Rosi Renoth

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Rosi Renoth Alpine skiing
nation GermanyGermany Germany
birthday 3rd June 1967 (age 53)
place of birth Schoenau am Koenigsee , Germany
Career
discipline Downhill , super-G
status resigned
End of career 1994
Placements in the Alpine Ski World Cup
 Overall World Cup 35th ( 1992/93 )
 Downhill World Cup 16. (1992/93)
 Super G World Cup 27. (1992/93)
 

Rosi Renoth , previously also active under her maiden name Rosi Krenn (born June 3, 1967 in Schönau ), is a former German ski racer .

She belonged to the team of the German Ski Association from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s and competed in the downhill and super-G disciplines . On December 15, 1988, she achieved her best result to date with a seventh place at the World Cup downhill run in Altenmarkt-Zauchensee . Renoth also took part in the 1989 Alpine World Ski Championships, which was held in Vail , USA , where he finished 6th in the downhill of the combined competition and 11th in the World Cup downhill. Furthermore, Renoth, no longer starting under her birth name Rosi Krenn, took fifth place on March 3, 1993 at the World Cup downhill run in Morzine, Italy . A few weeks earlier she had achieved her best ever World Cup result when she finished sixth on the downhill in the Austrian house in the Ennstal . Two more top 10 placements in the downhill run for her in the same year with eighth places in Hafjell and Tignes. The best result in Super G was a 12th place in Flachau in December 1993. In the overall World Cup she was 70 in the 1991/92 season. In the two following seasons, 35th and 68th place followed. She was nominated for the German team for the 1993 Alpine World Ski Championships in Morioka . She was also a member of Germany's squad for the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. "DSV nominated 19 athletes for the World Ski Championships in Morioka, construction for the 1994 Olympics in Lillehammer", FAZ from January 19, 2003
  2. ^ "Training for the combined descent Katja Seizinger falls and drives on", FAZ from February 2, 2003
  3. ^ "16 Berliners in the Olympic squad", Berliner Zeitung of January 31, 1994
  4. Rosi Renoth at sport-renoth.de