2018–19 Biathlon World Cup
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Biathlon competition
2018–19 Biathlon World Cup | |||
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Discipline | Men | Women | |
Overall | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | Italy Dorothea Wierer | |
Nations Cup | Norway Norway | Norway Norway | |
Individual | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | Italy Lisa Vittozzi | |
Sprint | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | Slovakia Anastasiya Kuzmina | |
Pursuit | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | Italy Dorothea Wierer | |
Mass start | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | Sweden Hanna Öberg | |
Relay | Norway Norway | Norway Norway | |
Mixed | Norway Norway | ||
Competition | |||
2018–19 Biathlon World Cup |
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Men |
Women |
Mixed |
Mixed relay |
World Cup stages |
See also |
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The 2018–19 Biathlon World Cup (BWC) was a multi-race series over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. The season started on 2 December 2018 in Pokljuka, Slovenia and ended on 24 March 2019 in Oslo Holmenkollen, Norway. The defending overall champions from the 2017–18 Biathlon World Cup were Martin Fourcade of France and Kaisa Mäkäräinen of Finland.
Calendar
[edit ]Below is the IBU World Cup calendar for the 2018–19 season.[1]
Stage | Location | Date | Individual | Sprint | Pursuit | Mass start | Relay | Mixed relay | Single mixed relay | Details |
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1 | Slovenia Pokljuka | 2–9 December | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||
2 | Austria Hochfilzen | 13–16 December | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
3 | Czech Republic Nové Město | 20–23 December | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
4 | Germany Oberhof | 10–13 January | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
5 | Germany Ruhpolding | 17–20 January | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
6 | Italy Antholz-Anterselva | 24–27 January | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
7 | Canada Canmore | 7–10 February | ●くろまる[nb 1] | ●くろまる | details | |||||
8 | United States Salt Lake City | 14–17 February | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | |||
WC | Sweden Östersund | 7–17 March | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | World Championships |
9 | Norway Oslo Holmenkollen | 21–24 March | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | ●くろまる | details | ||||
Total: 68 (31 men's, 31 women's, 6 mixed) | 3 | 9 | 8 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 3 |
World Cup podiums
[edit ]Men
[edit ]Women
[edit ]Men's team
[edit ]Stage | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third | Det. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 16 December 2018 | Austria Hochfilzen | 4x7.5 km Relay | Sweden | Norway | Germany | Detail |
4 | 13 January 2019 | Germany Oberhof | 4x7.5 km Relay | Russia | France | Austria | Detail |
5 | 18 January 2019 | Germany Ruhpolding | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | Germany | France | Detail |
7 | 8 February 2019 | Canada Canmore | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | France | Russia | Detail |
WC | 16 March 2019 | Sweden Östersund | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | Germany | Russia | Detail |
Women's team
[edit ]Stage | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third | Det. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 16 December 2018 | Austria Hochfilzen | 4x6 km Relay | Italy | Sweden | France | Detail |
4 | 13 January 2019 | Germany Oberhof | 4x6 km Relay | Russia | Germany | Czech Republic | Detail |
5 | 19 January 2019 | Germany Ruhpolding | 4x6 km Relay | France | Norway | Germany | Detail |
7 | 8 February 2019 | Canada Canmore | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | Norway | France | Detail |
WC | 16 March 2019 | Sweden Östersund | 4x6 km Relay | Norway | Sweden | Ukraine | Detail |
Mixed
[edit ]Stage | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third | Det. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 December 2018 | Slovenia Pokljuka | 1x6 km + 1x7.5 km Single Mixed Relay |
Norway | Austria | Ukraine | Detail |
1 | 2 December 2018 | Slovenia Pokljuka | 2x6 km + 2x7.5 km Mixed Relay |
France | Switzerland | Italy | Detail |
8 | 17 February 2019 | United States Salt Lake City | 1x6 km + 1x7.5 km Single Mixed Relay |
Italy | Austria | France | Detail |
8 | 17 February 2019 | United States Salt Lake City | 2x7.5 km + 2x6 km Mixed Relay |
France | Germany | Norway | Detail |
WC | 7 March 2019 | Sweden Östersund | 2x6 km + 2x7.5 km Mixed Relay |
Norway | Germany | Italy | Detail |
WC | 14 March 2019 | Sweden Östersund | 1x6 km + 1x7.5 km Single Mixed Relay |
Norway | Italy | Sweden | Detail |
Standings (men)
[edit ]Pos. | Points | |
---|---|---|
1. | Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø | 1262 |
2. | Russia Alexandr Loginov | 854 |
3. | France Quentin Fillon Maillet | 843 |
4. | France Simon Desthieux | 831 |
5. | Germany Arnd Peiffer | 802 |
- Final standings after 25 races.
