Men's pursuit at the XXI Olympic Winter Games | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Whistler Olympic Park | ||||||||||||
Date | February 16 | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 60 from 24 nations | ||||||||||||
Winning time | 33:38.4 | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Biathlon at the 2010 Winter Olympics | ||
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Individual | men | women |
Sprint | men | women |
Pursuit | men | women |
Mass start | men | women |
Relay | men | women |
The men's pursuit competition in biathlon at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia on February 16, 2010. It was won by Swedish athlete Björn Ferry, after both Ferry and second place finisher Christoph Sumann of Austria successfully pursued and overtook the leader at the start of the race, France's Vincent Jay.
The pursuit takes place over a distance of 12.5 km (8 mi). The start of the competition was marred by irregularities in how officials released athletes at the beginning of their runs. In pursuit competitions, athlete's start times are staggered by the differences in their times in a previous sprint, in this case the 10km sprint event held on February 14. Thus, officials need to release athletes to begin the event at exact times. Athletes in both the men's and women's pursuit competitions were started earlier and later than their appropriate times, resulting in a number of complaints from coaches and athletes. Officials attempted to correct the errors by making alterations in the final times of competitors. Nonetheless, media reports cited the incident as embarrassing for the International Biathlon Union. Norbert Baier, the chief technical delegate from the IBU at the Games and the official responsible for ensuring that the rules were implemented correctly by officials, called it, "the worst day of my career." [1]
Following the sprint, Vincent Jay of France led the field and started first. Jay would continue to set the pace throughout much of the race. Björn Ferry of Sweden, who started the race in 8th place more than a minute behind Jay, pushed hard through much of the race and finally overtook Jay in the final lap. Following Ferry, Austrian Christoph Sumann also overtook Jay and won the silver medal. Jay held on to third place, beating his closest opponent by less than three seconds at the finish line, and securing the bronze medal. Ferry's victory was the first Olympic biathlon gold medal won by a Swedish athlete in 50 years. [2] Norwegian competitors Emil Hegle Svendsen and Ole Einar Bjørndalen, a five-time Olympic champion, were expected to do well before the race but failed to live up to those expectations. Svendsen missed four shooting targets and Bjørndalen finished nearly a minute behind Ferry. [2]
Observers and participants reported that several starter errors occurred during the race start. Competitors Jeremy Teela and Jean-Philippe Leguellec were started too early, before racers who were seeded higher than them. Teela stated that the early start threw-off his strategy, contributing to his missing two targets in his first two shooting range stops. Said Teela, "We have a couple more races this week. Hopefully the organizers figure this problem out and they make the races fair." Starter confusion was reportedly also present during the Women's pursuit earlier that day. U.S. coach Per Nilsson stated that he had never seen an Olympic biathlon as poorly managed as the February 16 women's race. [3]
