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Martina Beck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German biathlete
Martina Beck

Martina Beck in Antholz (2006)
Medal record
Women'sbiathlon
Representing Germany
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place2006 Turin15 km individual
Silver medal – second place2006 Turin10 km pursuit
Silver medal – second place2006 Turin4 × 6 km relay
Bronze medal – third place2010 Vancouver4 × 6 km relay
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2003 Khanty-Mansiysk10 km pursuit
Gold medal – first place2007 Antholz-Anterselva4 × 6 km relay
Gold medal – first place2008 Östersund4 × 6 km relay
Silver medal – second place2001 Pokljuka12.5 km mass start
Silver medal – second place2004 Oberhof10 km pursuit
Silver medal – second place2007 Antholz-Anterselva12.5 km mass start
Silver medal – second place2008 Östersund15 km individual
Silver medal – second place2009 Pyeongchang4 × 6 km relay
Bronze medal – third place2003 Khanty-Mansiysk4 × 6 km relay
Bronze medal – third place2004 Oberhof7.5 km sprint
Bronze medal – third place2004 Oberhof4 × 6 km relay
Bronze medal – third place2007 Antholz-Anterselva15 km individual
Junior World Championships
Gold medal – first place1998 Jericho/ValcartierRelay
Gold medal – first place1999 Pokljuka7.5 km sprint
Gold medal – first place1999 Pokljuka10 km pursuit
Gold medal – first place1999 Pokljuka3 × 7.5 km relay
Silver medal – second place1997 Forni Avoltri7.5 km sprint
Silver medal – second place1997 Forni Avoltri3 × 7.5 km relay
Silver medal – second place1998 Jericho/ValcartierTeam
Bronze medal – third place1997 Forni Avoltri7.5 km team
Bronze medal – third place1998 Jericho/ValcartierSprint

Martina "Molly" Beck (bornMartina Glagow; 21 September 1979 inGarmisch-Partenkirchen,West Germany) is a retiredGerman biathlete. She now lives inMittenwald inBavaria. She was most successful in the 2002–03 season, when she was the first German to win the women's overallBiathlon World Cup. She is also a three-times world champion and three-times Olympic silver medalist.

She married theAustrian biathlete Günther Beck on 24 July 2008 and is now known as Martina Beck. She has one daughter named Hilde (born 1 April 2011).[1]

Career

[edit]

Beck's father, Martin Glagow, is a former army officer and ski technician: he waxed Martina's skis until the end of the 2004–05 season, and was also a wax technician for the British biathlon team from 2000 until his retirement in 2011.[2][3] Although Beck stands only 1.58 m (5 ft 2 in) tall, she was a strong skier, but was renowned for hershooting ability: she was regularly among the female athletes with the highest accuracy rate, leading the shooting statistics in the 2003–04 season with a rate of 89 percent.[4] Her father attributed her shooting ability to family inheritance: he had won multiple divisional shooting championships, and he noted that his father was also a good marksman.[2]

She became a member of the German World Cup team in 2000, when she impressed by winning an event in her first year and even finished third in the mass start World Cup standings. Later, she became the first German biathlete to win the women'sBiathlon World Cup in the 2002–03 season, alongside the pursuit World Cup; in 2005–06, she finished third in the overall standings and won the mass start standings. In 2007–08, she was the best biathlete in the individual discipline. As of 17 March 2008, she has won a total of 12 individual world cup events.

During the2006 Winter Olympics inTurin, Beck won three silver medals: one in the sprint competition, one in the pursuit, and one in the relay. At world championships, she has won a total of eleven medals: she was World Champion thrice, in 2003 in the pursuit (together withSandrine Bailly) and in 2007 and 2008 in the relay.

Beck retired from the sport after the2009–10 season.[5]

Achievements

[edit]
  • Winter Olympics:
    • 2006: 3 × Silver (Individual, Pursuit, Relay)
    • 2010: 1 × Bronze (Relay)
  • Biathlon World Championships:
    • 2001: 1 × silver (mass start)
    • 2003: 1 × gold (pursuit), 1 × bronze (relay)
    • 2004: 1 × silver (pursuit), 2 × bronze (sprint, relay)
    • 2007: 1 × gold (relay), 1 × silver (mass start), 1 × bronze (individual)
    • 2008: 1 × gold (relay), 1 × silver (individual)
  • Biathlon World Cup overall:
    • 1 × overall World Cup winner (2002/03), 1 × World Cup pursuit winner (2002/03), 1 × World Cup individual winner (2007/08)
  • Biathlon World Cup victories:
    • 14 (as of: 7 December 2008)
  • Holmenkollen ski festival victories
    • Three (as of 2006) - 2003 (pursuit), 2004 (individual), and 2006 (sprint)

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Martina Glagow hat geheiratet" (in German). Biathlon-online.de. 2008-07-26. Archived fromthe original on August 8, 2008. Retrieved2008-12-06.
  2. ^abKokesh, Jerry (16 December 2008)."British Wax Tech Martin Glagow" (Press release).International Biathlon Union. Archived fromthe original on 28 March 2016. Retrieved2015-12-28.
  3. ^"News: Season 2010 - 11".British Biathlon Union. Archived fromthe original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved28 December 2015.
  4. ^"Biathlon Statistics Database". International Biathlon Union. Archived fromthe original on 2008-03-06. Retrieved2008-03-17.
  5. ^Kokesh, Jerry (21 November 2010)."New-Look German Team Aiming for the Top".Biathlonworld. International Biathlon Union. Archived fromthe original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved25 December 2014.

External links

[edit]
Biathletes
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Women
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Biathlon World Cup champions – women's overall
International
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