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Tiril Eckhoff

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norwegian biathlete (born 1990)

Tiril Eckhoff
Personal information
Full nameTiril Kampenhaug Eckhoff
NationalityNorwegian
Born (1990-05-21)21 May 1990 (age 35)
Height1.63 m (5 ft 4 in)
Weight59 kg (130 lb)
Sport
Professional information
SportBiathlon
ClubFossum IF
World Cup debut2011
Olympic Games
Teams3 (2014,2018,2022)
Medals8 (2 gold)
World Championships
Teams5 (20152021)
Medals15 (10 gold)
World Cup
Seasons13 (2010/2011-2022/2023)
All races286
Individual victories28
All victories50
Individual podiums48
All podiums87
Overall titles1 (2020–21)
Discipline titles3:
1 Sprint (2020–21)
2 Pursuit (2019–20, 2020–21)

Tiril Kampenhaug Eckhoff (born 21 May 1990) is a Norwegian formerbiathlete.

Eckhoff is a two-time Olympic champion, winning the mixed relay at the2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and2022 Winter Olympics, and also won abronze in the mass start, a feat she repeated at the2018 Winter Olympics. Eckhoff is also a ten-time gold medalist at theBiathlon World Championships, winning gold in the7.5 km sprint at theBiathlon World Championships 2016, and both the7.5 km sprint and10 km pursuit at theBiathlon World Championships 2021.[1] She is the sister of fellow biathleteStian Eckhoff.[2]

Career

[edit]

Eckhoff has been part of the Norwegian biathlon team since 2008.[3]

Eckhoff competed inBiathlon at the 2014 Winter Olympics inSochi, where she won 3 medals.[1] Bronze in themass start[4] and in thewomen's relay[5] and gold in themixed relay together withTora Berger,Ole Einar Bjørndalen andEmil Hegle Svendsen.[6] She is the sister of former biathleteStian Eckhoff and studied engineering at theNorwegian Institute of Technology.[3][7]

In 2016, she became World Champion on 7.5  km sprint in her home arena, Holmenkollen, in Norway. She was also part of the Norwegian team who took the bronze medal in the mixed relay and played an instrumental part in the Norwegian women's relay gold medal, shooting 10/10 as the third skier.

In the 19–20 season, she won seven World Cup races, but she finished second in the Overall, behindDorothea Wierer. She won her first-ever discipline title in pursuit.

In the 20–21 season, she won 4 gold and took 6 medals in 7 races during theBiathlon World Championships 2021. Later in the season, she won the2020–21 World Cup overall title, winning the most races in a season sinceMagdalena Forsberg. She also won the discipline title in sprint and pursuit, becoming the first male or female biathlete to win seven consecutive races in a discipline (sprint competition).

She was awarded theHolmenkollen Medal in 2022.[8]

Eckhoff did not participate in the2022–23 Biathlon World Cup due to health issues. On March 15, 2023, she announced through her social media that she will not return to competing.[9]

Biathlon results

[edit]

All results are sourced from theInternational Biathlon Union.

Olympic Games

[edit]

8 medals (2 gold, 3 silver, 3 bronze)

YearIndividualSprintPursuitMass startRelayMixed relay
Russia2014 Sochi18th18th24thBronzeSilverGold
South Korea2018 Pyeongchang23rd24th9thBronze4thSilver
China2022 Beijing22nd11thBronzeSilver4thGold
*The mixed relay was added as an event in 2014.

World Championships

[edit]

15 medals (10 gold, 2 silver, 3 bronze)

YearIndividualSprintPursuitMass startRelayMixed relaySingle mixed relay
Finland2015 Kontiolahti52nd19th18th16th5thBronze
Norway2016 Oslo43rdGold17th24thGoldBronze
Austria2017 Hochfilzen39th13th30th12th11th8th
Sweden2019 Östersund37th9thSilver[10]5thGold[11]Gold[12]
Italy2020 Antholz-Anterselva15th59th[13]20th7thGoldGold[14]
Slovenia2021 Pokljuka23rdGoldGoldBronzeGoldGoldSilver
*During Olympic seasons competitions are only held for those events not included in the Olympic program.
**The single mixed relay was added as an event in 2019.

World Cup

[edit]
SeasonAgeOverallIndividualSprintPursuitMass start
PointsPositionPointsPositionPointsPositionPointsPositionPointsPosition
2011–12217454th1763rd2156th3634th
2012–132229929th12728th9828th7425th
2013–14235667th5610th1879th2365th878th
2014–15245988th4124th3076th12320th12714th
2015–162554411th6314th15820th18910th13410th
2016–172656611th272nd2776th16816th11912th
2017–182729723rd1939th13016th9029th5827th
2018–192851713th6414th15320th17610th12315th
2019–20297862nd6115th2833rd2321st2102nd
2020–213011391st4127th4201st3601st1725th
2021–223155511th4113th2567th15813th10011th