Rank | Bib | Name | Country | Start | Time | Penalties (P+P+S+S) | Deficit |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Björn Ferry | Sweden | 1:12 | 33:38.4 | 1 (0+0+0+1) | – | |
12 | Christoph Sumann | Austria | 1:25 | 33:54.9 | 2 (0+0+1+1) | +16.5 | |
1 | Vincent Jay | France | 0:00 | 34:06.6 | 2 (0+0+1+1) | +28.2 | |
4 | 11 | Simon Eder | Austria | 1:24 | 34:09.4 | 3 (0+0+2+1) | +31.0 |
5 | 21 | Michael Greis | Germany | 1:48 | 34:29.6 | 1 (0+0+0+1) | +51.2 |
6 | 10 | Ivan Tcherezov | Russia | 1:18 | 34:29.6 | 2 (1+0+1+0) | +51.2 |
7 | 17 | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | Norway | 1:41 | 34:29.8 | 2 (0+0+0+2) | +51.4 |
8 | 2 | Emil Hegle Svendsen | Norway | 0:12 | 34:30.4 | 4 (0+1+2+1) | +52.0 |
9 | 4 | Klemen Bauer | Slovenia | 0:17 | 34:33.8 | 5 (1+0+2+2) | +55.4 |
10 | 22 | Serguei Sednev | Ukraine | 1:49 | 34:50.0 | 0 (0+0+0+0) | +1:11.6 |
11 | 6 | Jean-Philippe Leguellec | Canada | 0:50 | 34:51.9 | 2 (0+1+0+1) | +1:13.5 |
12 | 13 | Thomas Frei | Switzerland | 1:29 | 34:56.4 | 1 (0+1+0+0) | +1:18.0 |
13 | 23 | Andreas Birnbacher | Germany | 1:59 | 35:03.4 | 2 (1+0+1+0) | +1:25.0 |
14 | 34 | Dominik Landertinger | Austria | 2:16 | 35:06.7 | 3 (1+0+1+1) | +1:28.3 |
15 | 15 | Evgeny Ustyugov | Russia | 1:40 | 35:07.4 | 4 (1+1+2+0) | +1:29.0 |
16 | 7 | Pavol Hurajt | Slovakia | 1:07 | 35:12.8 | 3 (1+0+0+2) | +1:34.4 |
17 | 24 | Halvard Hanevold | Norway | 2:00 | 35:13.1 | 2 (1+1+0+0) | +1:34.7 |
18 | 29 | Tomasz Sikora | Poland | 2:08 | 35:14.3 | 3 (1+1+0+1) | +1:35.9 |
19 | 42 | Carl Johan Bergman | Sweden | 2:34 | 35:14.6 | 1 (0+1+0+0) | +1:36.2 |
20 | 30 | Anton Shipulin | Russia | 2:11 | 35:34.4 | 3 (0+1+2+0) | +1:56.0 |
21 | 40 | Sergey Novikov | Belarus | 2:30 | 35:35.2 | 2 (0+0+1+1) | +1:56.8 |
22 | 53 | Vincent Defrasne | France | 3:07 | 35:35.6 | 0 (0+0+0+0) | +1:57.2 |
23 | 46 | Lars Berger | Norway | 2:45 | 35:37.2 | 2 (0+0+0+2) | +1:58.8 |
24 | 9 | Jeremy Teela | United States | 1:14 | 35:45.4 | 4 (0+0+2+2) | +2:07.0 |
25 | 3 | Jakov Fak | Croatia | 0:14 | 35:45.6 | 4 (2+1+0+1) | +2:07.2 |
26 | 5 | Andriy Deryzemlya | Ukraine | 0:41 | 35:48.7 | 6 (1+0+3+2) | +2:10.3 |
27 | 39 | Yan Savitskiy | Kazakhstan | 2:27 | 35:49.6 | 1 (0+0+1+0) | +2:11.2 |
28 | 26 | Matthias Simmen | Switzerland | 2:04 | 35:55.0 | 1 (3+0+0+0) | +2:16.6 |
29 | 18 | Michal Šlesingr | Czech Republic | 1:43 | 35:58.8 | 3 (0+0+1+2) | +2:20.4 |
30 | 19 | Christoph Stephan | Germany | 1:43 | 36:02.3 | 4 (1+0+1+2) | +2:23.9 |
31 | 20 | Alexandr Syman | Belarus | 1:46 | 36:13.9 | 2 (0+0+1+1) | +2:35.5 |
32 | 14 | Ilmārs Bricis | Latvia | 1:34 | 36:14.9 | 4 (0+0+2+2) | +2:36.5 |
33 | 38 | Fredrik Lindström | Sweden | 2:26 | 36:25.5 | 4 (0+1+1+2) | +2:47.1 |
34 | 35 | Martin Fourcade | France | 2:18 | 36:28.4 | 5 (1+0+2+2) | +2:50.0 |
35 | 32 | Zhang Chengye | China | 2:12 | 36:28.7 | 5 (0+2+1+2) | +2:50.3 |
36 | 36 | Lowell Bailey | United States | 2:19 | 36:34.0 | 3 (0+2+1+0) | +2:55.6 |
