Michael Greis
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Personal information |
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Full name |
Michael Greis |
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Nickname(s) |
Michi |
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Born |
(1976-08-18) 18 August 1976 Füssen, Germany |
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Height |
1.77 m (5 ft 10 in) |
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Professional information |
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Sport |
Biathlon |
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Club |
SK Nesselwang |
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World Cup debut |
28 February 2001 |
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Retired |
5 December 2012 |
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Olympic Games |
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Teams |
3 (2002, 2006, 2010) |
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Medals |
3 (3 gold) |
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World Championships |
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Teams |
9 (2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012) |
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Medals |
12 (3 gold) |
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World Cup |
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Seasons |
13 (2000/01–2012/13) |
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Individual wins |
11 |
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All wins |
21 |
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Individual podiums |
34 |
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All podiums |
64 |
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Overall titles |
1 (2006–07) |
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Discipline titles |
4: 3 Individual (2004–05, 2005–06, 2008–09); 1 Sprint (2006–07); |
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Updated on 5 December 2012. |
Michael Greis (born 18 August 1976 in Füssen, Bavaria) is a German retired triple Olympic gold medalist in biathlon.
Greis first competed at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, finishing 15th and 16th in the 10 km sprint and 12.5 km pursuit events in the biathlon.
Greis won the World Cup in the individual category in 2004/05, and was a member of the winning 4 × 7.5 km relay team in the 2004 Biathlon World Championships, and took silver in the individual 20 km category at the 2005 World Championships.
At the 2006 Winter Olympics, Greis came into the games heading the World Cup standings and took the first Olympic gold of the games with victory in the individual 20 km ahead of the defending Olympic champion Ole Einar Bjørndalen. He was also a member of the German team that won the 4 × 7.5 km relay.
On 25 February 2006 Greis won the men's 15 km event and became the first person to capture three gold medals at the Turin Olympic Games. (Koreans Jin Sun-Yu and Ahn Hyun Soo became the second and third later on the same day with victories in short track speed skating.)
Greis was named German sportsman of the year, along with fellow biathlete Kati Wilhelm, by journalists.[1]
In the 2006/07 World Cup season, Greis won the Overall and the Sprint competition.
In the 2007/08 World Cup season Greis managed onto the podium on a regular basis, attaining three victories, three 2nd places as well as three 3rds. At the season's World Champs in Östersund Greis did not participate in the sprint and in the pursuit but being anchor both in the men's Relay and the mixed Relay, helped to secure a gold and a bronze for his team.
Prior to the 2008/09 World Cup season Greis had had a serious disagreement with the Germans' head coach Frank Ullrich the reason being Ullrich's authoritative management of the team, which resulted in Greis' departure from Ullrich's jurisdiction to train on his own. This yielded him quite a solid performance throughout the year, with another two World Cup victories and the relay bronze at the Biathlon World Championships 2009 in South Korea.
Greis participated in the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver, Canada which turned to be a disappointing performance for his fans as he finished in the mediocre 10th place twice, in the Individual and the Mass Start, along with coming 5th in the relay and the pursuit, adding to a streak of unsuccessful Olympic performances by the German biathlon male team when not a single German managed to win any medal in biathlon for the first time in the Olympic history. Greis retired after competing in Östersund in November 2012.
Achievements
- Winter Olympics
- 2006 3 × Gold (Individual, Mass Start, Relay)
- Biathlon World Championships
- 2004 1 × Gold (Relay)
- 2005 1 × Silver (Individual), 1 × Bronze (Mixed relay)
- 2007 1 × Gold (Mass start), 1 × Silver (Individual), 1 × Bronze (Men's relay)
- 2008 1 × Gold (Mixed relay)
- 2009 2 × Bronze (Mixed relay, Men's relay)
References
External links
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- 1968: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Nikolay Puzanov, Viktor Mamatov, Vladimir Gundartsev)
- 1972: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Rinnat Safin, Ivan Byakov, Viktor Mamatov)
