Marie Dorin-Habert

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Marie Dorin-Habert biathlon
Marie Dorin.jpg
Association FranceFrance France
birthday 19th June 1986 (age 34)
place of birth Lyon , France
Career
job Biathlete
society CO 7 Laux
Trainer Pascal Etienne
Admission to the
national team
2005
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup 2003
Debut in the World Cup 2007
World Cup victories 14 (7 individual wins)
status resigned
End of career 2018
Medal table
Olympic medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 2 × bronze
World Cup medals 5 × gold 8 × silver 4 × bronze
JWM medals 2 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
bronze 2010 Vancouver sprint
silver 2010 Vancouver Season
gold 2018 Pyeongchang Mixed relay
bronze 2018 Pyeongchang Season
IBU Biathlon world championships
bronze 2009 Pyeongchang Season
silver 2011 Khanty-Mansiysk Season
bronze 2011 Khanty-Mansiysk Mixed relay
silver 2012 Ruhpolding Season
silver 2013 Nové Město Mixed relay
gold 2015 Kontiolahti sprint
gold 2015 Kontiolahti persecution
silver 2015 Kontiolahti Mixed relay
silver 2015 Kontiolahti Season
gold 2016 Oslo singles
gold 2016 Oslo Mass start
gold 2016 Oslo Mixed relay
silver 2016 Oslo sprint
silver 2016 Oslo Season
bronze 2016 Oslo persecution
silver 2017 Hochfilzen Mixed relay
bronze 2017 Hochfilzen Season
IBU Biathlon Junior World Championships
gold 2004 Haute Maurienne Season
gold 2005 Kontiolahti Season
bronze 2005 Kontiolahti singles
silver 2006 Presque Isle Season
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 2. ( 2015/16 )
Individual World Cup 2. (2015/16)
Sprint World Cup 2. (2015/16)
Pursuit World Cup 3. ( 2012/13 , 2015/16)
Mass start world cup 2. (2015/16)
 Podium placements 1. 2. 3.
singles 1 1 0
sprint 3 1 3
persecution 2 5 6th
Mass start 1 3 2
Season 7th 15th 12
last change: end of career

Marie Dorin-Habert (* as Marie Dorin on June 19, 1986 in Lyon ) is a former French biathlete .

Career

Beginnings

Marie Dorin-Habert lives in Laval and trains in Le Ruisseau . The student starts for CO 7 Laux , where she is trained by Pascal Etienne . She has been biathlon since 2000 and has been a member of the French national team since 2005. The French made her international debut in 2003 in races as part of the Junior European Cup in Ridnaun . In 2004 she took part in a Junior World Championship for the first time in Haute-Maurienne and won the gold medal with the French relay (with Marion Blondeau and Mélanie Droz-Vincent ) and was seventh in the individual and sixth in the pursuit. She won the season title again a year later in Kontiolahti together with Blondeau and Anaïs Bescond , also the bronze medal in the individual behind Swetlana Slepzowa and Vita Semerenko . In 2006 there was another silver medal in the relay (with Bescond and Pauline Macabies ). In the same year Dorin-Habert took part in their only Junior European Championship. In Langdorf she won the bronze medal with the relay. Dorin-Habert's last Junior World Championship was in Martell in 2007 . Here she was not used in the season, which this time was formed by her previous season partners. Nevertheless, she achieved good results with ninth place in the sprint and tenth in the pursuit.

First World Cup and first Olympic Games (2007/08 to 2009/10)

Dorin-Habert has been competing in the Biathlon World Cup since the 2007/08 season . In her first race, an individual in Kontiolahti , she finished 38th. She achieved her best result in a single race of the season shortly afterwards in the same place when she was 35th in the pursuit after she had only come in 51st place in the sprint. She achieved her best season result in Ruhpolding . There she was able to achieve a very good fourth place for the inexperienced season together with Marie Laure Brunet , Julie Carraz-Collin and Macabies. At the beginning of the following season , Dorin-Habert was able to achieve a new best World Cup result with rank 30 in the pursuit race in Östersund and collect first World Cup points. She ran from 47th place in the sprint, due to four clear shoots. But it should not stop at this result. In Ruhpolding she reached 15th place in the sprint and 17th place in the pursuit. Another top 20 placement followed at the Biathlon World Championships 2009 of Pyeongchang , where Dorin-Habert was the 18th of persecution after they had missed in the sprint even as 42. the points. In the individual, she took 33rd place. The greatest success, however, was winning the bronze medal in the relay race, which she was able to achieve with Brunet, Sylvie Becaert and Sandrine Bailly behind the relays from Russia and Germany. At the Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver 2010 , Marie Dorin-Habert celebrated her greatest sporting success to date when she won the bronze medal in the sprint race. A few days later she also reached the silver medal in the relay competition together with Becaert, Brunet and Bailly.