37 | 37 | Arnd Peiffer | Germany | 2:21 | 36:44.9 | 4 (0+0+1+3) | +3:06.5 |
38 | 28 | Zdeněk Vítek | Czech Republic | 2:06 | 36:45.1 | 5 (1+1+1+2) | +3:06.7 |
39 | 33 | Serhiy Semenov | Ukraine | 2:13 | 36:55.7 | 4 (3+1+0+0) | +3:17.3 |
40 | 49 | Evgeny Abramenko | Belarus | 2:50 | 36:56.0 | 1 (0+0+1+0) | +3:17.6 |
41 | 45 | Daniel Mesotitsch | Austria | 2:38 | 36:56.0 | 4 (0+0+3+1) | +3:17.6 |
42 | 43 | Rustam Valiullin | Belarus | 2:36 | 37:05.5 | 5 (1+0+2+2) | +3:27.1 |
43 | 16 | Simon Hallenbarter | Switzerland | 1:41 | 37:07.9 | 6 (1+2+1+2) | +3:29.5 |
44 | 59 | Michail Kletcherov | Bulgaria | 3:15 | 37:08.1 | 0 (0+0+0+0) | +3:29.7 |
45 | 25 | Krasimir Anev | Bulgaria | 2:01 | 37:24.2 | 3 (2+0+0+1) | +3:45.8 |
46 | 47 | Tim Burke | United States | 2:47 | 37:26.8 | 5 (0+2+1+2) | +3:48.4 |
47 | 27 | Janez Marič | Slovenia | 2:05 | 37:28.4 | 5 (0+1+3+1) | +3:50.0 |
48 | 31 | Indrek Tobreluts | Estonia | 2:11 | 37:29.0 | 5 (2+0+2+1) | +3:50.6 |
49 | 51 | Alexsandr Chervyhkov | Kazakhstan | 3:02 | 37:30.5 | 3 (1+0+1+1) | +3:52.1 |
50 | 48 | Kauri Koiv | Estonia | 2:48 | 37:45.5 | 4 (0+1+2+1) | +4:07.1 |
51 | 52 | Jaroslav Soukup | Czech Republic | 3:03 | 38:04.9 | 4 (1+1+1+1) | +4:26.5 |
52 | 41 | Timo Antila | Finland | 2:30 | 38:22.1 | 6 (0+1+2+3) | +4:43.7 |
53 | 44 | Markus Windisch | Italy | 2:37 | 39:50.8 | 6 (0+2+3+1) | +6:12.4 |
54 | 56 | Lukas Hofer | Italy | 3:11 | 39:50.9 | 5 (2+0+2+1) | +6:12.5 |
55 | 60 | Mattia Cola | Italy | 3:17 | 39:50.9 | 4 (0+0+0+4) | +6:12.5 |
56 | 55 | Lee-Steve Jackson | Great Britain | 3:10 | 39:54.7 | 4 (0+1+3+0) | +6:16.3 |
57 | 54 | Jay Hakkinen | United States | 3:10 | 40:33.2 | 6 (1+2+3+0) | +6:54.8 |
58 | 50 | Andrejs Rastorgujevs | Latvia | 2:58 | 41:35.9 | 9 (2+2+3+2) | +7:57.5 |
59 | 57 | Vasja Rupnik | Slovenia | 3:13 | 41:59.2 | 11 (1+2+4+4) | +8:20.8 |
58 | Peter Dokl | Slovenia | 3:13 | LAP | 5 (0+3+2+ ) |
The biathlon is a winter sport that combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting. It is treated as a race, with contestants skiing through a cross-country trail whose distance is divided into shooting rounds. The shooting rounds are not timed per se, but depending on the competition, missed shots result in extra distance or time being added to the contestant's total.
Ole Einar Bjørndalen is a retired Norwegian professional biathlete and coach, often referred to by the nickname, the "King of Biathlon". With 13 Winter Olympic Games medals, he is second on the list of multiple medalists behind Marit Bjørgen who has won 15 medals. He is also the most successful biathlete of all time at the Biathlon World Championships, having won 45 medals. With 95 World Cup wins, Bjørndalen is ranked first all-time for career victories on the Biathlon World Cup tour. He has won the Overall World Cup title six times, in 1997–98, in 2002–03, in 2004–05, in 2005–06, in 2007–08 and in 2008–09.
Emil Hegle Svendsen is a retired Norwegian biathlete. He has won eight medals at Winter Olympics and five individual gold medals and seven relay gold medals at World Championships.
The men's pursuit competition at the Biathlon World Championships 2007 was held on 4 February 2007.
Jeremy Scott Teela is a former American biathlete and a Staff Sergeant in the United States Army.
