Laura Dahlmeier

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Laura Dahlmeier biathlon
Portraits at the Olympic outfit Munich 2018 (Martin Rulsch) 48.jpg
Association GermanyGermany Germany
birthday 22nd August 1993 (age 27)
place of birth Garmisch-Partenkirchen
size 162 cm
Weight 52 kg
Career
job Customs officer
society SC Partenkirchen
Trainer Bernhard Kröll
Admission to the
national team
2011
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup 2018
Debut in the World Cup February 15, 2013
World Cup victories 33 (20 individual wins)
status resigned
End of career 17th May 2019
Medal table
Olympic medals 2 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
World Cup medals 7 × gold 3 × silver 5 × bronze
JWM medals 3 × gold 1 × silver 2 × bronze
EOJF medals 3 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
DM medals 2 × gold 2 × silver 3 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
gold 2018 Pyeongchang sprint
gold 2018 Pyeongchang persecution
bronze 2018 Pyeongchang singles
IBU Biathlon world championships
gold 2015 Kontiolahti Season
silver 2015 Kontiolahti persecution
gold 2016 Oslo persecution
silver 2016 Oslo Mass start
bronze 2016 Oslo sprint
bronze 2016 Oslo singles
bronze 2016 Oslo Season
gold 2017 Hochfilzen persecution
gold 2017 Hochfilzen singles
gold 2017 Hochfilzen Mass start
gold 2017 Hochfilzen Mixed relay
gold 2017 Hochfilzen Season
silver 2017 Hochfilzen sprint
bronze 2019 Östersund sprint
bronze 2019 Östersund persecution
German Ski Association German championships
gold 2015 Langdorf persecution
bronze 2015 Langdorf sprint
gold 2016 Oberhof Season
silver 2016 Oberhof Mass start
bronze 2016 Oberhof Special cross-country skiing
bronze 2017 Arber sprint
silver 2017 Arber persecution
IBU Biathlon Junior World Championships
bronze 2011 Nové Město na Moravě persecution
bronze 2011 Nové Město na Moravě Season
gold 2013 Obertilliach singles
gold 2013 Obertilliach sprint
gold 2013 Obertilliach Season
silver 2013 Obertilliach persecution
European Youth Olympic FestivalTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2011 Liberec singles
gold 2011 Liberec sprint
gold 2011 Liberec Mixed relay
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 1. ( 2016/17 )
Individual World Cup 1. (2016/17)
Sprint World Cup 2. (2016/17)
Pursuit World Cup 1. (2016/17)
Mass start world cup 2. (2016/17, 2017/18 )
 Podium placements 1. 2. 3.
singles 3 0 1
sprint 3 8th 4th
persecution 10 4th 3
Mass start 4th 5 2
Season 13 4th 4th
last change: May 17, 2019

Laura Dahlmeier (born August 22, 1993 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen ) is a former German biathlete who has been a mountain runner since she retired . She won seven gold, three silver and five bronze medals at biathlon world championships , 20 world cup races and the overall world cup of the 2016/17 season . At the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang , she won the sprint and pursuit races as well as the bronze medal in the individual competition .

Athletic career

Beginnings

Laura Dahlmeier first tried biathlon when she was seven. She initially competed in alpine ski racing before deciding to biathlon after two years. At the age of 17, she had some successes in the 2010/11 season. So she drew attention in the Germany Cup with two first and two second places. At her first Junior World Championships in 2011 , she also won two medals with third places in the pursuit and relay. At the European Youth Olympic Festival , which was held shortly afterwards in Liberec in the Czech Republic , she won all three races (sprint, individual and mixed relay).

The following year Dahlmeier missed top ten results in the individual competitions at the Junior World Championships in Kontiolahti, Finland . In the season she reached sixth place together with Franziska Preuss and Julia Bartolmäs . In contrast, she achieved four first places in the Germany Cup. Together with two other third places, she also won the overall ranking of the German Cup in her age group.

