SKIER

Olga Pall

1947 - Today

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Olga Scartezzini-Pall (born 3 December 1947) is a former alpine skier from Austria. At the 1968 Winter Olympics of Grenoble she won the downhill event. In addition to the Olympic gold, Pall had two World Cup victories during her career, both in the downhill discipline. Pall retired from competitions at the end of the 1969–70 season and later worked as a physiotherapist with the Austrian Olympic ski team at the 1980 and 1984 Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Olga Pall is the 147th most popular skier (up from 151st in 2019), the 1,015th most popular biography from Austria (up from 1,016th in 2019) and the 19th most popular Austrian Skier.

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Among SKIERS

Among skiers, Olga Pall ranks 147 out of 817Before her are Miran Tepeš, Ossi Reichert, Edy Reinalter, Annie Famose, Rauno Miettinen, and Blanca Fernández Ochoa. After her are Johann Mühlegg, Andrus Veerpalu, Jari Puikkonen, Anette Bøe, Aksel Lund Svindal, and Didier Cuche.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1947, Olga Pall ranks 711Before her are Denis Lawson, John Varley, Otto Stuppacher, Mustapha Choukri, Clodagh Rodgers, and Eddie Thomson. After her are Antti Kalliomäki, Giulio Tremonti, Nicanor de Carvalho, Emiliano Mondonico, Bilal Philips, and Randy Edelman.

Others Born in 1947

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In Austria

Among people born in Austria, Olga Pall ranks 1,015 out of 1,424Before her are Friedrich Maurer (1912), Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn (1909), Ute Bock (1942), Otto Stuppacher (1947), Michael Konsel (1962), and Franz Berghammer (1913). After her are Stefan Skoumal (1909), Thomas Brezina (1963), Barbara Schett (1976), Roland Hattenberger (1948), Ludwig Schuberth (1911), and Walter Slezak (1902).

Among SKIERS In Austria

Among skiers born in Austria, Olga Pall ranks 19Before her are Erik Schinegger (1948), Heinrich Messner (1939), Otto Leodolter (1936), Franz Gabl (1921), Josef Stiegler (1937), and Ernst Hinterseer (1932). After her are Marcel Hirscher (1989), Anderl Molterer (1931), Andreas Goldberger (1972), Traudl Hecher (1943), Reinhold Bachler (1944), and Ernst Vettori (1964).