Simone Hauswald
Simone Hauswald |
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Full name |
Simone Hye-Soon Denkinger |
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Born |
(1979-05-03) May 3, 1979 Rottweil, West Germany |
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Height |
1.69 m (5 ft 7 in) |
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Ski club |
SC Gosheim |
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World Cup career |
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Seasons |
2000-2010 |
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Individual wins |
7 |
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Indiv. podiums |
16 |
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Updated on March 21, 2010. |
Simone Hye-Soon Hauswald (born Simone Hye-Soon Denkinger, May 3, 1979, in Rottweil) is a former German biathlete and Winter Olympics bronze medalist. In 2008, she won her first single World Cup Race. Hauswald retired after the 2009–10 season.[1]
Biography
Hauswald was born to a German father and Korean mother. As a teenager she trained at the Skiinternat Furtwangen, an alpine sports training facility in Furtwangen im Schwarzwald, and met her coach and future husband, former skier Steffen Hauswald.[2] The couple have twin daughters.
Career highlights
- IBU World Championships
- 2003, Khanty-Mansiysk, 03 ! 3rd at team relay (with Disl / Wilhelm / Glagow)
- 2004, Oberhof, 03 ! 3rd at team relay (with Glagow / Apel / Wilhelm)
- 2009, Pyeongchang, 02 ! 2nd at sprint
- 2009, Pyeongchang, 03 ! 3rd at mixed relay
- IBU World Junior Championships
- 1998, Jericho, 01 ! 1st at individual race
- 1998, Jericho, 8th at sprint
- 1999, Pokljuka, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Flatscher / Glagow)
- 1999, Pokljuka, 02 ! 2nd at individual race
- World Cup
- 2002, Östersund, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Apel / Disl / Wilhelm)
- 2002, Pokljuka, 02 ! 2nd at team relay (with Glagow / Henkel / K. Beer)
- 2002, Osrblie, 02 ! 2nd at team relay (with Glagow / K. Beer / Wilhelm)
- 2003, Antholz, 02 ! 2nd at team relay (with Disl / R. Beer / Wilhelm)
- 2004, Ruhpolding, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Disl / Apel / Wilhelm)
- 2005, Antholz, 03 ! 3rd at pursuit
- 2005, Khanty-Mansiysk, 03 ! 3rd at sprint
- 2005, Hochfilzen, 03 ! 3rd at team relay (with Glagow / Apel / Wilhelm)
- 2006, Ruhpolding, 02 ! 2nd at team relay (with Glagow / Henkel / Apel)
- 2007, Ruhpolding, 02 ! 2nd at team relay (with Hitzer / Neuner / Wilhelm)
- 2007, Kontiolahti, 03 ! 3rd at individual race
- 2007, Hochfilzen, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Glagow / Henkel / Wilhelm)
- 2007-08, Oberhof, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Henkel / Hitzer / Wilhelm)
- 2008, Hochfilzen, 01 ! 1st at sprint
- 2008, Hochfilzen, 03 ! 3rd at pursuit
- 2008, Hochfilzen, 03 ! 3rd at individual race
- 2009, Vancouver-Whistler 01 ! 1st at individual race
- 2009, Trondheim, 02 ! 2nd at mass start
- 2009, Khanty-Mansiysk, 02 ! 2nd at sprint
- 2009, Khanty-Mansiysk 01 ! 1st at mass start
- World Military Championships
- 2004, Östersund, 02 ! 2nd at team patrol (with Künzel / Apel / Wilhelm)
- European Championships
- 2000, Zakopane, 03 ! 3rd at individual race
- 2000, Zakopane, 03 ! 3rd at team relay (with Wagenführ / Klein / Wilhelm)
- 2001, Haute Maurienne, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with K. Beer / Flatscher / Menzel)
- 2001, Haute Maurienne, 02 ! 2nd at sprint
- 2002, Kontiolahti, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Menzel / Klein / Buchholz)
- European Cup
- 2005, Ridnaun-Val Ridanna, 01 ! 1st at pursuit
- 2005, Ridnaun-Val Ridanna, 01 ! 1st at team relay (with Niziak / Ertl / Buchholz)
- 2005, Ridnaun-Val Ridanna, 01 ! 1st at sprint
Season titles
Season |
Discipline |
2010 | Sprint |
Race victories
7 race victories
(3 Sprint, 2 Mass Start, 1 Individual, 1 Pursuit)
References
External links
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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)
- 2016: France (Anaïs Bescond, Marie Dorin Habert, Quentin Fillon Maillet, Martin Fourcade)
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