Career
In the years 1952-1960 he was the second-placed German in this discipline. His best distance was 76.68m. From 1966 to 1972, Rieder was Coach of the German National Team for javelin throwing in the German Track and Field Federation (see German Olympic Sports Confederation).
After his studies in the fields of German language and literature, history, and physical education in Munich, Hermann Rieder was active as an assistant professor at the University of Würzburg.
From 1968 to 1994 he directed the Institute of Physical Education at the University of Heidelberg, which was renamed in 1973 to the Institute of Sport and Sport Science. Significant high points of his work included the establishment of Sport science as a scientific discipline and the promotion of sport for the disabled.
Rieder was also General Secretary of the International Society of Sport Psychology. Hermann Rieder united multiple facets of sport science and excelled at the knitting together of theoretical and practical expertise.
As a generalist of his field he encompassed a wide range of sport science subjects, ranging from talent scouting in tennis to exercise programs for Human Immunodeficiency Virus sufferers.
Rieder was convinced of the power of communication, which exemplified itself in the number of national and international conventions he organized. From the beginning of his time as an educator, Rieder was a promoter of growth in sport science, witnessed by more than 40 doctoral degrees and habilitations he supervised. Generations of students profited from his abilities to motivate and to lead in scientific work.
Since 1997, he was honored by the Institute of Sport and Sport Science with a prize named for him, which is awarded yearly for the best qualification work by a student.
After becoming Professor Emeritus, based on his education and experience in sport, Hermann Rieder dedicated himself to the theme of the "Cultural History of the Javelin".