Jens Byggmark

Jens Byggmark
 Alpine skier 

Byggmark in January 2008
Disciplines Slalom
Club Tärna IK Fjällvinden
Born (1985-08-22) 22 August 1985
Örebro, Sweden
World Cup debut 23 January 2005
(age 19)
Website www.jensbyggmark.se
Olympics
Teams 1 – (2010)
Medals 0
World Championships
Teams 4 – (200713)
Medals 3 (0 gold)
World Cup
Seasons 9th – (200715)
Wins 2 – (2 SL)
Podiums 8 – (8 SL)
Overall titles 0 – (15th in 2007)
Discipline titles 0 – (3rd in SL: 2007)

Jens Byggmark (born 22 August 1985) is a World Cup alpine ski racer from Sweden,[1] who specialises in the technical events of slalom and giant slalom.

Byggmark was born in Örebro but was raised in Tärnaby. He races for Tärna IK Fjällvinden, the world's most successful ski club. He made his debut in the European Cup in 2005. He has a daughter, Livia Celine Byggmark, together with his girlfriend Mikaela Delér.

FIS World Cup

Byggmark made his World Cup debut in 2005, and has won two slalom events, both during the 2007 season, on successive days at Kitzbühel, Austria. Two days later, he placed second in the slalom at Schladming, Austria.

After having struggled for some years with poor results and bad starting positions, Byggmark made a strong comeback during the 2011 season and for two seasons he had a place in the first start group. In September 2013, however, he suffered a knee injury, hindering him to compete during the winter 2013/14, including that season's Olympic Games.


World Cup results

Season standings[2]

Season Age Overall Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined
2007 21 15 3 49 33
2008 22 30 10 45 28
2009 23 94 35 41
2010 24 102 36
2011 25 46 16
2012 26 36 9
2013 27 25 8
2014 28
2015 29 59 19

World Cup podiums

Season Date Location Discipline Place
2007 27 Jan 2007Kitzbühel, AustriaSlalom1st
28 Jan 2007 Slalom 1st
30 Jan 2007Schladming, AustriaSlalom2nd
2008 9 Dec 2007Bad Kleinkirchheim, Austria Slalom 2nd
12 Jan 2008Wengen, SwitzerlandSlalom2nd
20 Jan 2008Kitzbühel, AustriaSlalom2nd
2013 11 Nov 2012Levi, FinlandSlalom 3rd
2015 22 Dec 2014Madonna di Campiglio, ItalySlalom 3rd

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.