World cup Individual Victories

[edit]
  • 29 victories – (14 Sp, 11 Pu, 3 MS, 1 In)
No.SeasonDateLocationRaceLevel
12014/156 December 2014SwedenÖstersund, Sweden 7.5 km Sprint World Cup
22015/165 March 2016NorwayOslo Holmenkollen, Norway7.5 km SprintWorld Championships
32016/1710 March 2017FinlandKontiolahti, Finland7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
419 March 2017NorwayOslo Holmenkollen, Norway12.5 km Mass StartWorld Cup
52017/1818 January 2018ItalyAntholz, Italy7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
62018/197 February 2019CanadaCanmore, Canada12.5 km Short IndividualWorld Cup
72019/2015 December 2019AustriaHochfilzen, Austria10 km PursuitWorld Cup
820 December 2019FranceLe Grand-Bornand, France7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
921 December 2019FranceLe Grand-Bornand, France10 km PursuitWorld Cup
1022 December 2019FranceLe Grand-Bornand, France12.5 km Mass StartWorld Cup
1115 January 2020GermanyRuhpolding, Germany7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
1219 January 2020GermanyRuhpolding, Germany10 km PursuitWorld Cup
138 March 2020Czech RepublicNové Město, Czech Republic12.5 km Mass StartWorld Cup
142020/216 December 2020FinlandKontiolahti, Finland10 km PursuitWorld Cup
1518 December 2020AustriaHochfilzen, Austria7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
1619 December 2020AustriaHochfilzen, Austria10 km PursuitWorld Cup
178 January 2021GermanyOberhof, Germany7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
189 January 2021GermanyOberhof, Germany10 km PursuitWorld Cup
1914 January 2021GermanyOberhof, Germany7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
2013 February 2021SloveniaPokljuka, Slovenia7.5 km SprintWorld Championships
2114 February 2021SloveniaPokljuka, Slovenia10 km PursuitWorld Championships
226 March 2021Czech RepublicNové Město, Czech Republic7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
237 March 2021Czech RepublicNové Město, Czech Republic10 km PursuitWorld Cup
2412 March 2021Czech RepublicNové Město, Czech Republic7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
2513 March 2021Czech RepublicNové Město, Czech Republic10 km PursuitWorld Cup
2619 March 2021SwedenÖstersund, Sweden7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
272021/226 March 2022FinlandKontiolahti, Finland10 km PursuitWorld Cup
2818 March 2022NorwayOslo Holmenkollen, Norway7.5 km SprintWorld Cup
2919 March 2022NorwayOslo Holmenkollen, Norway10 km PursuitWorld Cup

References

[edit]
  1. ^abTiril Eckhoff IBU. Retrieved 12 December 2014
  2. ^"Norwegian Women: Eckhoffs Lead the Way".International Biathlon Union. 18 November 2014. Archived fromthe original on 16 December 2014. Retrieved12 December 2014.
  3. ^abTiril Eckhoff Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 27 January 2014
  4. ^IBU – Women Mass Start Sochi 2014 IBU. Retrieved 6 March 2014
  5. ^IBU – Women Relay Sochi 2014 IBU. Retrieved 6 March 2014
  6. ^IBU – Mixed Relay Sochi 2014 IBU. Retrieved 6 March 2014
  7. ^Eckhoff droppet studiene for å bli bedreArchived 19 March 2014 at theWayback MachineAftenposten. Retrieved 27 January 2014(in Norwegian)
  8. ^Bryhn, Rolf; Sundby, Jørn."Holmenkollmedaljen". In Bolstad, Erik (ed.).Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Norsk nettleksikon. Retrieved22 October 2022.
  9. ^March 15, 2023, Tiril Eckhoff (@tirileckhoff), retrieved25 March 2022
  10. ^"IBU World Championships Biathlon, Women 10 km Pursuit Competition, 2018/2019".International Biathlon Union – IBU. Retrieved16 March 2019.
  11. ^"IBU World Championships Biathlon, Women 4x6 km Relay Competition, 2018/2019".International Biathlon Union – IBU. Retrieved16 March 2019.
  12. ^"IBU World Championships Biathlon, 2x6+2x7.5 Mixed Relay (W-M), 2018/2019".International Biathlon Union – IBU. Retrieved16 March 2019.
  13. ^"ANTHOLZ - ANTERSELVA"(PDF).ibu.blob.core.windows.net. 14 February 2020. Retrieved30 October 2025.
  14. ^"ANTHOLZ - ANTERSELVA"(PDF).ibu.blob.core.windows.net. 13 February 2020. Retrieved30 October 2025.

External links

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2 × 6 km + 2 × 7.5 km
4 × 6 km
5 km
7.5 km
3 × 5 km
3 × 7.5 km
4 × 7.5 km
4 × 6 km
4 × 7.5 km
2 × 6 km +
2 × 7.5 km
4 × 6 km
Biathlon World Cup champions – women's overall
Until 1900
1900–1950
1951–2000
Since 2001
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