- 1976: Soviet Union (Aleksandr Yelizarov, Ivan Byakov, Alexander Tikhonov, Nikolay Kruglov)
- 1980: Soviet Union (Vladimir Alikin, Alexander Tikhonov, Vladimir Barnachov, Anatoly Alyabyev)
- 1984: Soviet Union (Dmitri Vasilyev, Juri Kashkarov, Algimantas Šalna, Sergei Bulygin)
- 1988: Soviet Union (Dmitri Vasilyev, Sergey Tchepikov, Alexander Popov, Valery Medvedtsev)
- 1992: Germany (Ricco Groß, Jens Steinigen, Mark Kirchner, Fritz Fischer)
- 1994: Germany (Ricco Groß, Frank Luck, Mark Kirchner, Sven Fischer)
- 1998: Germany (Ricco Groß, Peter Sendel, Sven Fischer, Frank Luck)
- 2002: Norway (Halvard Hanevold, Frode Andresen, Egil Gjelland, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
- 2006: Germany (Sven Fischer, Michael Greis, Ricco Groß, Michael Rösch)
- 2010: Norway (Halvard Hanevold, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
- 2014: Russia (Alexey Volkov, Evgeny Ustyugov, Dmitry Malyshko, Anton Shipulin)
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- 1966: Norway (Jon Istad, Ragnar Tveiten, Ivar Nordkild, Olav Jordet)
- 1967: Norway (Jon Istad, Ragnar Tveiten, Ola Wærhaug, Olav Jordet)
- 1969: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Viktor Mamatov, Rinnat Safin, Vladimir Gundartsev)
- 1970: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Viktor Mamatov, Rinnat Safin, Alexander Ushakov)
- 1971: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Viktor Mamatov, Rinnat Safin, Nikolay Muzhytov)
- 1973: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Rinnat Safin, Yuriy Kolmakov, Gennady Kovalyev)
- 1974: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Alexander Ushakov, Nikolay Kruglov, Yuriy Kolmakov)
- 1975: Finland (Carl-Henrik Flöjt, Simo Halonen, Juhani Suutarinen, Heikki Ikola)
- 1977: Soviet Union (Alexander Tikhonov, Alexander Yelizarov, Alexander Ushakov, Nikolay Kruglov)
- 1978: East Germany (Manfred Beer, Frank Ullrich, Klaus Siebert, Eberhard Rösch)
- 1979: East Germany (Manfred Beer, Klaus Siebert, Frank Ullrich, Eberhard Rösch)
- 1981: East Germany (Mathias Jung, Matthias Jacob, Frank Ullrich, Eberhard Rösch)
- 1982: East Germany (Frank Ullrich, Mathias Jung, Matthias Jacob, Bernd Hellmich)
- 1983: Soviet Union (Algimantas Šalna, Juri Kashkarov, Petr Miloradov, Sergei Bulygin)
- 1985: Soviet Union (Juri Kashkarov, Algimantas Šalna, Sergei Bulygin, Andrei Zenkov)
- 1986: Soviet Union (Juri Kashkarov, Dmitri Vasilyev, Valery Medvedtsev, Sergei Bulygin)
- 1987: East Germany (Frank-Peter Roetsch, Matthias Jacob, André Sehmisch, Jürgen Wirth)
- 1989: East Germany (Frank Luck, André Sehmisch, Birk Anders, Frank-Peter Roetsch)
- 1990: Italy (Pieralberto Carrara, Wilfried Pallhuber, Johann Passler, Andreas Zingerle)
- 1991: Germany (Ricco Groß, Frank Luck, Mark Kirchner, Fritz Fischer)
- 1993: Italy (Wilfried Pallhuber, Johann Passler, Pieralberto Carrara, Andreas Zingerle)
- 1995: Germany (Ricco Groß, Mark Kirchner, Frank Luck, Sven Fischer)
- 1996: Russia (Viktor Maigourov, Vladimir Dratchev, Sergey Tarasov, Alexei Kobelev)
- 1997: Germany (Ricco Groß, Peter Sendel, Sven Fischer, Frank Luck)
- 1999: Belarus (Alexei Aidarov, Petr Ivashko, Vadim Sashurin, Oleg Ryzhenkov)
- 2000: Russia (Viktor Maigourov, Sergei Rozhkov, Vladimir Dratchev, Pavel Rostovtsev)
- 2001: France (Gilles Marguet, Vincent Defrasne, Julien Robert, Raphaël Poirée)
- 2003: Germany (Peter Sendel, Sven Fischer, Ricco Groß, Frank Luck)
- 2004: Germany (Frank Luck, Ricco Groß, Sven Fischer, Michael Greis)
- 2005: Norway (Halvard Hanevold, Stian Eckhoff, Egil Gjelland, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
- 2007: Russia (Ivan Tcherezov, Maxim Tchoudov, Dmitri Yaroshenko, Nikolay Kruglov, Jr.)
- 2008: Russia (Ivan Tcherezov, Nikolay Kruglov, Jr., Dmitri Yaroshenko, Maxim Tchoudov)
- 2009: Norway (Emil Hegle Svendsen, Lars Berger, Halvard Hanevold, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
- 2011: Norway (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Alexander Os, Emil Hegle Svendsen, Tarjei Bø)
- 2012: Norway (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Rune Brattsveen, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen)
- 2013: Norway (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen)
- 2015: Germany (Erik Lesser, Daniel Böhm, Arnd Peiffer, Simon Schempp)
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| 4 × 7.5 km | |
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| 2 × 6 km, 2 × 7.5 km |
- 2007: Sweden (Helena Jonsson, Anna Carin Olofsson, Björn Ferry, Carl Johan Bergman)
- 2008: Germany (Sabrina Buchholz, Magdalena Neuner, Andreas Birnbacher, Michael Greis)
- 2009: France (Marie-Laure Brunet, Sylvie Becaert, Vincent Defrasne, Simon Fourcade)
- 2010: Germany (Simone Hauswald, Magdalena Neuner, Simon Schempp, Arnd Peiffer)
- 2011: Norway (Tora Berger, Ann Kristin Aafedt Flatland, Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Tarjei Bø)
- 2012: Norway (Tora Berger, Synnøve Solemdal, Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Emil Hegle Svendsen)
- 2013: Norway (Tora Berger, Synnøve Solemdal, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen)
- 2015: Czech Republic (Veronika Vítková, Gabriela Soukalová, Michal Šlesingr, Ondřej Moravec)
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