2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2014) |
2009–10 Biathlon World Cup |
---|
Men |
Women |
World Cup locations |
See also |
The 2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4 was the fourth event of the season and was held in Oberhof, Germany from Wednesday, January 6 until Sunday, January 10, 2010.
Schedule of events
[edit]The schedule of the event is below[1]
Date | Time | Events |
---|---|---|
January 6 | 14:15 cet | Women's 4 x 6 km Relay |
January 7 | 14:15 cet | Men's 4 x 7.5 km Relay |
January 8 | 14:30 cet | Women's 7.5 km Sprint |
January 9 | 12:45 cet | Men's 10 km Sprint |
January 10 | 11:00 cet | Women's 12.5 km Mass Start |
13:20 cet | Men's 15 km Mass Start |
Medal winners
[edit]Men
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
4 x 7.5 km Relay details |
Norway Halvard Hanevold Tarjei Bø Emil Hegle Svendsen Ole Einar Bjørndalen |
1:17:03.3 (0+0) (0+0) (0+2) (0+2) (0+0) (0+2) (0+0) (0+1) |
France Vincent Jay Vincent Defrasne Simon Fourcade Martin Fourcade |
1:17:30.8 (0+2) (0+2) (0+0) (0+3) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) |
Germany Christoph Stephan Michael Greis Arnd Peiffer Simon Schempp |
1:17:45.5 (0+1) (0+2) (0+1) (0+3) (0+2) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) |
10 km Sprint details |
Evgeny Ustyugov Russia |
28:45.0 (0+3) |
Michael Greis Germany |
28:47.8 (0+2) |
Carl Johan Bergman Sweden |
28:53.2 (0+0) |
15 km Mass Start details |
Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway |
38:57.3 (0+1+0+0) |
Tim Burke United States |
40:00.2 (0+1+1+0) |
Tomasz Sikora Poland |
40:37.9 (0+0+1+2) |
Women
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
4 x 6 km Relay details |
Russia Anna Bogaliy-Titovets Anna Boulygina Olga Medvedtseva Svetlana Sleptsova |
1:14:23.6 (0+3) (0+2) (0+0) (0+0) (0+1) (0+0) (0+2) (0+0) |
Germany Martina Beck Simone Hauswald Tina Bachmann Andrea Henkel |
1:14:23.9 (0+1) (0+2) (0+0) (0+3) (0+2) (0+3) (0+0) (0+0) |
France Marie-Laure Brunet Sylvie Becaert Marie Dorin Sandrine Bailly |
1:15:24.5 (0+0) (0+0) (0+1) (0+3) (0+0) (0+1) (0+2) (0+1) |
7.5 km Sprint details |
Simone Hauswald Germany |
22:15.1 (0+1) |
Helena Jonsson Sweden |
22:23.8 (1+0) |
Ann Kristin Flatland Norway |
22:32.6 (0+1) |
12.5 km Mass Start details |
Andrea Henkel Germany |
40:53.6 (1+1+0+0) |
Helena Jonsson Sweden |
41:17.0 (0+1+0+1) |
Tora Berger Norway |
41:33.9 (0+0+0+2) |
Achievements
[edit]- Best performance for all time
- Martten Kaldvee (EST), 7 place in Sprint
- Serhiy Semenov (UKR), 16 place in Sprint
- Jean-Guillaume Béatrix (FRA), 17 place in Sprint
- Mikhail Siamionau (BLR), 31 place in Sprint
- Junji Nagai (JPN), 36 place in Sprint
- Oleksandr Batiuk (UKR), 67 place in Sprint
- Martin Otcenas (SVK), 75 place in Sprint
- Satoru Abe (JPN), 76 place in Sprint
- Andrejs Rastorgujevs (LAT), 82 in Sprint
- Tomas Kaukėnas (LTU), 94 in Sprint
- Mindaugas Kovoliunas (LTU), 102 in Sprint
- Ann Kristin Flatland (NOR), 3 place in Sprint
- Diana Rasimovičiūtė (LTU), 10 place in Sprint
- Ekaterina Yurlova (RUS), 28 place in Sprint
- Sarah Murphy (NZL), 45 place in Sprint
- Lyudmyla Pysarenko (UKR), 57 place in Sprint
- Jo In-Hee (KOR), 63 place in Sprint
- Zanna Juskane (LAT), 74 place in Sprint
- Alexandra Camenscic (MDA), 81 place in Sprint
- Sarianna Repo (FIN), 82 place in Sprint
- Kim Mi-Seon (KOR), 84 place in Sprint
- Amanda Lightfoot (GBR), 86 place in Sprint
- First World Cup race
- Ted Armgren (SWE), 26 place in Sprint
- Priit Narusk (EST), 33 place in Sprint
- Tanja Karisik (BIH), 90 place in Sprint
References
[edit]- ^ "Oberhof World Cup schedule". Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2009-12-22.