Individual[edit ]
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Mass start[edit ]
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Standings (women)
[edit ]Pos. | Points | |
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1. | Italy Dorothea Wierer | 905 |
2. | Italy Lisa Vittozzi | 882 |
3. | Slovakia Anastasiya Kuzmina | 870 |
4. | Norway Marte Olsbu Røiseland | 855 |
5. | Sweden Hanna Öberg | 741 |
- Final standings after 25 races.
Individual[edit ]
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Mass start[edit ]
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Standings: Mixed
[edit ]Mixed relay
[edit ]Pos. | Points | |
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1. | Norway | 306 |
2. | France | 281 |
3. | Italy | 267 |
4. | Germany | 264 |
5. | Sweden | 238 |
- Final standings after 6 races.
Medal table
[edit ]Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Norway | 28 | 15 | 5 | 48 |
2 | Italy | 8 | 7 | 6 | 21 |
3 | France | 7 | 10 | 15 | 32 |
4 | Germany | 6 | 14 | 13 | 33 |
5 | Slovakia | 5 | 3 | 4 | 12 |
6 | Russia | 3 | 4 | 7 | 14 |
7 | Finland | 3 | 3 | 1 | 7 |
8 | Sweden | 3 | 2 | 7 | 12 |
9 | Ukraine | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
10 | Czech Republic | 1 | 2 | 2 | 5 |
11 | Austria | 0 | 3 | 3 | 6 |
12 | Bulgaria | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Poland | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
Switzerland | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
15 | United States | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (15 entries) | 66 | 66 | 66 | 198 |
Achievements
[edit ]- First World Cup career victory
- Men
- Alexandr Loginov (RUS), 26, in his 5th season — Stage 4 Sprint in Oberhof; first podium was 2012–13 Pursuit in Oslo Holmenkollen
- Quentin Fillon Maillet (FRA), 26, in his 6th season — Stage 6 Mass Start in Anterselva; first podium was 2014–15 Mass Start in Ruhpolding
- Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (NOR), 26, in his 7th season — Stage 8 Sprint in Salt Lake City; first podium was 2018–19 Pursuit in Hochfilzen
- Dmytro Pidruchnyi (UKR), 27, in his 7th season — World Championships Pursuit in Östersund; it also was his first podium
- Women
- Yuliia Dzhima (UKR), 28, in her 7th season — Stage 1 Individual in Pokljuka; first podium was 2013–14 Pursuit in Hochfilzen
- Marte Olsbu Røiseland (NOR), 28, in her 7th season — Stage 3 Sprint in Nové Město; first podium was 2015–16 Sprint in Khanty-Mansiysk
- Lisa Vittozzi (ITA), 23, in her 5th season — Stage 4 Sprint in Oberhof; first podium was 2016–17 Pursuit in Kontiolahti
- Franziska Preuß (GER), 24, in her 6th season — Stage 5 Mass start in Ruhpolding; first podium was 2014–15 Mass start in Ruhpolding
- Markéta Davidová (CZE), 22, in her 3rd season — Stage 6 Sprint in Anterselva; first podium was 2018–19 Individual in Pokljuka
- Hanna Öberg (SWE), 23, in her 3rd season — World Championships Individual in Östersund; first podium was 2018–19 Pursuit in Nové Město
- First World Cup podium
- Men
- Johannes Kühn (GER), 27, in his 6th season — no. 2 in the Stage 1 Individual in Pokljuka
- Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (NOR), 26, in his 7th season — no. 3 in the Stage 2 Pursuit in Hochfilzen