Debut in World Cup and first Olympic Games (2013 and 2014)

Thanks to her good performance in the German Cup, Dahlmeier was nominated by the German Ski Association for the Junior World Championships in Obertilliach at the beginning of January 2013 . At the beginning she won the sprint. In the subsequent pursuit, she reached the podium with second place and secured further titles in the individual race and in the relay. With a total of three gold and one silver medal, she was the most successful participant among the juniors. Due to the strong performance, the German Ski Association nominated her for the World Championships in Nové Město, which will take place a week later . There she was put up for the women's relay instead of Nadine Horchler and reached fifth place together with Franziska Hildebrand , Miriam Gössner and Andrea Henkel . On her debut in the World Cup and at the same time in a World Championship, she completed her round without shooting errors and with the third-best running time and handed over to the last runner Henkel while in the lead.

At the following Biathlon World Cup 2012/13 in Oslo , she contested her first individual race and finished seventh in the sprint. In the subsequent pursuit she was tenth. With these results she qualified for the mass start, in which she landed in 27th place. In the sprint in Sochi she was able to repeat her good result from Oslo and came in seventh behind her team colleague Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle . One day later, on March 10, she won her second season as the final runner of the German season with Andrea Henkel, Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle and Miriam Gössner with two faultless shoots and an outstanding final round for the first time in the Biathlon World Cup.

On December 15, 2013, she achieved fifth place in the pursuit of Annecy - Le Grand-Bornand, her best ever World Cup result in a single race. On December 28, 2013, she and Florian Graf won the World Team Challenge in the Veltins-Arena in Gelsenkirchen .

In February 2014 she took part in the biathlon competitions of the XXII. Olympic Winter Games in Sochi .

First world championship title (2015 and 2016)

In August 2014, Dahlmeier fell while climbing in the Zugspitze massif , tearing a ligament on his right ankle and bruising his ankle. Due to the injuries and the associated lack of training, she missed the World Cup opener of the 2014/15 season in Östersund and the second World Cup in Hochfilzen . For the third World Cup in Pokljuka , Dahlmeier returned to the World Cup and achieved ninth place as the best German. In the sprint race in Antholz , Dahlmeier took third place and thus achieved her first podium finish in the World Cup.

On February 7, 2015, Dahlmeier won the first individual World Cup victory of her career in the sprint race in Nové Město , one second ahead of Franziska Hildebrand , who celebrated her first podium. In the dress rehearsal for the World Championship , she confirmed her good form in the Oslo sprint with a second place. At the World Championships in Kontiolahti , she achieved fourth place in the sprint race despite three shooting errors thanks to the fastest time of all starters. In the pursuit that followed, she won her first World Championship medal with silver. In the individual race, she came in sixth with two mistakes and became world champion for the first time in the women's relay. At the last race of the season in Khanty-Mansiysk , she celebrated her second World Cup success. She was able to place herself in eighth place overall at the end of the season, although she was unable to take part in eight of the twenty-five races. With two exceptions, she finished all races within the top ten and was on the podium eight times.

