Career
She is 5"9" tall and weighs 132 lbs., and is a specialist in backstroke, setting four world records in the Moscow Games (three in 100 m backstroke: 1:0151, 1:0150 and 1:0086. One in 200 m backstroke 2:1177), at the age of fifteen. Reinisch debuted at eight years old and her swimming abilities earned her a place in the Dresden Sports School.
At 12 years old, she had already swum the 100 m backstroke in 1:14.3.
Two years later, at 14, she was ranked as the twentieth female swimmer in the world in the 100 m backstroke with 1:04.84. One month later she recorded a time of 1:02.46, better than every active swimmer, less than one second away from the world record held by her countrywoman Ulrike Richter.
In the 200 m backstroke she went under 2:20 at 2:15.59. The "records route" was opened for Rica.
The hardest was, maybe, winning the national championships where she suffered one defeat by Petra Riedel.
But she improved in time for the Games. Shortly before she had swum the 100 m backstroke in 1:01.77. Reinisch, like many of the East German athletes of the time, was doped by her coaches under instruction from the Stasi.
Swimmers were doped with oral-Turinabol, an anabolic steroid derived from testosterone.
After suffering severe period pain and enlarged ovaries, her mother forced her to retire at the age of sixteen, just after the Moscow Olympics. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reintegration of East Germany, records confirmed the doping scandal.
By this time, Reinisch had married and had already suffered two miscarriages. Like most of the East German athletes, Reinisch was compensated in an ensuing court case on the matter.
That"s the greatest betrayal of all.".