Biathlon at the 2002 Winter Olympics – Men's sprint

Men's biathlon sprint
at the XIX Olympic Winter Games
Venue Soldier Hollow
Dates February 13
Competitors 87 from 34 nations
Winning time 24:51.3
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s) Ole Einar Bjørndalen  Norway
2nd, silver medalist(s) Sven Fischer  Germany
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Wolfgang Perner  Austria

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.[1]

Results

Ole Einar Bjørndalen, having won the men's 20 kilometre Individual race two days before, came in as one of the favourites. Bjørndalen was also the defending World Cup champion in the sprint, as well as the defending Olympic champion in the discipline.[2] In addition, he had won the 2001 test event at Soldier Hollow, beating countryman Frode Andresen,[3] and won one of the four World Cup sprints earlier in the season.[1] Raphaël Poirée, the defending overall World Cup champion, had also won a World Cup sprint race in 2001/02, but neither Poirée nor Bjørndalen was leading the World Cup standings, which were closely contested between Andresen, Frank Luck and the defending World Champion in the distance, Pavel Rostovtsev.[1]

Germans Ricco Groß and Sven Fischer set the early pace, both shooting clear on the first shoot, then missing one in the second, with Fischer pulling away over the last loop to lead his countryman by 25 seconds at the finish. Poirée led both of them after the first shoot, but put two shots wide on his final round, dropping him out of contention. Rovstovtsev, not skiing as quickly as Poirée, was also well placed after one shoot, but his one miss on the second left him five seconds behind Groß at the finish.[4]

Andresen, fresh off a disappointment in the final round of shooting in the individual, was clear on the first shoot, and quick on the skis, but, like the individual, struggled on the last shoot, missing twice and ending up in 8th. The man starting directly behind him, Wolfgang Perner, was slower on the course, but didn't miss a shot, and just managed to edge Groß at the line, finishing 0.2 seconds ahead for, at the time, second place.

But Bjørndalen was still to come, and did not disappoint. The Norwegian shot clear at the opening attempt, but only left the range in 4th, behind Poirée, Andresen and Fischer. However, where all three of those had stumbled at the second shooting round, Bjørndalen made no mistake, shooting clear. He left the range 30 seconds ahead of his closest competitor, Fischer, and held that lead until the finish line for his second gold medal of the games. [4] This was Bjørndalen's third Olympic gold medal, making him the first biathlete to achieve such a feat.[5]