Dahlmeier with the medals of the World Championships in Oslo 2016

In November 2015 fell ill Dahl Meier and therefore could not at the first World Cup of the season 2015/16 in Swedish Ostersund participate. In her first race, the sprint in Hochfilzen in December, with a sixth place she fulfilled the internal qualification criteria of the DSV for participation in the world championships and achieved her third World Cup victory in an individual race in the subsequent pursuit. She was not nominated for the season. This was followed by three first, a second and a third place at the races in Pokljuka and Ruhpolding . Also in Ruhpolding, she brought the German relay to the finish line as the final runner in second place. Karolin Horchler , who was already on her way to a race in the IBU Cup , was ordered back to Ruhpolding to replace the sick Vanessa Hinz , opened the race and handed over in fifth place, 22 seconds behind Miriam Gössner , who Maren Hammerschmidt started the race in eleventh place with 2 penalties, almost 2 minutes behind . However, the relay managed to run back to second place with a courageous performance on the trail and at the shooting range and passed Laura Dahlmeier 27.7 seconds behind. Dahlmeier was able to close the gap to the leader Olena Pidhruschna , but had to admit defeat shortly before the Ukrainian woman's home stretch. As the leader, she used her tactical advantage and only gave Dahlmeier the opportunity to switch to a different lane in fresh snow. She finished the race just 1.2 seconds behind Pidrushna, who was whistled by the home crowd in Ruhpolding. After the second week of the World Cup in Ruhpolding, Dahlmeier had to cancel her start in Antholz, Italy, due to an infection. In Canadian Canmore took them out of consideration for their health only at the individual race in part, the mixed relay won Franziska Hildebrand , Franziska Preuss , Arnd Peiffer and Simon Schempp . Like Hildebrand, she did not start in Presque Isle , but traveled straight home from Canada to prepare for the World Championships in peace . Preuss, Hildebrand, Peiffer and Schempp started again at Holmenkollen and together they won the silver medal. However, Dahlmeier contested all individual races and finished every race on the podium. In addition to the bronze medal in the relay - together with Franziska Preuss, Franziska Hildebrand and Maren Hammerschmidt - she won gold in the pursuit, silver in the mass start and bronze in the sprint and individual races. In the overall World Cup, she finished sixth directly behind her teammate Hildebrand, who, however, had contested more races than Dahlmeier.

Overall World Cup winner and multiple world champion (2016 and 2017)

On November 30, 2016, Dahlmeier won the first individual race of the new season and was the first German to wear the yellow jersey after Magdalena Neuner . She kept it until she suspended two races in Oberhof and Gabriela Koukalová temporarily took the lead. Even before the World Championships , Dahlmeier had regained the lead in the overall World Cup. At the world championships, Dahlmeier won one medal in every race, a total of five gold medals and one silver medal. Since the mixed relay has been part of the program of the world championships, this has only been the Norwegian Tora Berger 2013 in Nové Město (4 × gold, 2 × silver) and the French Marie Dorin-Habert 2016 in Oslo (3 × gold, 2 × silver, 1 × bronze) succeeded.

This made Dahlmeier the most successful participant in a single biathlon world championship. This record was surpassed by one medal at the 2020 in Antholz by Marte Olsbu Røiseland after the introduction of the single-mixed relay (5 gold, 2 bronze). Across the seasons, she won a medal in the eleventh World Cup race, something that no other biathlete has achieved before. With the victory in the individual race at the Biathlon World Championships, she won her first "crystal ball", the trophy for the World Cup ranking of the individual competition. Dahlmeier had won all individual races of the winter and in the end led the standings with 77 points ahead of her team-mate Vanessa Hinz. With victory in the Kontiolahti pursuit race, Laura Dahlmeier secured victory in the overall World Cup ahead of schedule, making her the first German to win this category since Magdalena Neuner in 2012. In addition, Dahlmeier won the small crystal ball in the pursuit rating.

Olympic gold medals

For the 2017/18 season , Dahlmeier skipped the first World Cup location in Östersund due to an infection and only entered the World Cup season in Hochfilzen . In Annecy-Le Grand-Bornand she showed with three podiums, including the victory in the pursuit, that she was to be expected again this season. She was able to prove her rising form with two second places in the mass start of Ruhpolding and the sprint of Antholz . The second win of the season was in the pursuit in Antholz.

At the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang , Dahlmeier won the gold medal in the first race of the competitions, the sprint over 7.5 km, with no shooting errors, thus fulfilling a childhood dream. Two days later, she also won the pursuit race with just one shooting error. This makes Dahlmeier the first biathlete to be victorious at the Olympic Games in two consecutive competitions. This was followed by the bronze medal in the individual competition, in the mass start she was 16th. In the rest of the biathlon winter, Dahlmeier continued to show good performances and some top ten placements. With third place in the pursuit in Tyumen , she finished the season fourth in the overall World Cup.

