Sven Fischer

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Medal record
Sven Fischer, Oberhof, 2003
Sven Fischer, Oberhof, 2003
Competitor for Flag of Germany Germany
Men's biathlon
Winter Olympics
Gold 2006 Turin 10 km sprint
Bronze 2006 Turin 12.5 km pursuit
Gold 2006 Turin 4×7.5 km relay
Silver 2002 Salt Lake City 10 km sprint
Silver 2002 Salt Lake City 4×7.5 km relay
Gold 1998 Nagano 4×7.5 km relay
Bronze 1994 Lillehammer 20 km individual
Gold 1994 Lillehammer 4×7.5 km relay

Sven Fischer (born April 16, 1971) is a former German biathlete. He trained with the WSV Oberhof club, and was coached by Frank Ullrich and Fritz Fischer (national coaches) and Klaus Siebert (club coach). After the 2006/07 biathlon season, he retired.[1]

Contents

[edit] Background

Fischer, who stands at 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) and weighs 85 kg (190 lb), was born in Schmalkalden, Thuringia (former East Germany). His apparent talents for athletics was discovered early and already in third grade he was training three times a week in the BSG Werkzeugkombinat sports club. In the fifth grade, he became district champion of his age class.

In September 1983, the boarding school Kinder- und Jugendsportschule (KJS) accepted him on a biathlon youth scholarship. After his exam in 1989, he joined the army studying to become a sports teacher. The German reunification and the fall of the Berlin wall and subsequent unification of the East and West German armies, forced him to leave the military in 1990.

He instead started training for international sport events, but in 1989, when Fischer was eighteen, he had problems with both his kneecaps after a growth spurt as a youth: "I grew too fast and didn't stretch well."[cite this quote] As a result he sat out the whole of the 1989 season and thought he might have to retire from the sport at his young age. However, in the 1990 season when he came back he found that he had become more powerful than before his injury, and in December 1990, he celebrated his first European cup victory in sprint in Hochfilzen. One week later he participated in his first world cup relay. He was soon rewarded B–status and because of success in the German Championship in 1992 he qualified for the world cup in Pokljuka in December 1992.

In 1993, he won a World Championship gold medal in the 10 km Team in Borowetz, Bulgaria, and a world cup race, in sprint, in Kontiolahti, Finland. In 1994, he won the Olympic bronze medal in the 20 km individual.

Since then Sven Fischer has been an integral part of the German biathlon team.

Fischer has eight biathlon victories at the Holmenkollen ski festival, three in individual (1995, 1999, 2004), two in sprint (1995, 1999), two in pursuit (2002, 2004), and one in mass start (2001).

[edit] Present day

Fischer has won the World Cup on two occasions (1996/97 and 1998/99), he's also come second twice (1993/94 and 2004/05), and third three times (1995/96, 1997/98, and 1999/2000). In the 2004/05 season Fischer lost the World Cup by only eleven points, which he most probably would have earned had he competed in the final race of the year, but he missed it because of a cold.

In the Olympics, Fischer has won four gold medals, one of them in the sprint in 2006 Winter Olympics, and the other three in the relay (1994, 1998, and 2006). He also has won two silver, and two bronze.

In the World Championships, Fischer has amassed six gold medals, four silver, and six bronze. Four of his gold medals are in the relay, he has one from the individual, and one from the mass start. In the sprint he has one of his silver medals (Hochfilzen 2005). He has three bronze from the pursuit (Kontiolahti 1999, Pokljuka 2001, and Hochfilzen 2005). In the mass start he has one gold (Oslo Holmenkollen 1999), two silver (Khanty-Mansiysk 2003 and Hochfilzen 2005), and one bronze (Pokljuka 2001). His remaining silver and two bronze came in the relay (silver in Ruhpolding 1996, bronzes in Borovetz 1993 and Lahti 2000).

[edit] Trivia

  • Fischer never wears gloves or a hat, owing it to his childhood where he would cut trees down in the winters with no hat or gloves. This somewhat macho statement possibly cost him the overall World Cup title in the 2004/2005 season, where Fischer missed the last race through a cold and ended up losing the overall World Cup to Ole Einar Bjørndalen by 11 points.
  • Fischer and his wife Doreen have a daughter named Emilia Sophie (b. 2004) and a son named Johann Alfred (b. 2007). He also has a sister named Andrea, and his brother-in-law is the great ex-biathlete Frank Luck.
  • When not in competition or training he works for Fiege WDZ as a clerk.
  • He can speak German, Norwegian, English and some Russian.
  • In the summer of 2003 Fischer and the rest of the German team recorded a song for the World Championships called "We are on the top".

[edit] Olympic Winter Games

Games Individual Sprint Pursuit Relay
1994 Winter Olympics Bronze 7th - Gold
1998 Winter Olympics 14th 29th - Gold
2002 Winter Olympics 29th Silver 12th Silver
2006 Winter Olympics 17th Gold - Gold

[edit] World Championships

Event Individual Sprint Pursuit Mass Start Team Relay
1993 Borowetz DNS 20th - - Gold Bronze
1995 Antholz DNS 26th - - 14th Gold
1996 Ruhpolding 22nd 19th - - 6th Silver
1997 Osrblie 5th 24th 22nd - - Gold
1998 Pokljuka - - 4th - Silver -
1999 Kontiolahti Gold 7th Bronze Gold - 4th
2000 Oslo 19th 40th 13th 13th - Bronze
2001 Pokljuka 11th 5th Bronze Bronze - 12th
2002 Oslo - - - Silver - -
2003 Khanty Mansiysk 12th 11th 22nd Silver - Gold
2004 Oberhof 16th 8th 23rd 11th - Gold
2005 Hochfilzen Silver Bronze 4th Silver - 6th
2007 Antholz 20th 43rd 17th 5th - Bronze

[edit] References

  1. ^ Schwarzbach, Stefan. "The end of an exceptional career: Sven Fischer retires", International Biathlon Union, 2007-05-07. 

[edit] External links