Juliane Döll

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Juliane Döll biathlon
Association GermanyGermany Germany
birthday July 8, 1986
place of birth Schmalkalden,  GDR
Career
job Police Officer ( Federal Police )
society WSV Oberhof 05
Trainer Gerald Hönig
Admission to the
national team
2005
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup 2006
European Cup / IBU Cup victories 11
Debut in the World Cup 2008
status resigned
End of career 2013
Medal table
EM medals 5 × gold 2 × silver 3 × bronze
JWM medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
SWM medals 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
DM medals 3 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
IBU European biathlon championships
silver 2008 Nove Mesto Season
gold 2009 Ufa singles
bronze 2009 Ufa Season
gold 2010 Otepää Season
gold 2011 Ridnaun singles
gold 2011 Ridnaun sprint
gold 2011 Ridnaun persecution
bronze 2011 Ridnaun Season
silver 2012 Osrblie singles
bronze 2012 Osrblie Season
IBU Biathlon Junior World Championships
bronze 2007 Martell persecution
gold 2007 Martell Season
IBU Summer biathlon world championships
bronze 2009 Oberhof Cross sprint
German Ski Association German championships
gold 2007 Season
silver 2007 Mass start
gold 2008 Oberhof Season
bronze 2008 Ruhpolding singles
gold 2010 Willingen Season
gold 2011 Langdorf Season
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 40th ( 2009/10 )
last change: February 3, 2012

Juliane Döll (born July 8, 1986 in Schmalkalden ) is a former German biathlete .

Juliane Döll, who lives in Floh-Seligenthal , started for WSV Oberhof 05 . Before switching to biathlon, Juliane Döll competed in mountain runs for the German Athletics Association and had been a cross-country skier since she was six . The then 19-year-old appeared for the first time internationally in biathlon at the European Championships in early 2006, when she finished 16th as the best result after just half a year of shooting training. In the same season, two appearances in the European Cup followed, where she finished tenth and 17th. Her hit rate in these five races was 46%, which prevented her from achieving significantly better results.

At the beginning of the winter of 2006/07, Döll won the first four European Cups of the winter. At the Junior World Championships in Martell in early 2007 , she won bronze in the pursuit race and gold in the relay. Overall, their hit rate increased significantly in 2008 to 79%. This prompted the national coaches to classify Döll as a B-squad athlete for the winter of 2007/2008 and to promote it through training with course group 1a. Her greatest successes to date were achieved at the 2007 Junior World Championships in Martell . There she won gold in the relay and bronze in the pursuit. She won the overall ranking of the 2007/2008 European Cup . With her victories in the European Cup in Osrblie and the associated qualification for the European Championships, she received a personal starting place for the last three World Cup positions after the World Championships and was thus able to contest her first World Cup race at Holmenkollen in Oslo , where she also finished 28th got her first World Cup points, the pursuit she finished in 33rd place. In 2009 she contested her third race in Antholz . In this sprint she achieved a new best result in 19th place. Before that, she had performed very well in the IBU Cup and led the overall ranking of the racing series, and was second overall at the end of the season. Participation in the 2009 European Championships in Ufa, Russia, was also successful for Juliane Döll . In the individual she was European champion and in the relay, Döll won the bronze medal together with Tina Bachmann , Carolin Hennecke and Anne Preußler . At the 2010 European Championships in Otepää, Döll won the relay with a new line-up with Franziska Hildebrand , Stefanie Hildebrand and Kathrin Hitzer . Three shooting errors cost her individual title defense.

At the Summer Biathlon World Championships 2009 in Oberhof, Döll won the bronze medal in the cross sprint, the first medal at a world championship in the senior sector. For the 2009/2010 season she was part of the World Cup team from the start and competed in thirteen races at the first six stations. Right at the start in Östersund , she achieved the best result so far in the top racing series with twelfth place. In the following season she was only used sporadically as a substitute runner due to the reduced starter quota in the World Cup. Instead, she dominated the IBU Cup and the 2011 European Championships in Ridnaun . In the individual, she repeated her success from 2009. With a miss, she left the flawless Olena Pidhruschna behind; two days later, the relay was third with her as the final runner. The fact that she also won the sprint and pursuit titles made her the second most successful female athlete of all European biathlon championships at the time . With five wins, a second and two third places, it is only surpassed by Irina Malgina , who won two more silver medals. Besides Nadeschda Talanowa , Döll is the only female athlete who won all three individual disciplines in the same year, and the most successful at a single European championship.

Nationally , Döll prevailed in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011 with the Thuringia relay at the championships, in addition she won silver in the mass start in 2007 and bronze in the individual in 2008.

In January 2013, Döll announced her immediate withdrawal from competitive sports in order to be able to devote more time to her correspondence course in law .

Biathlon World Cup Statistics

The table shows all placements (depending on the year, including the Olympic Games and World Championships).

  • 1st - 3rd Place: Number of podium placements
  • Top 10: Number of placements in the top ten (including podium)
  • Points ranks: Number of placements within the point ranks (including podium and top 10)
  • Starts: Number of races run in the respective discipline
placement singles sprint persecution Mass start Season total
1st place  
2nd place  
3rd place  
Top 10  
Scoring 5 6th 8th 1 20th
Starts 7th 16 9 1   33
As of December 29, 2012

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Juliane Döll ends biathlon career