Hansjörg Raffl
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Luge | ||
1994 Lillehammer | Men's doubles | |
1992 Albertville | Men's doubles | |
World Championships | ||
1989 Winterberg | Mixed team | |
1990 Calgary | Men's doubles | |
1983 Lake Placid | Men's doubles | |
1989 Winterberg | Men's doubles | |
1990 Calgary | Mixed team | |
1993 Calgary | Men's doubles | |
1991 Winterberg | Men's doubles | |
1991 Winterberg | Mixed team | |
1993 Calgary | Mixed team | |
European Championships | ||
1992 Winterberg | Men's doubles | |
1994 Königssee | Men's doubles | |
1988 Königssee | Men's doubles | |
1990 Igls | Men's doubles | |
1984 Olang | Men's doubles | |
1986 Hammarstrand | Men's doubles | |
1988 Königssee | Mixed team | |
1990 Igls | Mixed team | |
1992 Winterberg | Mixed team |
Hansjörg Raffl (born 29 January 1958 in Olang) is an Italian former luger who competed from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s. Competing in five Winter Olympics, he won two medals in the men's doubles event with a silver in 1994 and a bronze in 1992.
Raffl also won nine medals at the FIL World Luge Championships with two gold (Men's doubles: 1990, Mixed team: 1989), four silvers (1983, 1989, 1993; Mixed team: 1990), and three bronzes (Men's doubles: 1991, Mixed team: 1991, 1993).
He also won nine medals in the FIL European Luge Championships with two gold (Men's doubles: 1992, 1994), two silvers (Men's doubles: 1988, 1990), and five bronzes (Men's doubles: 1984, 1986; Mixed team: 1988, 1990, 1992).[1]
Raffll also won 26 World Cup races and eight World Cup overall men's doubles titles (1982-3, 1984-5, 1985-6, 1988-9, 1989–90, 1990-1, 1991-2, 1992-3). His best World Cup overall finish in the men's singles was second in 1978-9.
References
- ^ "List of European luge champions". Eiskanal (in German). Archived from the original on 2008-03-25. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- 1980 luge men's doubles results
- 1984 luge men's doubles results
- 1988 luge men's singles results
- 1992 luge men's doubles results
- 1994 luge men's doubles results
- DatabaseOlympics.com information on Raffl at the Wayback Machine (archived 2007-08-24)
- Fuzilogik Sports - Winter Olympic results - Men's luge at the Wayback Machine (archived 2010-02-21)
- Hickoksports.com results on Olympic champions in luge and skeleton. at the Wayback Machine (archived 2007-06-30)
- Hickok sports information on World champions in luge and skeleton. at archive.today (archived 2012-12-04)
- List of men's doubles luge World Cup champions since 1978. at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-06)
- List of men's singles luge World Cup champions since 1978. at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-06)
- v
- t
- e
- 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)