Due to several injuries and illnesses, Dahlmeier started the 2018/19 season late after a training break . She contested her first race in the IBU Cup in Ridnaun , where she came second with Roman Rees in the single mixed relay. The following weekend she returned to the World Cup in Nové Město and was able to convince with a second place in the sprint and fifth place in the pursuit. Dahlmeier skipped the final mass start and the World Cup in Oberhof for health reasons. In the following World Cup in Ruhpolding , after a ninth place in the sprint, she reached last place in the mass start with six shooting errors. In Antholz she was again strong and after a fourth and second place in the sprint and pursuit, she took her first win of the season in the mass start. In Canmore , Canada , she was ninth in the shortened individual and was able to achieve the first success of the season in the relay competition with Vanessa Hinz , Franziska Hildebrand and Denise Herrmann despite a penalty loop. Like three years before, she skipped the second World Cup on American soil in Soldier Hollow in order to insert an additional training block for the World Cup. At the World Championships in Östersund , she did not take part in the mixed relay due to a feverish cold. The next day she won the bronze medal thanks to a faultless sprint shooting. In the pursuit a day later, she also won bronze with just one shooting error, thus securing her thirteenth consecutive world championship medal.

On May 17, 2019, she announced the end of her career in biathlon.

Mountain run

In addition to her start in biathlon, Laura Dahlmeier also took part in mountain runs and continued this commitment as an active biathlete even after she retired. In this sport, too, she has achieved good results so far. a. she set a new course record at the 11th Karwendel run on August 31, 2019. At the beginning of October she was then nominated by the DLV alongside Stefanie Doll , Moritz auf der Heide , Benedikt Hoffmann and Florian Reichert for the endurance world championship in mountain running . For this she officially qualified according to the nomination guidelines of the DLV for the Basetrail XL as part of the Zugspitz Ultratrail. Laura Dahlmeier reached the goal of the mountain running world championship after Stefanie Doll's failure as the only German woman half an hour behind the winner Cristina Simion from Romania in 27th place out of a total of 75 runners.

Private life

Dahlmeier lives in Garmisch-Partenkirchen . She is the daughter of Susi (née Buchwieser) and Andreas Dahlmeier. In the early 1990s, mother Susi, like her sister, Laura Dahlmeier's aunt Regina Stiefl , was a successful mountain biker and won several national and international titles. Father Andreas was an alpinist and skier.

On August 1, 2011, Dahlmeier was accepted into the customs ski team and completed an apprenticeship as a customs officer . After her resignation, she was officially retired from the customs service in August 2018 with the rank of customs officer. She is a passionate and experienced mountaineer. In the summer of 2017, she climbed the Tocllaraju and Alpamayo peaks in the Peruvian Cordillera Blanca . In 2019 she climbed the highest mountain in Iran, the Damawand .

She is volunteer in the mountain rescue service Garmisch-Partenkirchen . She has been studying sports science at the Technical University of Munich since 2019 .

On October 18, 2019, her book Die Klimagang: Laura Dahlmeier and friends in action for nature was presented at the Frankfurt Book Fair.

Awards

  • In 2011 Laura Dahlmeier was awarded second place at the Piotr Nurowski Prize for the best young athlete by the European Olympic Committee .
  • In 2013 Dahlmeier received the WinterStar of Bavarian TV in the Perspective category and the Bavarian Sports Prize for Outstanding Young Athlete .
  • In October, Dahlmeier was voted Junior Sportswoman of the Year 2013 for her successes at the Junior World Championships and the World Cup .
  • During the World Cup in Hochfilzen on December 7, 2013, the IBU recognized her as the best young biathlete of the past season.
  • In 2015 she received together with Franziska Hildebrand , Franziska Preuß and Vanessa Hinz - in the cast of the world championship relay - the Bavarian Sports Prize in the category "Ambassador of Bavarian Sports".
  • In July 2017, Dahlmeier was again awarded the Bavarian Sports Prize.
  • In October 2017, Dahlmeier was named "Skier of the Year 2017" by the DSV for her achievements in the past season.
  • In December 2017, the then 24-year-old was voted Sportswoman of the Year 2017 .
  • On March 2nd, 2018 Laura Dahlmeier was made an honorary citizen of Garmisch-Partenkirchen.
  • For winning the gold medals at the 2018 Winter Olympics, she was awarded the silver bay leaf on June 7, 2018.
  • In the election for Sportswoman of the Year , she came third in 2018.
  • In 2019 she received the European Medal of the Bavarian State Government.
  • In 2019 she received the Bavarian Sports Prize in the category of outstanding Bavarian sports career .
  • On November 9, 2019, she was awarded the Pegasos Prize as a "legend of sports" at the German Sports Press Ball in Frankfurt.

