Sabine Wehr-Hasler

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Sabine Wehr Snowboard
Full name Sabine Wehr-Hasler
nation Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany
birthday July 8, 1967
place of birth Offenbach
size 164 cm
Career
discipline halfpipe
society Team T-Mobile
status resigned
Medal table
World Cup medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 2 × bronze
FIS Snowboard world championships
bronze 1997 Heavenly (ISF) halfpipe
bronze 1997 Heavenly (FIS) halfpipe
Placements
FIS logo World cup
 Debut in the World Cup 1997
 World Cup victories 4th
 Podium placements 1. 2. 3.
 halfpipe 4th 7th 8th
last change: end of career

Sabine Wehr-Hasler , née Wehr , (born July 8, 1967 in Offenbach am Main ) is a former German snowboarder in the halfpipe discipline .

Sabine Wehr-Hasler lives in Marstetten and was active for the T-Mobile team . First she was active in competitions of the International Snowboarding Federation . Here her greatest success was winning the bronze medal behind Satu Jarvela and Cara-Beth Burnside at the 1997 World Championships in Heavenly . Then she moved to the Fédération Internationale de Ski , only through FIS competitions one could qualify for the snowboard competitions held for the first time in 1998 at the Olympic Winter Games . Here she made her debut at the 1997 World Championships in Innichenand won the bronze medal behind Anita Schwaller and Christel Thoresen . Thus she won the bronze medal at both world championships of the year. Since the 1997/98 season she started regularly in the Snowboard World Cup . In her first season, Wehr was able to reach the podium for the first time in Innichen behind Anna Hellman in second place. The high point of the season were the 1998 Winter Olympics in Sapporo , where she was 15th. In December 1998, she also competed in a World Cup race in snowboard cross , in which she was 30th in Whistler . She also started in snowboard cross at the 1999 World Championships in Berchtesgaden and finished 22nd and sixth in the halfpipe. In 2000 Wehr won her first World Cup in Berchtesgaden, followed by three more victories by 2001. In total, she finished on the podium 19 times. At the World Championships in Madonna di Campiglio she was tenth. Last major event was the 2002 Olympic Winter Games of Salt Lake City , where she finished 14th. After the season she ended her career.

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