Men's sprint at the XX Olympic Winter Games | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Pragelato | ||||||||||||
Dates | February 21 | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 49 from 15 nations | ||||||||||||
Winning time | 18:38.6 | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Nordic combined at the 2006 Winter Olympics | |
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Sprint | men |
Individual Gundersen | men |
Team | men |
The Men's sprint Nordic combined competition for the 2006 Winter Olympics was held in Pragelato, Italy. It took place on 21 February. [1]
Forty-nine athletes entered the ski jumping portion of the sprint; each made one jump, which was judged in the same fashion as the Olympic ski jumping competition. The scores for these jumps were used to calculate the deficit with which each athlete began the cross-country portion of the event. Each one point behind the leading score of Georg Hettich was equivalent to four seconds of time deficit. [2]
The start for the 7.5 kilometre race was staggered, with a one-point deficit in the ski jump portion resulting in a four second deficit in starting the cross-country course. This stagger meant that the first athlete across the finish line, Felix Gottwald was the overall winner of the event. [2]
Rank | Name | Country | Deficit | Cross-Country Time | Total | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Felix Gottwald | Austria | +0:54 | 17:35.0 | 18.29.0 | ||
Magnus Moan | Norway | +0:56 | 17:38.4 | +0:05.4 | ||
Georg Hettich | Germany | 0:00 | 18:38.6 | +0:09.6 | ||
4 | Jason Lamy Chappuis | France | +0:05 | 18:46.5 | +0:22.5 | |
5 | Jaakko Tallus | Finland | +0:19 | 18:39.1 | +0:29.1 | |
6 | Petter Tande | Norway | +0:30 | 18:29.1 | +0:30.1 | |
7 | Björn Kircheisen | Germany | +1:17 | 17:48.7 | +0:36.7 | |
8 | Ronny Ackermann | Germany | +0:47 | 18:20.7 | +0:38.7 | |
9 | Todd Lodwick | United States | +1:14 | 17:57.4 | +0:42.4 | |
10 | Johnny Spillane | United States | +1:05 | 18:10.2 | +0:46.2 | |
11 | Anssi Koivuranta | Finland | +0:17 | 19:00.7 | +0:48.7 | |
12 | Hannu Manninen | Finland | +1:10 | 18:11.0 | +0:52.0 | |
13 | Michael Gruber | Austria | +0:35 | 18:48.3 | +0:54.3 | |
14 | Mario Stecher | Austria | +1:07 | 18:23.3 | +1:01.3 | |
15 | Daito Takahashi | Japan | +1:12 | 18:19.4 | +1:02.4 | |
16 | Giuseppe Michielli | Italy | +1:24 | 18:08.0 | +1:03.0 | |
17 | Ladislav Rygl | Czech Republic | +1:24 | 18:11.2 | +1:06.2 | |
18 | Norihito Kobayashi | Japan | +1:27 | 18:09.0 | +1:07.0 | |
19 | Akito Watabe | Japan | +0:41 | 18:56.3 | +1:08.3 | |
20 | Ronny Heer | Switzerland | +1:20 | 18:17.7 | +1:08.7 | |
21 | Andreas Hurschler | Switzerland | +1:50 | 17:51.6 | +1:12.6 | |
22 | Yosuke Hatakeyama | Japan | +0:38 | 19:05.0 | +1:14.0 | |
23 | Christoph Bieler | Austria | +0:40 | 19:04.0 | +1:15.0 | |
24 | Seppi Hurschler | Switzerland | +1:22 | 18:29.4 | +1:22.4 | |
25 | Bill Demong | United States | +1:34 | 18:29.7 | +1:34.7 | [1] |
26 | Tomas Slavik | Czech Republic | +1:23 | 18:40.8 | +1:34.8 | [1] |
27 | Nicolas Bal | France | +2:01 | 18:05.7 | +1:37.7 | |
28 | Kristian Hammer | Norway | +2:06 | 18:02.1 | +1:39.1 | |
29 | Sebastian Haseney | Germany | +2:20 | 17:49.1 | +1:40.1 | |
30 | Jochen Strobl | Italy | +1:59 | 18:10.8 | +1:40.8 | |
31 | Pavel Churavy | Czech Republic} | +1:58 | 18:11.9 | +1:40.9 | |
32 | Tambet Pikkor | Estonia | +1:59 | 18:15.1 | +1:45.1 | |
33 | Ivan Fesenko | Russia | +0:54 | 19:36.6 | +2:01.6 | |
34 | Damjan Vtic | Slovenia | +1:12 | 19:23.9 | +2:06.9 | |
35 | Dmitry Matveyev | Russia | +1:16 | 19:21.1 | +2:08.1 | |
36 | Ivan Rieder | Switzerland | +1:21 | 19:21.0 | +2:13.0 | |
37 | Janne Ryynänen | Finland | +1:33 | 19:14.6 | +2:18.6 | |
38 | Daniele Munari | Italy | +2:26 | 19:21.0 | +2:34.1 | |
39 | Eric Camerota | United States | +2:05 | 18:59.8 | +2:35.8 | |
40 | Håvard Klemetsen | Norway | +1:51 | 19:15.6 | +2:37.6 | |