- Martin Ponsiluoma (SWE), 23, in his 2nd season — no. 3 in the Stage 3 Sprint in Nové Město
- Sebastian Samuelsson (SWE), 21, in his 2nd season — no. 3 in the Stage 4 Sprint in Oberhof
- Roman Rees (GER), 25, in his 3rd season — no. 3 in the Stage 8 Sprint in Salt Lake City
- Vladimir Iliev (BUL), 31, in his 13th season — no. 2 in the World Championships Individual in Östersund
- Women
- Markéta Davidová (CZE), 21, in her 3rd season — no. 3 in the Stage 1 Individual in Pokljuka
- Hanna Öberg (SWE), 23, in her 3rd season — no. 3 in the Stage 3 Pursuit in Nové Město
- Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold (NOR), 22, in her 4th season — no. 2 in the Stage 5 Mass start in Ruhpolding
- Clare Egan (USA), 31, in her 5th season — no. 3 in the Stage 9 Mass start in Oslo Holmenkollen
- Victory in this World Cup (all-time number of victories in parentheses)
- Men
- Johannes Thingnes Bø (NOR), 16 (37) first places
- Martin Fourcade (FRA), 2 (72) first places
- Quentin Fillon Maillet (FRA), 2 (2) first places
- Arnd Peiffer (GER), 1 (9) first place
- Dominik Windisch (ITA), 1 (2) first place
- Alexandr Loginov (RUS), 1 (1) first place
- Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (NOR), 1 (1) first place
- Dmytro Pidruchnyi (UKR), 1 (1) first place
- Women
- Anastasia Kuzmina (SVK), 5 (16) first places
- Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN), 3 (26) first places
- Dorothea Wierer (ITA), 3 (7) first places
- Marte Olsbu Røiseland (NOR), 3 (3) first places
- Denise Herrmann (GER), 2 (4) first places
- Lisa Vittozzi (ITA), 2 (2) first places
- Hanna Öberg (SWE), 2 (2) first places
- Laura Dahlmeier (GER), 1 (20) first place
- Tiril Eckhoff (NOR), 1 (6) first place
- Yuliia Dzhima (UKR), 1 (1) first place
- Franziska Preuß (GER), 1 (1) first place
- Markéta Davidová (CZE), 1 (1) first place
Retirements
[edit ]The following notable biathletes retired during or after the 2018–19 season:
- Men
- Sven Grossegger (AUT)
- Daniel Mesotitsch (AUT)[2]
- Michael Rösch (BEL)[3]
- Michail Kletcherov (BGR)
- Kristyan Stoyanov (BGR)
- Vladimir Chepelin (BLR)[4]
- Brendan Green (CAN)[5]
- Nathan Smith (CAN)[6]
- Kauri Kõiv (EST)[7]
- Roland Lessing (EST)[8]
- Martin Remmelg (EST)[9]
- Tuomas Gronman (FIN)
- Simon Fourcade (FRA)[10]
- Pietro Dutto (ITA)[11]
- Kazuya Inomata (JPN)
- Timur Khamitgatin (KAZ)
- Daumants Lusa (LAT)
- Henrik L'Abée-Lund (NOR)[12]
- Sergey Korastylev [de] (RUS)
- Vladimir Semakov (RUS)
- Anton Shipulin (RUS)[13]
- Milanko Petrović (SRB)
- Mitja Drinovec (SLO)
- Christoffer Eriksson (SWE)[14]
- Fredrik Lindström (SWE)[15]
- Vitaliy Kilchytskyy (UKR)
- Women
- Susanne Hoffmann (AUT)[16]
- Inna Kostyuchenko [ru] (BLR)
- Darya Yurkevich (BLR)[17]
- Emilia Yordanova (BUL)
- Rosanna Crawford (CAN)[18]
- Megan Tandy (CAN)[19]
- Wang Xuelan (CHN)
- Gabriela Koukalová (CZE)[20]
- Laura Toivanen (FIN)[21]
- Enora Latuillière (FRA)
- Laura Dahlmeier (GER)[22]
- Annika Knoll (GER)[23]
- Luise Kummer (GER)[24]
- Miriam Neureuther (GER)[25]
- Uiloq Slettemark (GRL)[26]
- Hwang Hye-suk (KOR)
- Diana Rasimovičiūtė (LTU)[27] [28]
- Anastasiya Nychyporenko (MDA)
- Galina Nechkasova (RUS)[29]
- Kristina Tokareva (RUS)
- Victoria Padial Hernandez (SPA)
Notes
[edit ]- ^ The Individuals in Canmore were shortened because of freezing temperatures.
