Elina Pienimäki-Hietamäki

(Redirected from Elina Pienimäki)

Elina Pienimäki-Hietamäki (born 20 July 1976) is a Finnish cross-country skier. She competed at the 2002 Winter Olympics and the 2006 Winter Olympics.[1]

Elina Pienimäki-Hietamäki
Born (1976-07-20) 20 July 1976 (age 47)
Oulu, Finland
Ski clubTampereen Pyrintö
World Cup career
Seasons11 – (19952004, 2006)
Starts69
Podiums2
Wins0
Overall titles0 – (19th in 2004)
Discipline titles0
Medal record
Women's cross-country skiing
Representing  Finland
Junior World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1996 Asiago 4 × 5 km relay

Cross-country skiing results edit

All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).[2]

Olympic Games edit

 Year   Age   10 km   15 km   Pursuit   30 km   Sprint   4 × 5 km 
 relay 
 Team 
 sprint 
2002 25 40 14
2006 29 33 42

World Championships edit

 Year   Age   5 km   15 km   Pursuit   30 km   Sprint   4 × 5 km 
 relay 
2001 24 CNX[a] 8
2003 26 23 19
a. 1 Cancelled due to extremely cold weather.

World Cup edit

Season standings edit

 Season   Age 
Overall Distance Long Distance Middle Distance Sprint
1995 18 NC
1996 19 NC
1997 20 NC NC NC
1998 21 NC NC
1999 22 51 NC 23
2000 23 49 NC NC 31
2001 24 31 10
2002 25 33 12
2003 26 37 25
2004 27 19 62 5
2006 28 74 64 64

Individual podiums edit

  • 2 podiums – (2 WC)
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place
1 2003–04 26 February 2004   Drammen, Norway 1.2 km Sprint C World Cup 3rd
2 12 March 2004   Pragelato, Italy 1.0 km Sprint F World Cup 3rd

Team podiums edit

  • 2 podiums – (1 RL, 1 TS)
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place Teammate(s)
1 2002–03 19 January 2003   Nové Město, Czech Republic 4 × 5 km Relay C/F World Cup 3rd Välimaa / Saarinen / Varis
2 2003–04 6 March 2004   Lahti, Finland 6 × 1.0 km Team Sprint C World Cup 2nd Manninen

References edit

  1. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Elina Pienimäki-Hietamäki Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
  2. ^ "HIETAMAEKI-PIENIMAEKI Elina". FIS-Ski. International Ski Federation. Retrieved 19 December 2019.

External links edit