Timothy John Burke is a retired U.S. biathlete and coach. On December 20, 2009, he became the first ever US biathlete to lead the overall Biathlon World Cup. During his career he competed in 11 Biathlon World Championships and four Winter Olympic Games, won a World Championship silver and took six podiums in World Cup races.
Biathlon at the 2002 Winter Olympics consisted of eight biathlon events. They were held at Soldier Hollow. The events began on 11 February and ended on 20 February 2002. For the first time since 1992, the biathlon program expanded. A new race type, the pursuit was added, the first new race type since the debut of the sprint in 1980.
The 43rd Biathlon World Championships were held in Pyeongchang, South Korea from February 13 to February 22, 2009. It was the first time that the Biathlon World Championships were held in Asia.
Björn Ferry is a former Swedish biathlete and medal winning Olympian. He began competing internationally in World Cup competitions in 2001, but did not win his first international race until the 2007–2008 season. In 2007, he won gold in the mixed relay event at the Biathlon World Championships. The next year, at his third Winter Olympics appearance, he won the gold medal in the pursuit event. He started the event in 8th place as determined by the previous sprint event, but managed to overtake the race leader on the final lap.
Christoph "Sumi" Sumann is a former Austrian biathlete.
The Men's 12.5 kilometre biathlon pursuit competition at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy was held on 18 February, at Cesana San Sicario. Competitors raced over five loops of a 2.5 kilometre skiing course, shooting twenty times, ten prone and ten standing. Each miss required a competitor to ski a 150-metre penalty loop.
The Women's 10 kilometre pursuit biathlon competition of the Vancouver 2010 Olympics was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia on 16 February 2010.
Evgeny Romanovich Ustyugov is a Russian former biathlete. Born to cross-country skiers, Ustyugov was introduced to biathlon at the age of three. He started his career in junior tournaments in 2005, before going professional three years later in the European Championships. He is an Olympic champion in the men's 15 km mass start event at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Prior to the 2010 Olympic Games, his best World Championship finish in an individual event was 20th place.
Tarjei Bø is a Norwegian professional biathlete. Awarded Olympic gold medals, World Championship gold medals and World Cup victories from 2010 to 2022. Bø debuted in the Biathlon World Cup on 26 March 2009 in Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia. In the 2010 Winter Olympics, he earned his first gold medal in the 4 × 7.5 km biathlon relay. On 10 December 2010 he won the World Cup sprint race in Hochfilzen, his first world cup victory. He also won the following pursuit race and anchored the winning relay team. Bø is the older brother of biathlete Johannes Thingnes Bø.
Martin Fourcade is a retired French biathlete and sous-lieutenant. He is a five-time Olympic champion, a thirteen-time World Champion and a seven-time winner of the Overall World Cup. As of February 2018, he is the most successful French Olympian of all time. Fourcade is the all-time biathlon record holder of overall World Cup titles with seven big crystal globes and he's also the all-time record holder of the most consecutive Major Championships titles with at least one non-team gold medal in every major championship from 2011 to 2018.
The Men's 10 kilometre sprint biathlon competition at the 2002 Winter Olympics was held on 13 February, at Soldier Hollow. Competitors raced over two 3.0 kilometre loops and one 4.0 kilometre loop of the skiing course, shooting two times, once prone and once standing. Each miss was penalized by requiring the competitor to race over a 150-metre penalty loop.
The Men's 12.5 kilometre pursuit biathlon competition at the 2002 Winter Olympics was held on 16 February, at Soldier Hollow. Competitors raced over four 2.5 kilometre loops and one 2.75 kilometre loop of the skiing course, shooting four times, twice prone and twice standing. Each miss was penalized by requiring the competitor to race over a 150-metre penalty loop.
The men's sprint competition of the Sochi 2014 Olympics was held at Laura Biathlon & Ski Complex on 8 February 2014. It was 10 kilometres in length.
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen is a Norwegian biathlete.
The men's 10 km sprint biathlon competition of the Pyeongchang 2018 Olympics was held on 11 February 2018 at the Alpensia Biathlon Centre in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The event was won by Arnd Peiffer, with Michal Krčmář taking silver and Dominik Windisch bronze. This was the first individual Olympic medal for both Peiffer and Windisch, whereas for Krčmář, this was the first Olympic medal.