Second Olympic Games (2010/11 to 2013/14)

The post-Olympic season was her best season to date. This she finished in seventh place in the overall standings and she was seventh in the discipline of the pursuit. At the competitions in the United States , she reached her third and fourth career podiums. She finished second in the Presque Isle Pursuit and third in the Fort Kent Pursuit . At the 2011 World Championships she was sixth in the individual, and eighth in the sprint and mass start. She won silver with the relay and bronze with the mixed relay.

At the beginning of the following season, she first started in an IBU Cup race before taking part in the World Cup opener in Östersund . In relay races she was able to reach the podium several times, but she did not succeed in a single race this season. At the end of the season, however, she reached ninth place overall. The World Championships in Ruhpolding were more successful for Dorin-Habert than the previous one. She was able to achieve a top ten position in all individual races and in the individual she reached the goal only 3 seconds after third-placed Helena Ekholm . With the relay she was able to win silver again.

In the 2012/2013 season , Dorin-Habert managed her best season to date, with six podium finishes. After the start in Östersund with 19th place in the individual, 38th in the sprint and 17th in the pursuit did not go quite as well, she showed clearly rising form in Hochfilzen with tenth place in the sprint, seventh place in the pursuit and place five with the relay. In Pokljuka she was fifth in the sprint, third in the pursuit and ninth in the mass start race in difficult foggy conditions. In difficult weather conditions, Habert came second in Oberhof with Marie-Laure Brunet, Anaïs Bescond and Sophie Boilley. In the sprint, she narrowly missed the podium in fourth and finished ninth in the pursuit. In Ruhpolding she was fifth in the sprint thanks to her good shooting performance. After a mixed world championship , the start of the last third of the season on Holmenkollen in Oslo got better. Habert finished fourth in the sprint and second in the pursuit. At the pre-Olympic World Cup in Sochi , she was again sprint fourth. At the World Cup final in Khanty-Mansiysk, Habert was 18th in the sprint and was able to improve to fourth in the pursuit based on this with the fastest running time. At the last race of the season she finished second in the mass start.

In the Olympic season she did not enter until the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi . However, this was not successful for Dorin-Habert. She could not achieve a top ten placement and even with the mixed relay she was only sixth. In the last race of the season, the mass start in Oslo , she was able to reach the podium again with a third place.

World Champion and third Olympic Games (2014/15 to 2017/18)

After Dorin-Habert became a mother in September 2014, she only started the 2014/15 season in January 2015 . In Antholz she reached the top ten with fifth place in the pursuit and again the podium with third place in the sprint in Oslo . At the following world championships she not only achieved her first gold medal at a World Cup, but also her first World Cup victory in an individual discipline. She also won the gold medal in the subsequent pursuit. At the start of the World Cup, she won silver with the French mixed relay. She also won silver in the relay, making her the most successful biathlete at these world championships even before the mass start. As in the previous year, she was third in the mass start at the end of the season.

She started the 2015/16 season with her first single mixed season and reached 21st place together with Simon Fourcade . In the first individual race, the individual, of the season she was second and in the pursuit she just missed the podium with fourth place. She won the sprint in Pokljuka with one second ahead of Laura Dahlmeier . In the subsequent pursuit, the stronger Dahlmeier prevailed and Dorin-Habert came second. After she had achieved her worst result of the season in Canmore with a 29th place , she was second in the mass start. She was able to win the single mixed relay that also took place there with Martin Fourcade with a 45-second lead.

At the world championships she was again in her best form of the season and won a medal in all races. After becoming world champion in sprint and pursuit last year, she also became world champion in individual and mass start at these world championships and has thus become world champion in all individual disciplines. She won silver in the sprint and bronze in the pursuit. Dorin-Habert also became world champion with the mixed relay and came second with the relay. Since the mixed relay has been part of the World Championships program, only the Norwegian Tora Berger was able to win a medal in all races of a world championship in 2013 in Nové Město . Laura Dahlmeier succeeded in doing this at the World Championships the following year.

Again she reached the podium in the last race of the season, because she finished second in the pursuit in Khanty-Mansiysk . The mass start race was not held due to the strong wind. That season was the best season of her career. In the overall standings, Dorin-Habert was second behind Gabriela Soukalová . She also came second in the discipline scores, with the exception of the pursuit score. She finished third in the pursuit.

As in the previous year, she started the 2016/17 season with the single mixed relay. Together with Martin Fourcade she was able to win this again. She also won the sprint in Östersund . In Oberhof she then reached the podium again. After finishing third in the sprint, she won the pursuit. The world championships in Hochfilzen were not successful for Dorin-Habert. Her best individual result was a sixth place in the pursuit. With the relay she was able to win bronze again and with the mixed relay silver. After she had to abandon the sprint at the pre-Olympic competitions in Pyeongchang , she finished second in the pursuit in Kontiolahti . At the season finale in Oslo, she could no longer achieve a top ten placement. Nevertheless, she finished fourth in the overall standings.

