Anne Poleska

Anne Poleska
Personal information
Full nameAnne Poleska
Nationality Germany
Born (1980-02-20) February 20, 1980
Krefeld, Nordrhein-Westfalen, West Germany
Height1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight63 kg (139 lb)
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesBreaststroke
ClubSG Krefeld, (Germany)
Coral Springs Swim Club
(Coral Springs, FL)
College teamUniversity of Alabama
CoachEric McIlquham (Alabama)
Michael Lohberg (Coral Springs)
Medal record
Women's swimming
Representing  Germany
Olympic Games
2004 Athens200 m breaststroke
World Championships (LC)
2005 Montreal200 m breaststroke
European Championships (LC)
2002 Berlin200 m breaststroke
European Championships (SC)
1999 Lisbon200 m breaststroke
2001 Antwerp100 m breaststroke
2001 Antwerp200 m breaststroke
2004 Vienna200 m breaststroke
2005 Triest200 m breaststroke
2003 Dublin200 m breaststroke
2006 Helsinki200 m breaststroke
1996 Rostock200 m breaststroke
1998 Sheffield200 m breaststroke
2002 Riesa200 m breaststroke
2007 Debrecen200 m breaststroke

Anne Poleska (born February 20, 1980) is a German breaststroke swimmer who swam for the University of Alabama, won five gold medals at the European championships, and competed in three Olympics from 2000-2008. She won a Bronze medal in her specialty, the 200-meter breaststroke competing for Germany in the 2004 Athens Olympics.

Poleska was born in Krefeld, Nordrhein-Westfalen, West Germany on February 20, 1980, and trained and competed with the SG Krefeld Swim Club in her hometown.

After 1999, and intermittently throughout the following decade, Poleska trained at Coral Springs's Aquatic Complex in South Florida where she would later swim with American Olympic swimmer Dara Torres and five other 2008 Beijing Olympians. To follow German Olympic guidelines, Poleska swam as an "unattached" swimmer during this period to remain eligible to compete for Germany. At Coral Springs's, where she became a resident in 2005, she was trained by six-time Olympic Coach Michael Lohberg originally a native of Germany. After his death, the Coral Springs Aquatic Complex was named in Lohberg's honor.