Zoltán Tagscherer

Zoltán Tagscherer ( born May 13, 1976 in Budapest) is a Hungarian biathlete and cross-country skiers. Between 1997 and 2008 he participated in both sports at 14 Olympic Winter Games and World Championships.

Zoltán Tagscherer lives like his brother Imre Tagscherer in Budapest. Biathlon he operates since 1985. 1991 he was appointed to the national team of Hungary. He starts for the Vasas SC and is trained by Jozsef Kovács, Miklós and Zoltán Holló Rosivall.

Tagscherer debuted in 1997 with a sprint race in Oberhof Biathlon World Cup and took that ranking 69th only once as 60th in the sprint in Antholz he could improve his placement. The first Biathlon World Championships where Tagscherer were attended also played in Osrblie 1997. Like a year later at Holmenkollen in Oslo, he started only in singles. 2000 in Oslo, 2003 in Khanty- Mansiysk, 2004 in Oberhof, 2005 in Hochfilzen, 2007 in Antholz, and 2008 in Östersund, he started in singles and Sprint, but never managed to qualify for the pursuit race. The best results achieved by the Hungarian in 1999 as 79th in singles and in 2003 as a single - 80th and 78th in the sprint.

In addition to the biathlon started Tagscherer since 2001 also increased in cross-country skiing. After just a few races in the FIS Continental Cup and he was nominated for the 2001 Nordic World Ski Championships in Lahti and took that ranking 69 in the race over 15 kilometers, ranking 39 in the sprint race. In Furtwangen he could win a FIS Sprint in January 2002. At the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City Tagscherer 66 was about 15 km and 39 in the sprint. In the Cross Country World Cup, the Hungarian first appeared at the start of the 2002/ 03 in Dusseldorf and was 59th in the sprint. In Val di Fiemme he started in 2003 as in 2005 in Oberstdorf and 2007 in Sapporo at Nordic World Ski Championships. Only in Sapporo Tagscherer in the team sprint was with his brother beat the sprint result from Lahti and was 18 in 2006, he started for the second time in the Olympics. In Pragelato he was 76 about 15 km and 44 in the sprint. In the World Cup he ran until February 2007, only sprint races. In his only start about 15 km in Changchun, he finished 30th place and won for the first time a World Cup point.

Biathlon World Cup rankings

The table shows all placements (depending on the year, including hosting the Olympic Games and World Championships ).

Cross Country World Cup rankings

The table shows the achieved placings in detail.

  • Place 1st-3rd. Number of podiums
  • Top 10: Number of placings in the top ten
  • Points ranking: number of placements within the points positions
  • Start: Number overflowed race in the respective discipline
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