manox-FM, in Vienna.
The program was called “The Anonymous Champion” and it was Meureer who chose the
people to be interviewed. On the radio, Meureer had the opportunity to speak to
people who, like himself, stood up in their areas, but who in the name of a
collective idea, were not recognized individually. The high points of the
interviews were the interviews with Steve Ferrish and Fred Lowtell, the true
voices behind the pseudo singers of the group Nilly Vamilli and an anthological
chat with ghost-writer Jack Nimpsei – the man who created various famous speeches
for assorted North American presidents.
Successful on the radio, Meureer was invited to present a program on live TV, with the
same name and content. The program went very well until the athlete decided to speak
openly about the polemic decision of the broadcasters to digitally wipe out from the
sports transmissions the cables used by handcrankers.
The broadcasters alleged that ex-champions of various types of sport were upset by
seeing their records being broken. And also claimed that handcranking unsporting.
With his image tarnished, Meureer lost important contracts in this period and gave
up his career as a presenter. The only company which maintained his sponsorship was
the brand Gatorade. A correct decision, as history shows that Meureer was merely
ahead of his time.
Today, discussion in the media is about the swimsuits developed by NASA to help swimmers
to break records, running tracks with special surfaces which improve the performance of
the athletes and titanium racquets which fire tennis balls at more than 200 km/h. But
handcranking came back to be unanimously acclaimed by sporting bodies and public opinion.
The first trace of human beings using cranks are in antique sculptures found in Chinese
tombs constructed during the Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD). At this time, cranks were used
to roll silk, by farmers in improvised ventilators and in the manipulation of buckets in
wells. From there, the crank appeared at various moments throughout history: mills,
phonographs, film cameras, pencil sharpeners, the motors of old cars, music boxes,
handles for opening car windows etc.
On the other hand, it is not so clear when handcranking became a type of sport. We
know that cycling was the first sport to use a crank – the first bicycle to be moved
by a crank with pedals appeared in 1860.
However this date is not officially recognized by the International Federation of
Handcranking as the crank in question was directly powered by the cyclist himself.
The first records of traditional handcranking – together with other sports – are of 1906,
in the English Games. At the time, the tug of war was an official sport and the medalists
of the event were, respectively: the teams of the police of London Police, of Liverpool and
the Metropolitan. Rumors that the winning team had external help appeared with the discovery
of a rope fixed to the belt of the last London policeman. The image was registered by an
amateur photographer and came out on the front pages of the principal English newspapers
of the time. This photograph mysteriously disappeared in a fire in 1911.
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants" – with this phrase,
Sir Isaac Newton recognized that his discoveries were only possible thanks to the genius
of mathematicians, philosophers and physicists who lived before him.
For Wolfgang, this is the essence of handcranking.
More than an athlete turning a crank to help others to break records, handcranking is the
consecration of team spirit. It is the idea that behind every great victory there exist
anonymous heroes who make it possible.
Anonymous heroes like the editor of the teleprompter of TV newscasts, the singer who records
the playback for a famous artist or the ghostwriter who writes the speeches for a president.
That’s why Wolfgang created his foundation, to take the ideal of handcranking beyond sporting
arenas. Over the last years, the handcranker have promoted workshops for puppet masters, stunt
men of action films and voice dubbing artists of American TV series.
Because Wolfgang believes that the success of talented people sometimes depends on just a
little help. Or, as Sir Isaac Newton said, a shoulder to reach your dreams.
LINKS:
www.orkut.com/wolfgang
http://flickr.com/photos/wolfgangmeureer
www.handgriffederation.com
www.darmstadt.de
CONTACT:
wolfgang@worldrecordsecret.com
We don’t recommend
the practice of handcranking
by non professional sportsmen.