A Quote by Hermann Maier

It was necessary to organize my career to remain at the top level until Salt Lake City. — © Hermann Maier
It was necessary to organize my career to remain at the top level until Salt Lake City.
I planned to stop in 2002 after the Salt Lake City Olympics. I felt able to remain competitive another four years, and I wanted to stop while I'm still at the top.
It's always good to be back in Salt Lake City.
I live in Salt Lake City, and I don't have a lot of gay friends.
I love Salt Lake City. It's beautiful with all the great outdoors around you.
I had an agent in Salt Lake City, but acting was more like a hobby.
I left Montana in Spring of 1866, for Utah, arriving at Salt Lake city during the summer.
I began skating when I was 3. It was during 2002, the year the Olympics were held in Salt Lake City.
As a professional, you want to get as much as you can out of your career, play at the top level, and win trophies. Playing with top players at Manchester City, I've got a great chance of doing that, and I just want to keep improving.
We have fewer troops in Afghanistan than we had law enforcement [officers] at the Olympics in Salt Lake City.
When I got to Salt Lake City, in the summer of 2010 - I know it's a cliche, but man, it's the truth: I was just a kid.
Most of my family is still active in the Mormon Church. They live in Utah and Provo and Orem and Salt Lake City.
Yesterday the flame of the Olympic torch was carried through our great state on its way to Salt Lake City.
I think my heart breaks daily living in Salt Lake City, Utah. But I still love it. And that is the richness, the texture.
Salt Lake City gave me a lot of surprises. How progressive the city actually is, for instance, compared to the rest of Utah - it's like this purple dot in a sea of red. And the government there is kind of a mix of conservative values and progressive ideas.
Presidents and presidential assassins are like Las Vegas and Salt Lake City. Even though one city is all about sin and the other is all about salvation, they are identical, one-dimensional company towns built up by the sheer will of true believers.
I worked for Union Pacific. I started out as a conductor at an intermodal switching facility outside of Salt Lake City. We'd pull in trains from all over the country, break them apart, consolidate the freight, and build other trains. It was great until I screwed up and took a management position. Then it became no fun very quickly.
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