Cross-country skiing at the 2002 Winter Olympics – Women's 30 kilometre classical

The Women's 30 kilometre classical mass start cross-country skiing competition at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, United States, was held on 24 February at Soldier Hollow. This was the final women's event of the 2002 Olympics cross-country program.

Women’s 30 kilometre classical
at the XIX Olympic Winter Games
VenueSoldier Hollow
Dates24 February
Competitors52 from 17 nations
Winning time1:30:57.1
Medalists
Gabriella Paruzzi
 Italy
Stefania Belmondo
 Italy
Bente Skari
 Norway

All skiers started at 30 second intervals, skiing the entire 30 kilometre course.

The race

The early leader in this race was Russian Larisa Lazutina, the 1999 World Champion and 2001 Holmenkollen champion in the event. She won the race by almost two minutes over Italian Gabriella Paruzzi. Lazutina led at every checkpoint and had the fastest intermediate split for each time check. Stefania Belmondo of Italy finished third and Norwegian Bente Skari finished in fourth place.[1]

After the competition, it was confirmed that Lazutina had tested positive for darpopoietin, an erythropoietin analogue, and was disqualified from all events in the 2002 Winter Olympics. Her teammate, Olga Danilova, who had originally finished eighth had been sanctioned for doping two months earlier and was also disqualified. This brought Paruzzi up to gold medal, her first individual olympic medal. The silver medalist became Italy's Stefania Belmondo while Skari won the bronze. For Belmondo this was her 10th Olympic medal, equaling the Winter Olympic record for women held by Soviet/Unified Team skier Raisa Smetanina, both trailing only Norway's Bjørn Dæhlie, who won 12.

Results

[2]

RankNameCountryTime [h:min:s]
Gabriella Paruzzi Italy1:30:57.1
Stefania Belmondo Italy1:31:01.6
Bente Skari Norway1:31:36.3
4Anita Moen Norway1:31:37.3
5Valentina Shevchenko Ukraine1:33:03.1
6Viola Bauer Germany1:33:25.1
7Kristina Smigun Estonia1:33:52.7
8Vibeke Skofterud Norway1:35:02.3
9Yuliya Chepalova Russia1:35:37.4
10Natascia Leonardi Cortesi Switzerland1:35:46.8
11Svetlana Nagejkina Belarus1:35:51.6
12Petra Majdic Slovenia1:35:51.8
13Marit Bjørgen Norway1:37:02.6
14Nina Kemppel United States1:37:08.7
15Svetlana Shishkina Kazakhstan1:37:14.5
16Oxana Jatskaja Kazakhstan1:37:25.3
17Irina Terelia Ukraine1:37:32.9
18Antonella Confortola Italy1:37:47.4
19Olga Savialova Russia1:37:47.4
19Laurence Rochat Switzerland1:38:24.2
21Sumiko Yokoyama Japan1:39:48.8
22Wendy Kay Wagner United States1:39:54.8
23Annmari Viljanmaa Finland1:40:47.9
24Elin Ek Sweden1:40:48.2
25Madoka Natumi Japan1:41:06.0
26Kamila Rajdlova Czech Republic1:41:57.7
27Amanda Fortier Canada1:42:08.1
28Natalja Zjatikova Belarus1:42:18.0
29Irina Skripnik Belarus1:42:49.1
30Milaine Thériault Canada1:42:56.9
31Elena Antonova Kazakhstan1:43:37.6
32Marianna Longa Italy1:44:02.5
33Jaime Fortier Canada1:44:26.2
34Barbara Jones United States1:45:18.7
35Midori Furusawa Japan1:45:50.0
36Svetlana Deshevykh Kazakhstan1:46:18.1
37Olena Rodina Ukraine1:46:51.2
38Anna Dahlberg Sweden1:46:51.3
39Katerina Nash Czech Republic1:48:52.6
40Luan Zhengrong China1:49:37.7
41Hou Yuxia China1:49:45.8
42Tomomi Otaka Japan1:50:00.3
--Satu Salonen FinlandDNF
--Marina Pestrekova UkraineDNF
--Manuela Henkel GermanyDNF
--Anna-Carin Olofsson SwedenDNF
--Ulrika Persson SwedenDNF
--Larissa Lazutina RussiaDSQ
--Olga Danilova RussiaDSQ
--Vera Zjatikova BelarusDNS
--Sara Renner CanadaDNS
--Aelin Peterson United StatesDNS

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.