References
[edit ]- ^ "International Biathlon Union - IBU". www.biathlonworld.com.
- ^ "Daniel Mesotitsch beendet Biathlon-Karriere". www.biathlon-news.de (in German). April 11, 2019. Archived from the original on May 8, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- ^ "Rösch kündigt Karriereende an". www.sport1.de (in German). January 13, 2019.
- ^ "Уладзімір Чапелін завяршае прафесійную кар'еру". www.tvr.by (in Belarusian). July 10, 2019.
- ^ "Canadian Hay River's Brendan Green retires after 11-year biathlon career". www.pressfrom.info. February 9, 2019.
- ^ "Canadian two-time Olympic biathlete Nathan Smith retires". www.theglobeandmail.com. December 19, 2018.
- ^ "Laskesuusatajad panevad Haanjas tänavusele hooajale punkti". www.biathlon.ee (in Estonian). March 28, 2019.
- ^ "Laskesuusatajad panevad Haanjas tänavusele hooajale punkti". www.biathlon.ee (in Estonian). March 28, 2019.
- ^ "Laskesuusatajad panevad Haanjas tänavusele hooajale punkti". www.biathlon.ee (in Estonian). March 28, 2019.
- ^ Biathlon : Simon Fourcade prend sa retraite
- ^ "Pietro Dutto lascia il biathlon: "Non pensavo di emozionarmi così"". www.fondoitalia.it (in Italian). March 31, 2019.
- ^ "Henrik L'Abée-Lund legger opp". www.nrk.no (in Norwegian). May 3, 2019.
- ^ "Anton Shipulin Calls it a Career". www.biathlonworld.com. December 26, 2018.
- ^ "Christoffer Eriksson Calls it a Career". www.tapatalk.com. April 8, 2019.
- ^ "OS-guld i fjol – Nu slutar Lindström". www.svt.se (in Swedish). March 16, 2019.
- ^ "Susanne Hoffmann Calls it a Career". www.facebook.com (in German). September 12, 2019.
- ^ "Біятланістка Дар'я Юркевіч вырашыла не заканчваць спартыўную кар'еру". euroradio.fm (in Belarusian). July 11, 2018.
- ^ "Biathlete Crawford retires from competition". www.rmoutlook.com. March 16, 2019. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- ^ "Megan Tandy Calls it a Career". www.facebook.com. January 31, 2019.
- ^ "Nejúspěšnější česká biatlonistka Gabriela Koukalová ukončila kariéru". www.biatlon.cz (in Czech). May 28, 2019.
- ^ "Laura Toivanen Calls it a Career". www.facebook.com. June 14, 2019.
- ^ "Laura Dahlmeier beendet ihre Karriere". www.biathlon-news.de (in German). May 17, 2019. Archived from the original on May 17, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
- ^ "Annika Knoll beendet ihre Biathlonkarriere". www.biathlon-news.de (in German). January 29, 2019. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- ^ "Luise Kummer beendet Biathlon-Karriere!". www.biathlon-news.de (in German). May 2, 2019. Archived from the original on May 5, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
- ^ "Familienglück als oberste Priorität – Miriam Neureuther beendet Karriere". www.biathlon-news.de (in German). September 18, 2019. Archived from the original on September 24, 2019. Retrieved September 19, 2019.
- ^ "Uiloq Slettemark was her last race". www.tapatalk.com. January 28, 2019.
- ^ "D.Rasimovičiūtė kabina šautuvą ant vinies: medaliai, kartėlis bei sėkmę atnešęs virusas". www.lrytas.lt (in Lithuanian). January 8, 2019.
- ^ "Dianos Rasimovičiūtės istorija: apie medalius ir kartėlį, pilietybes bei sėkmę atnešusį virusą". www.biathlonltu.com (in Lithuanian). January 8, 2019.
- ^ "Галина Нечкасова: "Хочется отдохнуть от спорта. Сейчас сложно искать мотивацию"". www.sport-express.ru (in Russian). April 6, 2019.