RankBibNameCountryTimePenaltiesDeficit
1st, gold medalist(s)Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway24:51.30-
2nd, silver medalist(s)Sven Fischer Germany25:20.2100:28.9
3rd, bronze medalist(s)Wolfgang Perner Austria25:44.4000:53.1
4Ricco Groß Germany25:44.6100:53.3
5Wolfgang Rottmann Austria25:48.8200:57.5
6Pavel Rostovtsev Russia25:50.1100:58.8
7Viktor Maigourov Russia25:50.9000:59.6
8Frode Andresen Norway25:51.5201:00.2
9Raphaël Poirée France25:56.9201:05.6
10Ludwig Gredler Austria26:04.3201:13.0
11Oleg Ryzhenkov Belarus26:05.5001:14.2
12Vadim Sashurin Belarus26:09.9001:18.6
13Halvard Hanevold Norway26:12.5001:21.2
14Zdeněk Vítek Czech Republic26:14.0101:22.7
15Michael Greis Germany26:18.4201:27.1
16Paavo Puurunen Finland26:24.7101:33.4
17Björn Ferry Sweden26:30.5201:39.2
18Wojciech Kozub Poland26:31.9101:40.6
19Timo Antila Finland26:33.4101:42.1
20Jeremy Teela United States26:36.6201:45.3
21Vincent Defrasne France26:36.7201:45.4
22René Cattarinussi Italy26:37.3101:46.0
23Tomaž Globočnik Slovenia26:40.0101:48.7
24Egil Gjelland Norway26:42.5101:51.2
25Vesa Hietalahti Finland26:43.2001:51.9
26Jay Hakkinen United States26:43.5101:52.2
27Marko Dolenc Slovenia26:47.0101:55.7
28Carl Johan Bergman Sweden26:47.1101:55.8
29Frank Luck Germany26:47.7201:56.4
30Dimitri Borovik Estonia26:50.1201:58.8
31Tomasz Sikora Poland26:59.3102:08.0
32Tomáš Holubec Czech Republic27:01.8102:10.5
33Sergey Rusinov Russia27:04.3102:13.0
34Roman Dostál Czech Republic27:04.9202:13.6
35Julien Robert France27:05.1202:13.8
36Vyacheslav Derkach Ukraine27:05.3102:14.0
37Alexei Aidarov Belarus27:06.4202:15.1
38Andriy Deryzemlia Ukraine27:11.1102:19.8
39Marek Matiaško Slovakia27:12.6102:21.3
40Ilmārs Bricis Latvia27:17.3202:26.0
41Kyoji Suga Japan27:21.0102:29.7
42Marian Blaj Romania27:25.5102:34.2
43Robin Clegg Canada27:28.3202:37.0
44Janez Marič Slovenia27:28.6202:37.3
45Janno Prants Estonia27:29.2302:37.9
46Oļegs Maļuhins Latvia27:30.7302:39.4
47Petr Garabík Czech Republic27:30.9202:39.6
48Indrek Tobreluts Estonia27:31.1202:39.8
49Paolo Longo Italy27:31.9002:40.6
50Wilfried Pallhuber Italy27:35.7102:44.4
51Sergei Rozhkov Russia27:39.8402:48.5
52Jēkabs Nākums Latvia27:40.9102:49.6
53Ruslan Lysenko Ukraine27:43.1202:51.8
54Lawton Redman United States27:43.4202:52.1
55Roland Zwahlen Switzerland27:43.7102:52.4
56Zhang Qing China27:45.3102:54.0
57Aleksandr Syman Belarus27:45.3302:54.0
58Wiesław Ziemianin Poland27:47.0202:55.7
59Sašo Grajf Slovenia27:52.6203:01.3
60Georgi Kasabov Bulgaria27:55.8103:04.5
61Krzysztof Topór Poland28:02.2303:10.9
62Hidenori Isa Japan28:03.6203:12.3
63Henrik Forsberg Sweden28:04.0603:12.7
64Jean-Marc Chabloz Switzerland28:08.6103:17.3
65Gundars Upenieks Latvia28:11.9303:20.6
66Gilles Marguet France28:20.1403:28.8
67Matthias Simmen Switzerland28:22.8303:31.5
68Devis Da Canal Italy28:25.9203:34.6
69Yukio Mochizuki Japan28:28.5203:37.2
70Roland Lessing Estonia28:34.4203:43.1
71Jason Sklenar Great Britain28:43.4403:52.1
72Mark Gee Great Britain28:57.8204:06.5
73Olli-Pekka Peltola Finland28:58.5104:07.2
74Mike Dixon Great Britain28:58.7104:07.4
75Imre Tagscherer Hungary29:08.6304:17.3
76Roman Pryma Ukraine29:16.1304:24.8
77Aleksandr Tropnikov Kyrgyzstan29:30.2204:38.9
78Tord Wiksten Sweden29:39.5404:48.2
79Dmitry Pantov Kazakhstan29:46.3504:55.0
80Shin Byung-Kook South Korea29:51.1204:59.8
81Ricardo Oscare Argentina30:00.2305:08.9
82Liutauras Barila Lithuania30:01.4505:10.1
83Mihail Gribuşencov Moldova30:02.2205:10.9
84Žarko Galjanić Croatia30:33.0305:41.7
85Stavros Khristoforidis Greece31:51.4207:00.1
86Carlos Varas Chile32:48.1007:56.8
-Christoph Sumann AustriaDNFDNF-

[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Salt Lake City 2002 Official Report - Volume 1" (PDF). Salt Lake Organizing Committee. LA84 Foundation. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 6, 2010. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
  2. "IBU Biathlon Guide 2012/13" (PDF). International Biathlon Union. November 2012. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
  3. 2001 World Cup 7 - 10 km Sprint Results Archived July 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. from biathlonworld.com, retrieved 6 February 2013
  4. 1 2 http://ibu.blob.core.windows.net/docs/0102/BT/SWRL/OG__/SMSP/BT_O77B_1.0.pdf[- Competition Analysis, Men's 10 km Sprint - SLOC]
  5. "Norway's Bjoerndalen wins second gold". CNNSI.com. AP. February 13, 2002. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.