Statistics biathlon

World Cup victories

Single race Relay race
No. date place discipline
1. 0Feb 7, 2015 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Nové Město na Moravě sprint
2. 22 Mar 2015 RussiaRussia Khanty-Mansiysk Mass start
3. Dec 12, 2015 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen persecution
4th 19 Dec 2015 SloveniaSlovenia Pokljuka persecution
5. 0Jan. 9, 2016 GermanyGermany Ruhpolding persecution
6th Jan. 10, 2016 GermanyGermany Ruhpolding Mass start
7th 06th Mar 2016 NorwayNorway Oslo (World Cup) persecution
8th. Nov 30, 2016 SwedenSweden Ostersund singles
9. 0Dec 9, 2016 SloveniaSlovenia Pokljuka sprint
10. Dec 10, 2016 SloveniaSlovenia Pokljuka persecution
11. Jan. 19, 2017 Flag of Italy.svg Antholz singles
12. Feb 12, 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen ( WM ) persecution
13. Feb. 15, 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen ( WM ) singles
14th 19th Feb 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen ( WM ) Mass start
15th 02nd Mar 2017 Korea SouthSouth Korea Pyeongchang sprint
16. 04th Mar 2017 Korea SouthSouth Korea Pyeongchang persecution
17th 11th Mar 2017 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti persecution
18th 16 Dec 2017 FranceFrance Annecy-Le Grand-Bornand persecution
19th Jan. 20, 2018 Flag of Italy.svg Antholz persecution
20th Jan. 27, 2019 Flag of Italy.svg Antholz Mass start
No. date place discipline
1. 10 Mar 2013 RussiaRussia Sochi Season 1
2. Dec 12, 2013 FranceFrance Annecy-Le Grand-Bornand Season 2
3. 0Jan. 8, 2014 GermanyGermany Ruhpolding Season 3
4th Jan. 25, 2015 Flag of Italy.svg Antholz Season 4
5. 13 Mar 2015 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti (WM) Season 5
6th Dec 11, 2016 SloveniaSlovenia Pokljuka Season 6
7th Jan. 12, 2017 GermanyGermany Ruhpolding Season 7
8th. Jan. 22, 2017 Flag of Italy.svg Antholz Season 6
9. 0Feb 9, 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen ( WM ) Mixed season 8
10. 17th Feb 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen ( WM ) Season 6
11. Dec 10, 2017 AustriaAustria Hochfilzen Season 6
12. Jan. 13, 2018 GermanyGermany Ruhpolding Season 9
13. 0Feb. 8, 2019 CanadaCanada Canmore Season 10
2with Franziska Preuß , Andrea Henkel and Franziska Hildebrand
3 with Franziska Preuß, Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle and Franziska Hildebrand
4thwith Franziska Hildebrand, Franziska Preuß and Luise Kummer
5with Franziska Hildebrand, Franziska Preuß and Vanessa Hinz
6thwith Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand and Maren Hammerschmidt
7th with Vanessa Hinz, Maren Hammerschmidt and Franziska Preuß
8thwith Vanessa Hinz, Arnd Peiffer and Simon Schempp
9with Franziska Preuß, Denise Herrmann and Franziska Hildebrand
10 with Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand and Denise Herrmann

