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Pernilla Wiberg

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Club
  
Norrkopings SK

Name
  
Pernilla Wiberg

Retired
  
March 2002

Teams
  
5 – (1991-2001)

Spouse
  
Bodvar Bjerke


Teams
  
4 – (1992-2002)

Height
  
1.61 m

Website
  
pernilla-wiberg.com

Role
  
Alpine ski racer

Pernilla Wiberg Pernilla Wiberg Rosa Kokboken

Disciplines
  
Downhill, Super G,Giant Slalom, Slalom,Combined

Born
  
15 October 1970 (age 53) Norrkoping, Sweden (
1970-10-15
)

World Cup debut
  
13 March 1990 – (age 19)

Olympic medals
  
Alpine Skiing at the 1998 Winter Olympics -Women's Downhill

Similar People
  
Anja Parson, Katja Seizinger, Anita Wachter, Vreni Schneider, Petra Kronberger

Children
  
Sofia Bjerke, Axel Bjerke

Pernilla wiberg the highest point of a career in sport words of olympians


Pernilla Wiberg (born 15 October 1970) is a Swedish former alpine ski racer and businesswoman, She competed on the World Cup circuit between 1990 and 2002, where she became one of the few all-event winners. Having won two Olympic gold medals, four World Championships and one World Cup overall title, she is one of the most successful alpine ski racers of the 1990s. On club level, she represented Norrköpings SK. She was born in Norrköping.

Contents

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Career

Pernilla Wiberg 59 Pernilla Wiberg Agendasttarna

After competing without much success in two junior world championships in 1987 and 1988, Wiberg got her international breakthrough in the early 1990s. In her World Cup debut in Vemdalen, Sweden, on 13 March 1990, she finished 5th in slalom, and five days later she finished 3rd in giant slalom in Åre. In the following season of 1991, she claimed three World Cup victories and a giant slalom gold medal at the 1991 World Championships in Saalbach. Her Alpine World Championship gold was the first for a Scandinavian woman in 33 years. Until the end of her career in 2002, Wiberg won an additional 21 World Cup races, earning her a total of 24 World Cup race victories, including at least one victory in each of the five different alpine disciplines. In five World Championships she won six medals: four gold, one silver, and one bronze.

Pernilla Wiberg Pernilla Wiberg klar fr quotMstarnas mstarequot TV

Her finest season was in 1996-1997 when she won ten World Cup races and took the overall, slalom, and combined titles. She dethroned the previous years World Cup Overall winner Katja Seizinger by over 500 points. In the slalom discipline she was incredibly dominant with 5 wins, 2 silvers, 1 bronze, and 1 4th in 9 World Cup slalom races. She won her first ever World Cup downhill in the World Cup finale weekend, making her one of the first women ever to win World Cup races in all 5 disciplines. She also led the World Cup Super G standings until the final race, and needed only a 5th-place finish in the Super G on World Cup finale weekend (with Gerg's 2nd-place finish) to secure the season Super G title. Unfortunately on pace for a 2nd or 3rd-place finish and to easily reach this, she went off course, losing the season Super G crystal globe to Gerg.

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Today, Wiberg comments alpine skiing for Sveriges Television.

Olympics

Pernilla Wiberg Pernilla Wiberg pernillawiberg Twitter

Wiberg won the giant slalom gold in the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville and the combination gold medal in 1994 at Lillehammer. At both of these Olympics, Wiberg was the most successful Swedish athlete. In 1998 in Nagano, she won the downhill silver medal; Wiberg holds this achievement to be the best of her career. In her final Olympics in 2002 at age 31, she failed to reach the top ten and finished 14th in downhill and 12th in super-G. The Olympic super-G was to be her final international race, as she announced her retirement a few weeks later, following surgery on her knees.

Awards

In 1991, Wiberg was awarded the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal. The jury's motivation was: "For the sensational giant slalom victory in the World Championships, secured through a bold and skillful second leg." The same year, 1991, she was awarded Jerringpriset, an award she received again the following year.

International Olympic Committee

Wiberg was elected a member of the International Olympic Committee in 2002 and served an eight-year mandate until 2010. She was a member of the following commissions: Athletes’ (2002-), Sport and Environment (2002), Ethics (2003-), Coordination for the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver in 2010 (2003-), Nominations (2003-). On 2 September 2008, IOC announced that Wiberg would chair a commission appointed by the president of IOC, Jacques Rogge. The commission would analyse the projects of the shortlisted cities candidating for 1st Winter Youth Olympic Games.

Activism

Pernilla is today a member of the ‘Champions for Peace’ club, a group of 54 famous elite athletes committed to serving peace in the world through sport, created by Peace and Sport, a Monaco-based international organization.

Personal life

Together with her husband Bødvar Bjerke, Wiberg has two children; Axel (b. 2003) and Sofia (b. 2007). Since 1995, she lives in Monaco.

As a businesswoman she owns and runs the Pernilla Wiberg Hotel at Idre Fjäll in Dalarna, Sweden.

Season titles

5 titles (1 overall, 1 slalom, 3 combined)

Race victories

24 race victories (2 downhill, 3 super G, 2 giant slalom, 14 slalom, 3 combined)

References

Pernilla Wiberg Wikipedia