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German Nordic combined skier
Fabian Rießle |
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Country | Germany |
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Born | (1990-12-18) 18 December 1990 (age 33) Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany |
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Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) |
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Ski club | SZ Breitnau |
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Seasons | 2009–2024 |
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Starts | 209 |
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Podiums | 53 |
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Wins | 9 |
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Fabian Rießle (also spelled Riessle, born 18 December 1990) is a German former nordic combined skier.[1]
At the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi he won the bronze medal in the individual large hill/10 km competition. He became 9th in the ski jumping and started 56 seconds behind the leader, teammate Eric Frenzel. Rießle joined the leading group by mid-distance, and at the finish line became third.[2] Six days earlier, in the individual normal hill/10 km event he finished 8th. On 20 March 2014, Rießle together with Björn Kircheisen, Johannes Rydzek, and Eric Frenzel won the silver medal in the team event.
At the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang he won the silver medal in the individual large hill/10 km competition. On 22 February 2018, Rießle together with Vinzenz Geiger, Eric Frenzel, and Johannes Rydzek won the gold medal in the team event.
Individual victories
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3 x 10 km | |
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4 x 5 km |
- 1998: Halldor Skard, Kenneth Braaten, Bjarte Engen Vik, Fred Børre Lundberg (NOR)
- 2002: Jari Mantila, Hannu Manninen, Jaakko Tallus, Samppa Lajunen (FIN)
- 2006: Michael Gruber, Christoph Bieler, Felix Gottwald, Mario Stecher (AUT)
- 2010: Bernhard Gruber, David Kreiner, Felix Gottwald, Mario Stecher (AUT)
- 2014: Magnus Moan, Magnus Krog, Jørgen Graabak, Håvard Klemetsen (NOR)
- 2018: Vinzenz Geiger, Fabian Rießle, Eric Frenzel, Johannes Rydzek (GER)
- 2022: Espen Andersen, Espen Bjørnstad, Jørgen Graabak, Jens Lurås Oftebro (NOR)
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3 × 10 km |
- 1982: East Germany
- 1984: Norway
- 1985: West Germany
- 1987: West Germany
- 1989: Norway
- 1991: Austria
- 1993: Japan
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4 × 5 km |
- 1995: Japan
- 1997: Norway
- 1999: Finland
- 2001: Norway
- 2003: Austria
- 2005: Norway
- 2007: Finland
- 2009: Japan
- 2011 (normal hill): Austria
- 2013 (normal hill): France
- 2015 (normal hill): Germany
- 2017 (normal hill): Germany
- 2019 (normal hill): Norway
- 2021 (normal hill): Norway
- 2023 (large hill): Norway
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2 x 7.5 km |
- 2013: France
- 2015: France
- 2017: Germany
- 2019: Germany
- 2021: Austria
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