Biathlon World Cup placements

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
  • Relay: including mixed relays
placement singles sprint persecution Mass start Season total
1st place 3 3 10 4th 13 33
2nd place 0 8th 4th 5 4th 21st
3rd place 1 4th 3 2 4th 14th
Top 10 7th 29 29 20th 24 109
Scoring 11 41 34 26th 24 136
Starts 12 41 35 26th 24 138
As of March 17, 2019
season Individual race 1 Placement individual races Relay race 1 Placement relay races Overall World Cup 3rd
1st - 2nd - 3rd Top ten Scoring Ladies Mixed 2 1st - 2nd - 3rd Top ten Points space
2012/13 07 (26) 0 - 0 - 0 05 07th 02 (6) 00 (2) 1 - 0 - 0 02 220 35
2013/14 17 (22) 0 - 0 - 0 05 16 03 (3) 00 (1) 2 - 1 - 0 03 410 15th
2014/15 17 (25) 2 - 4 - 2 15th 17th 04 (6) 00 (4) 2 - 0 - 1 04th 725 08th
2015/16 18 (25) 5 - 2 - 3 14th 18th 02 (5) 00 (4) 0 - 1 - 1 02 786 06th
2016/17 24 (26) 10 - 6 - 1 23 24 04 (5) 03 (5) 5 - 1 - 1 07th 1211 01
2017/18 19 (22) 2 - 3 - 2 14th 18th 03 (4) 00 (4) 2 - 1 - 0 03 730 04th
2018/19 15 (25) 1 - 2 - 2 11 15th 03 (5) 00 (6) 1 - 0 - 1 03 554 012
total 117 (171) 20 - 17 - 10 87 115 21 (34) 3 (22) 13 - 4 - 4 024  

Status: end of season 2018/19

1Number of race starts. The total number of races in the season is given in brackets.
2 Includes mixed relay races and individual mixed relay races.
3 For better comparability, the actually achieved World Cup points are listed here and the deleted results are not deducted.

Additional information: Distribution of points / cancellation results in the Biathlon World Cup

winter Olympics

Individual competitions Relay competitions
sprint persecution singles Mass start Women's relay Mixed relay
2014 Winter Olympics

RussiaRussia Sochi

46. 30th 13. - 11. DSQ 1
Olympic Winter Games 2018

Korea SouthSouth Korea Pyeongchang

gold 1. gold 1. bronze 3. 16. 8th. 4th
1The mixed relay was disqualified due to a doping offense by Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle .

World championships

Individual competitions Relay competitions
sprint persecution singles Mass start Women's relay Mixed relay
World Championships 2013

Czech RepublicCzech Republic Nové Město na Moravě

- - - - 5. -
World Championships 2015

FinlandFinland Kontiolahti

4th silver 2. 6th 7th gold 1. -
World Championships 2016

NorwayNorway Oslo

bronze 3. gold 1. bronze 3. silver 2. bronze 3. -
World Championships 2017

AustriaAustria Hochfilzen

silver 2. gold 1. gold 1. gold 1. gold 1. gold 1.
World Championships 2019

SwedenSweden Ostersund

bronze 3. bronze 3. 4th 6th 4th -

Shooting results

Shooting performance Laura Dahlmeier (World Cup races including relays)

All IBU World Cup races were used to evaluate the shooting results. The shooting from the relay races was also included.

Shooting results Prone shooting Standing shooting total
2012/13 season 60/65 92% 57/65 88% 117/130 90%
2013/14 season 173/190 91% 173/191 91% 346/381 91%
2014/15 season 144/156 92% 146/157 93% 290/313 93%
2015/16 season 147/160 92% 147/161 91% 294/321 92%
Season 2016/17 222/248 90% 222/253 88% 444/501 89%
Season 2017/18 149/167 89% 151/168 90% 300/335 90%
Season 2018/19 127/145 88% 124/143 87% 251/288 87%
total 1022/1131 90% 1020/1138 90% 2042/2269 90%
Status : After the 2018/19 season

Statistics mountain run

date venue competition placement time Altitude
Oct 29, 2017 GermanyGermany Grainau -
Eibsee
Eibseelauf 12.2 km 1. 0:53:27 370
June 16, 2018 AustriaAustria Leutasch - Grainau
GermanyGermany
Zugspitz Ultratrail 63.5 km 3. 7:55:21 2,984
June 15, 2019 GermanyGermany Mittenwald -
Grainau
Zugspitz Ultratrail 39 km 1. 4:15:38 2.005
31 Aug 2019 AustriaAustria Scharnitz -
Pertisau
Karwendel run 52 km 1. 4:51:03 2,281
Nov 16, 2019 ArgentinaArgentina Villa La Angostura Mountain running world championship long distance 41.5 km 27. 4:20:47 2.184

