Scott Perras

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Scott Perras biathlon
Scott Perras CAN.jpg
Association CanadaCanada Canada
birthday October 25, 1983
place of birth Regina , Canada
Career
society Biathlonschool.com
Biathlon Saskatchewan
Trainer Richard Boruta
Admission to the
national team
2004
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup 2005
Nor Am Cup victories 1
Debut in the World Cup 2007
status resigned
End of career 2016
Medal table
NAM medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
KM medals ? ×gold ? ×silver ? ×bronze
NAMSB medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
North America ChampionshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2009 Valcartier sprint
Canadian Championships
gold 2009 Valcartier sprint
bronze 2009 Valcartier Mixed relay
silver 2010 Canmore sprint
bronze 2010 Canmore persecution
gold 2011 Charlo singles
North American
Summer Biathlon ChampionshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold Canmore 2008 singles
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 54th ( 2011/12 )
last change: April 3, 2011

Scott Anthony Perras (born October 25, 1983 in Regina ) is a former Canadian biathlete .

Scott Perras lives in Regina and starts for the team Biathlonschool.com/Biathlon Sasktachewan . His trainer is Richard Boruta. Like many biathletes, he got into the sport after learning about the sport on television at the Olympics. He has been training the sport intensively since 2003 and was able to achieve his first success in 2004 by winning the runner-up title in the sprint of the Canadian juniors.

Perras has been competing in international races for his home country since 2005. His first race in the European Biathlon Cup was a sprint race in Langdorf , where he was 33rd. In a super sprint in Gurnigel he finished in the top ten for the first time in the same year, but in a understaffed European Cup. The Canadian made his World Cup debut at the start of the 2007/08 season in Kontiolahti . In his first race, an individual, he was 104th, in the following sprint already 70. At the next World Cup station in Hochfilzen he reached 13th place with the relay. Towards the end of the season, Perras achieved 43rd place in the sprint from Pyeongchang, his best result in a World Cup race to date, which he repeated at the beginning of the following season in Östersund with an even better field of starters. Shortly before he started at the Biathlon World Championships 2008 in Östersund, his first world title fight. In the individual, the Canadian ran in 75th place, in the sprint on 95 and with the relay he was 21. He won his first international title at the North American Roller Ski Biathlon Championships in 2008 in Canmore, Canada . With fifth place in the sprint and fourth in the pursuit, he achieved further good placements. At the Biathlon World Championships 2009 in Pyeongchang Perras was 107th of the individual, 82nd of the sprint and with Robin Clegg , Brendan Green and Jean-Philippe Leguellec season 16.

In Pokljuka Perras was able to run into the points for the first time in the 2009/10 season with rank 32 in a single. Nevertheless, he missed participation in the 2010 Winter Olympics in his Canadian homeland. The 2010/11 season became Perra's best season. In Fort Kent he was able to achieve his best World Cup result with rank 30. He achieved a total of six placements in the points and was 68th overall. At the Biathlon World Championships 2011 in Khanty-Mansiysk he was 49th of the individual, 34th of the sprint, 31st of the pursuit and with Green, Leguellec and Nathan Smith eleventh of the relay race. At the end of the season he won the singles title at the Canadian Championships in Charlo . In 2012 he improved a new best World Cup placement in Antholz with a 29th place in a sprint race.

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  
2nd place  
3rd place  
Top 10 1 9 10
Scoring 5 11 6th 1 31 54
Starts 20th 50 18th 1 31 120
As of March 8, 2015

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Scott Perras , olympic , approx