ATHLETE

Rainer Schmidt

1948 - Today

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Rainer Schmidt (born 1 August 1948 in Langewiesen, Thuringia) is an East German former ski jumper who competed from 1972 to 1976. He won the bronze medal in the individual large hill competition at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. Schmidt won the Four Hills Tournament in 1973 and earned a silver medal at the FIS Ski-Flying World Championships in 1975. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Rainer Schmidt is the 2,271st most popular athlete (down from 2,127th in 2019), the 5,674th most popular biography from Germany (down from 5,650th in 2019) and the 222nd most popular German Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Rainer Schmidt ranks 2,271 out of 6,025Before him are Brigitte Wujak, Katrin Krabbe, Lesley Ashburner, Spyridon Belokas, Pertti Purhonen, and Rod Milburn. After him are Valentina Nikonova, Aldo Ghira, Arto Härkönen, Edward Ferry, Sven Fischer, and Jack Pierce.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1948, Rainer Schmidt ranks 696Before him are Susan Bernard, Mick Rock, Howard Dean, Juan José Muñante, Karel Neffe, and Horacio López Salgado. After him are Hilarion Kapral, Nina Rocheva, Kristina Hautala, Trevor Brooking, Antonio Biosca, and Lester Bangs.

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Rainer Schmidt ranks 5,677 out of 7,253Before him are Alex Christensen (1967), André Lotterer (1981), Jürgen Vogel (1968), Stephan Engels (1960), Brigitte Wujak (1955), and Katrin Krabbe (1969). After him are Nicolas Kiefer (1977), Pascal Groß (1991), Sven Fischer (1971), Peter Broeker (1926), Rudolf Kargus (1952), and Rainer Schüttler (1976).

Among ATHLETES In Germany

Among athletes born in Germany, Rainer Schmidt ranks 222Before him are Manfred Germar (1935), Ulrike Bruns (1953), Jochen Schümann (1954), Christine Scheiblich (1954), Brigitte Wujak (1955), and Katrin Krabbe (1969). After him are Sven Fischer (1971), Walter Mahlendorf (1935), Christine Laser (1951), Franz-Peter Hofmeister (1951), Katrin Dörre-Heinig (1961), and Joachim Mattern (1948).