As in previous years, the Olympic season began for her with the single mixed relay. However, together with Martin Fourcade, she missed the podium by a second. The season up to the Olympics was unsuccessful for Dorin-Habert and she never achieved a placement better than 13th place in any race. At the Winter Olympics , however, she was fourth in the sprint and ninth in the mass start. Together with Anaïs Bescond , Simon Desthieux and Martin Fourcade, she became Olympic champion in the mixed relay competition and won the bronze medal with the relay. Due to her good result at the Olympics, she postponed her planned career end after the Olympics until the World Cup in Oslo. In Oslo she was then able to win the relay race with Anaïs Chevalier , Célia Aymonier and Anaïs Bescond and ended her career after a 20th place in the pursuit.

Private life

Marie Dorin-Habert has been married to the biathlete Loïs Habert since June 2011 . In September 2014 she became the mother of a daughter. She and her husband opened a sports hotel in Corrençon-en-Vercors in 2018 . She studied during her sports career and is now a qualified biologist . She is now the mother of two daughters.

statistics

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
placement singles sprint persecution Mass start Season total
1st place 1 3 2 1 7th 14th
2nd place 1 1 5 3 15th 25th
3rd place 3 6th 2 12 23
Top 10 10 35 30th 22nd 46 143
Scoring 21st 76 64 38 49 248
Starts 28 92 65 38 49 272
Status: end of career

World Cup victories

World Cup victories in individual races

No. date place discipline
1. 07th Mar 2015 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti (WM) sprint
2. 0March 8 2015 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti (WM) persecution
3. Dec 18, 2015 SloveniaSlovenia Pokljuka sprint
4th 09 Mar 2016 NorwayNorway Oslo (World Cup) singles
5. 13 Mar 2016 NorwayNorway Oslo (World Cup) Mass start
6th 03rd Dec 2016 SwedenSweden Ostersund sprint
7th 0Jan. 7, 2017 GermanyGermany Oberhof persecution

World Cup victories in the team

No. date place discipline
1. Jan. 21, 2012 ItalyItaly Antholz Season 1
2. Jan. 24, 2016 ItalyItaly Antholz Season 2
3. 0Feb 7, 2016 CanadaCanada Canmore Single mixed season 3
4th 03rd Mar 2016 NorwayNorway Oslo (World Cup) Mixed season 4
5. Nov 27, 2016 SwedenSweden Ostersund Single mixed season 3
6th March 12 2017 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti Mixed season 5
7th 17th Mar 2018 NorwayNorway Oslo Season 6
2with Justine Braisaz , Anaïs Bescond and Anaïs Chevalier
4thwith Justine Braisaz, Quentin Fillon Maillet and Martin Fourcade
5with Anaïs Bescond, Simon Desthieux and Quentin Fillon Maillet
6thwith Anaïs Chevalier, Célia Aymonier and Anaïs Bescond

winter Olympics

Results at Olympic Winter Games:

Individual competitions Relay competitions
sprint persecution singles Mass start Women's relay Mixed relay
2010 Winter Olympics winter Olympics | VancouverCanadaCanada  bronze 3. 16. 50. 15th silver 2.
Olympic Winter Games 2014 winter Olympics | SochiRussiaRussia  20th 14th 39. - DNF 6th
Olympic Winter Games 2018 winter Olympics | PyeongchangKorea SouthSouth Korea  4th 27. - 9. bronze 3. gold 1.

World championships

Individual competitions Relay competitions
sprint persecution singles Mass start Women's relay Mixed relay
World Championships 2009

IBU.svg| PyeongchangKorea SouthSouth Korea 

42. 18th 33. - 3. -
World Championships 2011

IBU.svg| Khanty-MansiyskRussiaRussia 

8th. 15th 6th 8th. 2. 3.
World Championships 2012

IBU.svg| RuhpoldingGermanyGermany 

9. 9. 4th 6th 2. 11.
World Championships 2013

IBU.svg| Nové Město na MoravěCzech RepublicCzech Republic 

18th 16. 9. 9. 6th 2.
World Championships 2015

IBU.svg| KontiolahtiFinlandFinland 

1. 1. - 8th. 2. 2.
World Championships 2016

IBU.svg| OsloNorwayNorway 

2. 3. 1. 1. 2. 1.
World Championships 2017

IBU.svg| HochfilzenAustriaAustria 

7th 6th 40. 7th 3. 2.

Junior World Championships

World Championship sprint persecution singles Season
year place
2004 FranceFrance Haute Maurienne 14th 6th 7th 1.
2005 FinlandFinland Kontiolahti 18th 16. 3. 1.
2006 United StatesUnited States Presque Isle 19th 19th 19th 2.
2007 ItalyItaly Martell 9. 10. 22nd -

Web links

Commons : Marie Dorin-Habert  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Biathlon: preliminary decisions, revenge and a farewell. March 17, 2018, accessed March 20, 2018 .
  2. Video: Marie Dorin Habert breaks new ground. In: de.biathlonworld.com. IBU , August 1, 2018, accessed December 28, 2019 .
  3. Video: Without a gun - life after the biathlon. In: daserste.de. The first , December 28, 2019, accessed December 28, 2019 .