41 | Jason Myslicki | Canada | +2:23 | 19:00.1 | +2:54.1 | |
42 | Alexsej Barannikov | Russia | +2:49 | 18:49.2 | +3:09.2 | |
43 | Sergej Maslennikov | Russia | +1:46 | 19:56.1 | +3:13.1 | |
44 | Davide Bresadola | Italy | +1:35 | 20:08.3 | +3:14.3 | |
45 | Sergei Diyachuk | Ukraine | +3:23 | 18:21.1 | +3:15.1 | |
46 | Max Thompson | Canada | +2:45 | 19:24.3 | +3:40.3 | |
47 | Ales Vodsedalek | Czech Republic | +1:54 | 20:51.0 | +4:16.0 | |
48 | Volodymyr Trachuk | Ukraine | +4:17 | 19:40.8 | +5:28.8 |
^ 1: Determining the finish order of Demong and Slavik required a photo finish, with the American just edging Slavik for 25th place.
Nordic combined is a winter sport in which athletes compete in cross-country skiing and ski jumping. The Nordic combined at the Winter Olympics has been held since the first ever Winter Olympics in 1924, while the FIS Nordic Combined World Cup has been held since 1983. Many Nordic combined competitions use the Gundersen method, where placement in the ski jumping segment results in time (dis)advantages added to the contestant's total in the cross-country skiing segment.
Pursuit racing is where two or more competitors are either chasing after each other or chasing after a lead competitor or team.
Gunder Gundersen was a Norwegian Nordic combined skier and sports official. He was born in Asker.
Switzerland competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. This was the confederation's largest Winter Olympics team ever, because two ice hockey teams qualified.
Estonia sent 28 athletes to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Half of them competed in cross-country skiing, where Estonia won all of their three Turin Olympic medals. Olympic champion Andrus Veerpalu participated on his 5th Winter Olympics.
Ukraine competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
Slovenia competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
The Nordic combined events have been contested at the Winter Olympic Games since 1924. The first competition involved 18 km cross-country skiing, followed by ski jumping.
The Gundersen method is a method in the Nordic combined developed by Gunder Gundersen, a Nordic combined athlete from Norway, that was first used in the 1980s. In it, the ski jumping portion comes first, and points in the ski jump determine when individuals start the cross-country skiing portion, which is a pursuit race, so that whoever crosses the finish line first wins the competition. The system is now also used in the modern pentathlon in which the start times of the final event are staggered so that the first to cross the finish line is the winner of the entire event. World Athletics announced on 7 December 2018 that the 2020 World Under-20 Athletics Championship will adopt the Gundersen method for the decathlon and heptathlon for the final event.
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The Men's individual Gundersen Nordic combined competition for the 2006 Winter Olympics was held in Pragelato, Italy. It took place on 11 February.
The Men's team Nordic combined competition for the 2006 Winter Olympics was held in Pragelato, Italy. It was originally scheduled for 15 February, but high winds meant that only part of the ski jumping competition was completed on that day, with the conclusion, and the cross-country race, taking place on 16 February.
The men's individual large hill/10 km Nordic combined competition for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia on 25 February.
The men's individual normal hill/10 km Nordic combined competition for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia, on 14 February.
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The men's team Nordic combined competition for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary was held at Canada Olympic Park and Canmore Nordic Centre on 23 and 24 February.