From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from
Andreas Widhoelzl)
Andreas Widhölzl (born October 14, 1976 in St. Johann in Tirol) is an Austrian ski jumper who competed from 1997 to 2008. He has three children: Jana, Noah and Elea.
[edit] Results
- 1997/98
- 3rd place World Cup overall
- Olympic bronze medals in the individual normal hill and the team large hill events.
- 1998/99
- 1999/2000
- 2001/02
- 4th place World Cup overall
- 2002/03
- 3rd place World cup overall
- 2003/04
- Bronze medal in the team event at the Ski flying World Championship
- 2004/05
- 2005/06
- Silver at the Ski flying World Championships
[edit] References
- This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.
|
Olympic champions in men's ski jumping team large hill |
|
1988: Finland ( Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Matti Nykänen, Tuomo Ylipulli, & Jari Puikkonen) * 1992: Finland ( Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Mika Laitinen, Risto Laakkonen, & Toni Nieminen) * 1994: Germany ( Hansjörg Jäkle, Christof Duffner, Dieter Thoma, & Jens Weissflog) * 1998: Japan ( Takanobu Okabe, Hiroya Saito, Masahiko Harada, & Kazuyoshi Funaki) * 2002: Germany ( Sven Hannawald, Stephan Hocke, Michael Uhrmann, & Martin Schmitt) * 2006: Austria ( Andreas Widhölzl, Andreas Kofler, Martin Koch, & Thomas Morgenstern)
|
|
|
World champions in men's ski jumping team large hill |
|
1982: Norway ( Johan Sætre, Per Bergerud, Ole Bremseth & Olav Hansson) * 1984: Finland ( Markku Pusenius, Pentti Kokkonen, Jari Puikkonen & Matti Nykänen) * 1985: Finland ( Tuomo Ylipulli, Pentti Kokkonen, Matti Nykänen & Jari Puikkonen) * 1987: Finland ( Matti Nykänen, Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Tuomo Ylipulli & Pekka Suorsa) * 1989: Finland ( Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Jari Puikkonen, Matti Nykänen & Risto Laakkonen) * 1991: Austria ( Heinz Kuttin, Ernst Vettori Stefan Horngacher & Andreas Felder) * 1993: Norway ( Bjørn Myrbakken, Helge Brendryen, Øyvind Berg & Espen Bredesen) * 1995: Finland ( Jani Soininen, Janne Ahonen, Mika Laitinen & Ari-Pekka Nikkola) * 1997: Finland ( Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Jani Soininen, Mika Laitinen & Janne Ahonen) * 1999: Germany ( Sven Hannawald, Christof Duffner, Dieter Thoma & Martin Schmitt) * 2001: Germany ( Sven Hannawald, Michael Uhrmann, Alexander Herr & Martin Schmitt) * 2003: Finland ( Janne Ahonen, Tami Kiuru, Arttu Lappi & Matti Hautamäki) * 2005: Austria ( Wolfgang Loitzl, Andreas Widhölzl, Thomas Morgenstern & Martin Höllwarth) * 2007: Austria ( Wolfgang Loitzl, Gregor Schlierenzauer, Andreas Kofler & Thomas Morgenstern) * 2009: Austria ( Wolfgang Loitzl, Martin Koch, Thomas Morgenstern & Gregor Schlierenzauer)
|
|