Tora Berger (born 18 March 1981) is a retired Norwegian biathlete and Olympic champion.[1]
Norwegian biathlete
Tora Berger
Fullname
Tora Berger
Born
(1981-03-18) 18 March 1981 (age41) Ringerike, Norway
Height
1.64m (5ft 5in)
World Cup career
Seasons
2001–2014
Individualwins
28
Indiv.podiums
63
Disciplinetitles
2 (2012–13, 2013–14)
Medal record
Women's biathlon
Representing Norway
Event
1st
2nd
3rd
Olympic Games (4 medals)
2
1
1
World Championships (18 medals)
8
5
5
Junior/Youth World Championships (1 medal)
0
0
1
Total (23 medals)
10
6
7
Olympic Games
2010 Vancouver
15 km individual
2014 Sochi
Mixed relay
2014 Sochi
10 km pursuit
2014 Sochi
4 × 6 km relay
World Championships
2011 Khanty-Mansiysk
Mixed relay
2012 Ruhpolding
15 km individual
2012 Ruhpolding
12.5 km mass start
2012 Ruhpolding
Mixed relay
2013 Nové Město
15 km individual
2013 Nové Město
10 km pursuit
2013 Nové Město
4 × 6 km relay
2013 Nové Město
Mixed relay
2006 Pokljuka
Mixed relay
2008 Östersund
12.5 km mass start
2010 Khanty-Mansiysk
Mixed relay
2013 Nové Město
7.5 km sprint
2013 Nové Město
12.5 km mass start
2007 Antholz-Anterselva
4 × 6 km relay
2007 Antholz-Anterselva
Mixed relay
2009 Pyeongchang
15 km individual
2011 Khanty-Mansiysk
12.5 km mass start
2012 Ruhpolding
4 × 6 km relay
Junior World Championships
2000 Hochfilzen
7.5 km sprint
Updated on 20 March 2014.
Personal life
Berger married in 2010, having met her husband in high school.[2] They have two dogs Tussi (Eeyore in English) and Tarzan – Tarzan often joins her on training runs.[3] Whilst away from home during the biathlon season she enjoys knitting[4] and reading (especially books about crime[2]). Outside biathlon she enjoys hunting and fishing.[4]
Career
She has been a member of the Norwegian women's biathlon team since 1999. She has 28 individual victories in the World Cup.
[1]
Tora Berger
At the 2008 World Championship, she received three 4th places, before earning the silver medal in the mass start.[citation needed]
On 18 February 2010, she became the first Norwegian woman to win an Olympic gold medal in biathlon by winning the women's 15km individual at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. By doing this, she won Norway's 100th Olympic gold medal at the Winter Olympic Games, as well as winning the 10th Norwegian biathlon gold medal. This historic medal makes Norway the first ever nation to win 100 gold medals at the Winter Olympic Games.[citation needed]
At the Biathlon World Championships 2013 in Nove Mesto, she won gold in the mixed relay, silver in the sprint and gold in the pursuit before becoming the first woman to defend her 15k individual title. She followed this up with a stunning final-leg performance in the relay, making up a deficit of nearly 40 seconds on the leaders to take another gold medal, before taking silver in the mass start. As the holder of 18 world championship medals she is second in the table of total medals, one medal behind Uschi Disl. At the same championships, she also became the first biathlete (male or female) to win 6 medals at a single biathlon world championships, with four golds and two silvers.[citation needed]
Berger competed in Biathlon at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi where she won 3 medals. Gold in the Mixed relay together with Tiril Eckhoff, Ole Einar Bjørndalen and Emil Hegle Svendsen, a silver in the Women's Pursuit, and a bronze in the Women's relay,[citation needed]
IBU World Cup
Although Tora Berger had been part of the Norwegian women's biathlon team since 1999, up until the end of the 2011–12 season she had never been the world cup winner either overall or in any of the individual disciplines. Her highest finish was third in the overall standings in the 2008–09 and 2011–12 seasons, second in the Pursuit discipline in the 2008–09 season, and second in the Mass Start discipline in the 2011–12 season.
Success came in the 2012–13 World Cup season, with Tora taking 11 wins and missing the podium only seven times. Her 19 podium finishes equalled Magdalena Forsberg's record for the highest number of podium finishes in a single season. She won all three races at Oslo Holmenkollen to secure the crystal globes for both the Overall women's world cup and the Pursuit discipline. By the end of the season she had also won the crystal globe for the Individual, Sprint and Mass Start disciplines, completing a clean sweep of the five women's crystal globes (a feat last achieved by Magdalena Forsberg in the 2001–02 season). With Berger's contribution, Norway also won the 2012/13 season's Women's Nation Cup, Women's Relay Cup and Mixed Relay Cup.
Season
Overall
Sprint
Pursuit
Individual
Mass Start
Races
Points
Position
Races
Points
Position
Races
Points
Position
Races
Points
Position
Races
Points
Position
2002–03
11/23
1
68th
5/9
1
65th
4/7
–
–
2/3
–
–
0/4
–
–
2003–04
-
-
-
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
2004–05
26/27
389
17th
10/10
160
13th
8/9
102
21st
4/4
64
14th
4/4
47
21st
2005–06
20/26
253
22nd
9/10
104
22nd
6/8
75
26th
2/3
20
33rd
3/5
54
23rd
2006–07
25/27
450
14th
9/10
175
12th
8/8
124
16th
3/4
92
5th
5/5
53
24th
2007–08
24/26
664
6th
9/10
271
6th
8/8
238
4th
2/3
40
15th
5/5
102
12th
2008–09
23/26
894
3rd
9/10
352
3rd
7/7
246
2nd
3/4
122
3rd
4/5
146
6th
2009–10
20/25
564
12th
9/10
215
15th
4/6
101
24th
2/4
87
13th
5/5
139
9th
2010–11
24/26
963
4th
9/10
356
3rd
6/7
268
4th
4/4
133
4th
5/5
206
3rd
2011–12
26/26
1054
3rd
10/10
373
4th
8/8
361
3rd
3/3
108
5th
5/5
241
2nd
2012–13
26/26
1234
1st
10/10
428
1st
8/8
417
1st
3/3
168
1st
5/5
262
1st
2013–14
22/22
856
1st
9/9
361
2nd
8/8
319
2nd
2/2
58
9th
3/3
121
4th
*Key:Races—number of entered races/all races; Points—World Cup points; Position—World Cup season ranking.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025 WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии