Hanna Öberg: Swedish Female Biathlete Olympic Gold Medalist And World Champion Reveal Her Success Story

By | September 25, 2020
Hanna Öberg
Photo Credits: Per Danielsson

Hanna Öberg is a Swedish female biathlete. In 2017 she won the IBU Female Rookie of the Year Award for her World Cup debut season. At the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympics she won gold in the Individual, after four clean shootings. She also claimed silver in the Relay. At the 2019 Biathlon World Championships on home snow in Östersund, where she again won the individual with a perfect shoot. She became the first female biathlete to win the individual World Championship title the year after taking the Olympic individual gold.

She was awarded the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal in early-December 2018 and the Jerring Award in January 2019. In June 2019, it was announced she had been awarded the Victoria Award.

Women Fitness President Ms. Namita Nayyar had a candid interview with Hanna Öberg, Swedish female biathlete, she is Olympic Gold Medalist and World Champion where she talks about her workout, hair & skin care secrets and about her exceptional achievements in the sporting world.

Namita Nayyar:

You are the first female biathlete to win the individual World Championship title the year after taking the Olympic individual gold. Walk us through your spectacular journey and share what appeals to you the most about the sport? Also, when did it all began that you wanted to take up this sport as a career option?

Hanna Öberg
Photo Credits: Swedmount
Hanna Oberg:

I’ve always done sports. I got my first cross-country skis on my two year birthday so skiing has always been part of my life. Besides from skiing have I also did other sports as little such as soccer, track and field and orienteering before I found biathlon at the age of 10. I continued doing several sports until I started in Gymnasium (High School) were I chose Biathlon as alignment. Therefore I also moved 400km away from home at the age of 15. It was an easy choice for me at the time; I knew this was what I wanted to do. I went four years at the Gymnasium and developed pretty much during those years, mostly I learned a bit of what it takes to become a world-class athlete through attending international competitions such as Junior World Championships.

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By the time I was in my last year at the school I got taken in to the Swedish National Team in Biathlon. This was huge for me then. To have the opportunity to take part in camps with the best biathletes in Sweden was very inspiring and the progress continued. The year after that I’d graduated school Wolfgang Pichler came in as a coach for the Swedish team. In biathlon he is a real legend, known as a devils coach because of his insane training programs. During my first year of Wolfgangs training I developed most of my values from our physical tests with between 15-20%, that’s extra ordinary! This was my last winter as a junior and at my last Junior World Championships in 2016 I took two gold medals and a silver medal becoming the most successful Swedish junior until then.

Moving up as a senior the next winter I did my first whole World Cup season which was very instructive with pretty varied results. My best results were 5th and 7th but I also had some results outside of top 60. I did my first World Championships in 2017 without any special results. Then the 17/18 season came, with the big goal of PyeongChang 2018 Olympics. Before the Olympics I’d had a difficult season with a lot of sickness and missed races but when I finally came to Korea I was in really good shape, both physically and mentally. In the initial races I was 5th and 7th, equally with the best I’ve ever done before, but I knew that I could perform even better. In the Individual I put up a perfect race. I hit 20/20 shots on the range and I skied faster than never done before resulting in a shocking Olympic Champion title. I mean, I’d never even been on the podium in a World Cup before. It was an unreal feeling and situation for me.

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Coming in to the World Championships in Östersund 2019 I’d had a good season with some podium places so the focus and expectations on me from the surroundings and media was much higher than the year before. I learnt that a championship on home soil is a special thing. Before the individual competition was I number 4 in the sprint less than a second behind bronze and number 5 in the pursuit. I’d had some good chances to medal before this, for me, very special competition. If it was a special feeling winning the Olympic gold, this world champion title was also very special but in a different way. For me personally it was bigger to win the second gold. To be able to bring home a gold medal to the home crowd in front of friends and family and accomplish this once again perfect race with 20/20. I remember thinking, coming in to the last shooting, let’s show who the Olympic Champion is.

Full Interview is Continued on Next Page

This interview is exclusive and taken by Namita Nayyar President womenfitness.net and should not be reproduced, copied or hosted in part or full anywhere without an express permission.

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