Adolf Wiklund (biathlete)
Adolf Wiklund | ||||||||||||||||||
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||
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Birth name | Adolf Jakob Wiklund | |||||||||||||||||
Born | 19 December 1921 Bodum, Sweden | |||||||||||||||||
Died | 21 September 1970 (aged 48) Frösön, Sweden | |||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Biathlon | |||||||||||||||||
Club | F4 IF, Östersund | |||||||||||||||||
Retired | 1961 | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Adolf Jakob Wiklund (19 December 1921 – 21 September 1970) was a Swedish biathlon competitor who won two world championship titles in 1958, individual (20 km) and with a team. He competed at the 1960 Winter Olympics and finished 19th.[1][2]
He was elected for the Swedish Biathlon Hall of Fame in September 2013.[3]
Career
Wiklund initially began his cross-country skiing career in 1948, having previously worked as a flight technician at a military airfield. At the first biathlon world championships in Saalfelden in 1958, he won the 20 km distance and was the first biathlon world champion. He also won a gold medal with the still unofficially held relay. A year later, he won a silver medal in Courmayeur with the still unofficial relay behind the team from the Soviet Union and finished 9th in the individual over 20 km.
At the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, he finished 19th and retired the following year.
Personal life
Wiklund, who lived in Frösön, practiced various sports and he was also a good football player and a good cross-country and steeplechase runner.
References
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- 1958: Adolf Wiklund
- 1959: Vladimir Melanin
- 1961: Kalevi Huuskonen
- 1962: Vladimir Melanin
- 1963: Vladimir Melanin
- 1965: Olav Jordet
- 1966: Jon Istad
- 1967: Viktor Mamatov
- 1969: Alexander Tikhonov
- 1970: Alexander Tikhonov
- 1971: Dieter Speer
- 1973: Alexander Tikhonov
- 1974: Juhani Suutarinen
- 1975: Heikki Ikola
- 1977: Heikki Ikola
- 1978: Odd Lirhus
- 1979: Klaus Siebert
- 1981: Heikki Ikola
- 1982: Frank Ullrich
- 1983: Frank Ullrich
- 1985: Juri Kashkarov
- 1986: Valeriy Medvedtsev
- 1987: Frank-Peter Roetsch
- 1989: Eirik Kvalfoss
- 1990: Valeriy Medvedtsev
- 1991: Mark Kirchner
- 1993: Andreas Zingerle
- 1995: Tomasz Sikora
- 1996: Sergei Tarasov
- 1997: Ricco Groß
- 1999: Sven Fischer
- 2000: Wolfgang Rottmann
- 2001: Paavo Puurunen
- 2003: Halvard Hanevold
- 2004: Raphaël Poirée
- 2005: Roman Dostál
- 2007: Raphaël Poirée
- 2008: Emil Hegle Svendsen
- 2009: Ole Einar Bjørndalen
- 2011: Tarjei Bø
- 2012: Jakov Fak
- 2013: Martin Fourcade
- 2015: Martin Fourcade
- 2016: Martin Fourcade
- 2017: Lowell Bailey
- 2019: Arnd Peiffer
- 2020: Martin Fourcade
- 2021: Sturla Holm Lægreid
- 2023: Johannes Thingnes Bø
- 2024: Johannes Thingnes Bø
This Swedish biographical article relating to biathlon is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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