Siegrid Pallhuber

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Siegrid Pallhuber biathlon
Association ItalyItaly Italy
birthday May 1, 1970
place of birth Brunico
Career
job Forester
society CS Forestale
Debut in the European Cup / IBU Cup ?
European Cup / IBU Cup victories 2
Debut in the World Cup 1992 (?)
World Cup victories -
status resigned
End of career 2003
World Cup balance
Overall World Cup 67th ( 1999/2000 )
last change: September 8, 2010

Siegrid Pallhuber (born May 1, 1970 in Bruneck ) is a former Italian biathlete . She participated in eight Winter Olympic Games and World Biathlon Championships .

Siegrid Pallhuber lives and trained in Antholz and started for CS Forestale . The forester started biathlon in 1990. The Italian had her international breakthrough at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville , where she was 56th in the sprint and 38th in the individual in the first female biathlon competitions. From now on, Pallhuber was part of the tribe of the Italian national biathlon team and the biathlon world cup for the next ten years . The next international championship was the Biathlon World Championships in 1993 in Borowetz , where Pallhuber was 43rd in the sprint and 45th in the individual. For the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer , the Italian biathletes were only entitled to one starting place, which Nathalie Santer got. At the 1995 biathlon world championships in her home town of Antholz, the Italian was able to compete in a major event again. In the individual she reached the 41st place and missed the pursuit race as 61st in the sprint for one place. With Nathalie Santer, Monika Schwingshackl and Petra Trocker , she also reached 17th place with the relay. In 1996 in Ruhpolding the places 51 in the individual, 43 in the sprint and with Santer, Trocker and Silvia Petris the 15th place with the relay were added, in which Pallhuber acted as the starting runner. In Osrblie , Pallhuber competed in four races at the 1997 Biathlon World Championships : she finished 28th in the individual, was 33rd in the sprint, was 17th in the relay race with Santer, Petris and Manuela Casagrande and with Casagrande, Petris and Manuela Piller Roner 16. in the team race. At the end of the 1997/98 season , the Italian won the first World Cup points as 19th of an individual in Hochfilzen . It was also her best placement in the highest racing series in biathlon.

Pallhuber also missed the Olympic Games in 1998 because there was again only one place for an Italian starter, which was again taken by Nathalie Santer. It was not until 1999 that she took part again in an international championship at the world championships in Kontiolahti and finished 61st in the sprint, which means she again missed the pursuit race by just one place. At the end of the season, she took part in two races of the Biathlon European Cup in Champex-Lac and won both the individual and the sprint race, albeit with a weak cast. In 2000 Pallhuber was able to again achieve 19th place in a World Cup race in a sprint in Antholz. This was followed by participation in the Biathlon World Championships 2000 at Holmenkollen in Oslo . In the individual the Italian ran to 48th place, in the sprint she was 37th and in the pursuit race she improved to 32nd place. The 2001 Biathlon World Championships in Pokljuka were somewhat less successful, where she finished 75th in the individual, came 46th in the sprint, finished the pursuit race in 50th and was eighth in the relay race with Michela Ponza Sakia and Nathalie Santer. With this line-up, she also achieved her best result in a World Cup relay race in Ruhpolding in 2001 and was fifth with Italy. At the 2001 Military World Ski Championships in Jericho , the Italian came seventh in the sprint race. For 2002 Pallhuber was able to qualify for the second time for the Olympic Winter Games. In Salt Lake City she was used in the sprint race, in which she finished 68th. It ran for a season after the Olympic Games, the climax of which was the 2003 European Biathlon Championships in Forni Avoltri . In the continental title fights, Pallhuber was 30th in the individual, 22nd in the sprint, 23rd in the pursuit and with Romina Demetz , Katja Haller and Leda Abati as the starting runner eighth in the relay competition. After the season she ended her active career.

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
placement singles sprint persecution Mass start team Season total
1st place  
2nd place  
3rd place  
Top 10 9 9
Scoring 1 2 1 16 20th
Starts 35 56 12   1 17th 121
Status : End of career, data may not be complete

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