Heinz Florian Oertel is dead. The best-known GDR sports journalist died on March 27 in Berlin. His family confirmed this to the German Press Agency on Wednesday. First had the Picture– Newspaper reports. Oertel was 95 years old. The television and radio journalist, who received his doctorate in Leipzig in 1981, reported on 17 Olympic Games and eight soccer World Cups, among other events. He was considered a multi-talent of speaking and took his listeners with him into his emotional life.
Oertel had a great deal of specialist and general knowledge and was not only fixated on sport. He was active as a moderator of television programs such as “Ein Kessel Buntes” and also hosted programs on radio and television TV like “He, he, he – sport on the Spree”, “Schlager a big city” and “Portrait by phone”.
Heinz Florian Oertel: On August 1, 1980, he erected a monument to himself
His “Waldemar, Waldemar!” had made the reporter with the high forehead and the flowery language forever famous: with three concise sentences in nine seconds, Oertel set himself a monument on August 1, 1980 – unintentionally and unexpectedly. “Dear young fathers or prospective fathers – have courage! Feel free to call your newcomers today Waldemar! Waldemar is here!” For the second time since 1976, the native of Lausitz commentated on the Olympic gold race of marathon runner Waldemar Cierpinski in Moscow.
After the fall of communism, Oertel commented on the Bundesliga match between VfB Stuttgart and 1. FC Köln for Südwestfunk in December 1989. He was the author and editor of numerous Olympia books and taught at universities in East and West.