Tobias Schiegl
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's luge | ||
Representing Austria | ||
World Championships | ||
1996 Altenberg | Men's doubles | |
1996 Altenberg | Mixed team | |
1997 Igls | Men's doubles | |
1997 Igls | Mixed team | |
1999 Königssee | Mixed team | |
1993 Calgary | Mixed team | |
1999 Königssee | Men's doubles | |
2003 Sigulda | Men's doubles | |
2007 Igls | Men's doubles | |
2008 Oberhof | Mixed team | |
1995 Lillehammer | Mixed team | |
2000 St. Moritz | Mixed team | |
2001 Calgary | Men's doubles | |
2008 Oberhof | Men's doubles | |
European Championships | ||
1996 Sigulda | Mixed team | |
2002 Altenberg | Men's doubles | |
1994 Königssee | Mixed team | |
1998 Oberhof | Men's doubles | |
1998 Oberhof | Mixed team | |
2000 Winterberg | Men's doubles | |
2002 Altenberg | Mixed team | |
2010 Sigulda | Men's doubles |
Tobias Schiegl (born 5 October 1973 in Kufstein) is an Austrian former luger who competed from 1993 to 2010. He won fourteen medals at the FIL World Luge Championships with five golds (Men's doubles: 1996, 1997; Mixed team: 1996,1997, 1999), five silvers (Men's doubles: 1999, 2003, 2007; Mixed team: 1993, 2008), and four bronzes (Men's doubles: 2001, 2008; Mixed team: 1995, 2000). He competes in doubles with his older cousin Markus.
Schiegl also won eight medals at the FIL European Luge Championships with two silvers (Men's doubles: 2002; Mixed team: 1996) and six bronzes (Men's doubles: 1998, 2000, 2010; Mixed team: 1994, 1998, 2002).
Competing in five Winter Olympics, his best finish in the men's doubles event was fourth twice (1998 and 2006).[1]
Schiegl's best overall Luge World Cup finish was second in men's doubles twice (1993–94, 1998–99).
After his career as an athlete, Schiegl will become a coach in Austria's Luge Federation.
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Tobias Schiegl Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
Sources
- FIL-Luge profile at the Wayback Machine (archived 10 February 2012)
- Hickok sports information on World champions in luge and skeleton.
- List of European luge champions (in German)
- List of men's doubles luge World Cup champions since 1978.
- Schiegl/Schiegl erklären Rücktritt at the Fédération Internationale de Luge de Course (12 October 2010 article accessed 19 October 2010.)
External links
- Tobias Schiegl at the International Luge Federation (archive)
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- 1955: Austria (Hans Krausner & Josef Thaler)
- 1957–58: West Germany (Fritz Nachmann & Josef Strillinger)
- 1960: Austria (Reinhold Frosch & Ewald Walch)
- 1961: Italy (Roman Pichler & Enrico Prinoth)
- 1962: Italy (Giovanni Graber & Giampaolo Ambrosi)
- 1963: Poland (Ryszard Pędrak-Janowicz & Lucjan Kudzia)
- 1965: East Germany (Wolfgang Scheidel & Thomas Köhler)
- 1967: East Germany (Klaus Bonsack & Thomas Köhler)
- 1969–70: Austria (Manfred Schmid & Ewald Walch)
- 1971: Italy (Paul Hildgartner & Walter Plaikner)
- 1973: East Germany (Horst Hörnlein & Reinhard Bredow)
- 1974: East Germany (Bernd Hahn & Ulrich Hahn)
- 1975–77: East Germany (Hans Rinn & Norbert Hahn)
- 1978: Soviet Union (Dainis Bremze & Aigars Kriķis)
- 1979: West Germany (Hans Brandner & Balthasar Schwarm)
- 1981: East Germany (Bernd Hahn & Ulrich Hahn)
- 1983–87: East Germany (Jörg Hoffmann & Jochen Pietzsch)
- 1989: East Germany (Stefan Krauße & Jan Behrendt)
- 1990: Italy (Hansjörg Raffl & Norbert Huber)
- 1991–95: Germany (Stefan Krauße & Jan Behrendt)
- 1996–97: Austria (Tobias Schiegl & Markus Schiegl)
- 1999–2000: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2001: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2003: Austria (Andreas Linger & Wolfgang Linger)
- 2004: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2005: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2007: Germany (Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch)
- 2008: Germany (André Florschütz & Torsten Wustlich)
- 2009: Italy (Gerhard Plankensteiner & Oswald Haselrieder)
- 2011–12: Austria (Andreas Linger & Wolfgang Linger)
- 2013–16: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt)
- 2017–23: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
- 2024: Austria (Juri Gatt & Riccardo Schöpf)
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