Web links

Commons : Laura Dahlmeier  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. Laura Dahlmeier. Eurosport , accessed February 23, 2020 .
  2. a b Laura Dahlmeier announces the end of her career. In: sportschau.de . May 17, 2019, accessed May 17, 2019 .
  3. Dahlmeier nominated for World Championship in Nove Mesto. biathlon-online.de, January 29, 2013, accessed on January 29, 2013 .
  4. IBU Datacenter: 7.5 km sprint for women in Oslo, 2012/13 season
  5. IBU Datacenter: 10 km pursuit of women in Oslo, season 2012/13
  6. IBU Datacenter: 12.5 km mass start for women in Oslo, 2012/13 season
  7. WTC Hall of Fame ( Memento from August 10, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  8. a b Gössner stays in the team - Dahlmeier joins again ( Memento from December 18, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  9. Dahlmeier: “I will be different now”. In: tz.de. October 28, 2014, accessed November 30, 2014 .
  10. Dahlmeier paused - Gössner attacks only in individual cases ( Memento from December 2, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  11. Gössner dropout prevents victory of the German season in Ruhpolding on www.youtube.com, accessed on September 22, 2016
  12. https://www.karwendelmarsch.info/
  13. Pamela Lechner: DLV nominates Laura Dahlmeier for the Mountain Running World Championships in Argentina. Retrieved October 3, 2019 .
  14. Nomination guidelines for the mountain run 2019. In: Leichtathletik.de. Retrieved October 3, 2019 .
  15. Results Category Women Long, Course: 41.5 km; +2184 m / -2184 m. In: wmrch2019.com.ar. November 16, 2019, accessed November 17, 2019 .
  16. Out, up, down - how mountain biking came to Germany
  17. https://www.ovb-online.de/sport/gipfelstuermerin-goldkurs-7378917.html
  18. ^ Portrait of biathlete Laura Dahlmeier
  19. ^ Peru - Cordillera Blanca June 2017. Laura Dahlmeier, accessed December 28, 2017 .
  20. sportschau.de: Olympia 2018: Laura Dahlmeier - superstar without starry airs. February 17, 2018, accessed February 18, 2018 .
  21. Sport1.de: Biathlon: Laura Dahlmeier studies sports science in Munich. Retrieved December 25, 2019 .
  22. WinterStar 2013: Sport, Games and Honors. Bayerischer Rundfunk, March 24, 2013, accessed on March 25, 2013 .
  23. Bavarian Sports Prize 2013: Seehofer honors greats in sport. Bayerischer Rundfunk, July 6, 2013, archived from the original on July 15, 2013 ; Retrieved July 9, 2013 .
  24. Laura Dahlmeier is "Junior Sportswoman of the Year 2013". Deutsche Sporthilfe Foundation, October 12, 2013, archived from the original on October 14, 2013 ; Retrieved October 12, 2013 .
  25. World Association honors Greis and Dahlmeier. biathlon-online.de, December 9, 2013, accessed December 10, 2013 .
  26. Sportsman of the year 2017 - Dahlmeier, Rydzek and beach volleyball duo triumph . Spiegel Online, December 17, 2017.
  27. Markt Garmisch-Partenkirchen gives Laura Dahlmeier honorary citizenship
  28. Laura Dahlmeier is honored by the Federal President on merkur.de, accessed on June 13, 2018
  29. ^ IOC Disciplinary Commision Decision. (PDF) In: IOC. February 21, 2014, accessed March 18, 2014 .
  30. ^ Statistics Women . real biathlon. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
  31. biathlon-online.de: World Cup 2016/2017 . www.biathlon-online.de. Retrieved December 20, 2017.
  32. IBU data center . IBU. Retrieved April 14, 2019.