Eigil Ramsfjell

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Eigil Ramsfjell Curling
birthday March 17, 1955
place of birth Oslo
Career
nation NorwayNorway Norway
society Snarøen CC
Playing hand right
status unknown
Medal table
Olympic medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
World Cup medals 3 × gold 2 × silver 4 × bronze
EM medals 2 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
gold 1988 Calgary
bronze 1998 Nagano
World Curling ChampionshipTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
silver 1978 Winnipeg
gold 1979 Bern
silver 1980 Moncton
bronze 1983 Regina
gold 1984 Duluth
bronze 1987 Vancouver
gold 1988 Lausanne
bronze 1989 Milwaukee
bronze 1991 Winnipeg
European Curling ChampionshipTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
bronze 1979 Varese
silver 1980 Copenhagen
bronze 1985 Grindelwald
silver 1987 Oberstdorf
silver 1988 Perth
silver 1989 Engelbert
bronze 1990 Lillehammer
gold 1993 Leukerbad
bronze 1995 Grindelwald
last change: March 6, 2010

Eigil Ramsfjell (born March 17, 1955 in Oslo ) is a Norwegian curler and Olympic champion .

Ramsfjell made his international debut at the 1976 World Curling Championships in Duluth , but he remained without a medal. In 1978 he won his first precious metal with the silver medal at the World Cup in Winnipeg . The following year, Ramsfjell became world champion curling for the first time.

Ramsfjell played as Skip the Norwegian team at the Winter Games in 1988 in Calgary and won the gold medal. Since curling was still a demonstration sport at the time, the medal has no official status. Ramsfjell also played as Skip for the Norwegian team in the XVIII. Winter Olympics in Nagano in curling. The team won the Olympic bronze medal after a 9-4 victory in the game for 3rd place against the United States around Skip Tim Somerville .

successes

  • 1st place Olympic Winter Games 1988 (demonstration competition)
  • World champion 1979, 1984, 1988
  • European Champion 1993
  • 2nd place World Championship 1978, 1980
  • 2nd place European Championship 1980, 1987, 1988, 1989
  • 3rd place Olympic Winter Games 1998
  • 3rd place World Championship 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991
  • 3rd place European Championship 1979, 1985, 1990, 1995

Web links