Biathlon at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Mixed relay
Mixed relay at the XXIV Olympic Winter Games | |
---|---|
Venue | Hualindong Ski Resort |
Date | 5 February |
Competitors | 80 from 20 nations |
Teams | 20 |
Winning time | 1:06:45.6 |
Medalists | |
Biathlon at the 2022 Winter Olympics | |||
---|---|---|---|
Qualification
| |||
Individual | men | women | |
Sprint | men | women | |
Pursuit | men | women | |
Mass start | men | women | |
Relay | men | women | mixed |
The mixed relay competition of the 2022 Winter Olympics was held on 5 February, at the National Biathlon Centre,[1] in the Zhangjiakou cluster of competition venues, 180 kilometres (110 mi) north of Beijing, at an elevation of 1,665 metres (5,463 ft).[2] The event was won by Norway. France was second, and the Russian Olympic Committee third.
Summary
[edit]The defending champions were France, and the 2018 silver and bronze medalists were Norway and Italy, respectively. There was only one mixed relay in the 2021–22 Biathlon World Cup before the Olympics, won by Norway, with Belarus second and France third. Norway were also the 2021 world champion.
Marte Olsbu Røiseland comfortably won the first leg for Norway, who was 15 seconds ahead of Italy, followed by Belarus, Sweden, and the Russian Olympic Committee. For France, Anaïs Chevalier-Bouchet had to ski two penalty loops and was in the ninth position. However, in the second leg Norway's Tiril Eckhoff got three penalty loops and dropped to the fifth position. Julia Simon brought France to the leading position after the second leg, 4 seconds ahead of Italy, fifteen ahead of Sweden, and 30 seconds ahead of the United States and Norway. Meanwhile, Kristina Reztsova had to ski a penalty loop on her leg, and the Russian Olympic Committee dropped to seventh, a minute behind France. Alexander Loginov was the fastest in the third leg, bringing the Russian Olympic Committee to the leading position. Sweden was second, France dropped to third due to Émilien Jacquelin being on the penalty loop twice on his standing shoot. The United States were still fourth, and Norway fifth, all four teams approximately 20 seconds behind the leader. Italy dropped to seventh after a penalty loop of Thomas Bormolini and was not able to return to medal contention. On the last leg Quentin Fillon Maillet caught up with Eduard Latypov and Johannes Thingnes Bø caught over 9 seconds. At the finish Bø outsprinted Fillon Maillet and Latypov, and Norway won the gold medal ahead of France and the Russia Olympic Committee.
Qualification
[edit]Results
[edit]The race was started at 17:00.[3]
Rank | Bib | Country | Time | Penalties (P+S) | Deficit |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Norway | 1:06:45.6 17:18.6 19:12.6 15:31.1 14:43.3 |
1+6 2+7 0+1 0+0 1+3 2+3 0+0 0+3 0+2 0+1 |
||
3 | France | 1:06:46.5 18:43.7 17:17.7 15:56.3 14:48.8 |
0+5 3+6 0+2 1+3 0+2 0+0 0+0 2+3 0+1 0+0 |
+0.9 | |
5 | ROC | 1:06:47.1 18:16.0 18:46.1 14:38.3 15:06.7 |
0+4 1+9 0+2 0+3 0+1 1+3 0+0 0+2 0+1 0+1 |
+1.5 | |
4 | 4 | Sweden | 1:07:26.6 18:02.6 18:13.8 15:41.1 15:29.1 |
0+7 0+6 0+2 0+1 0+3 0+2 0+0 0+3 0+2 0+0 |
+41.0 |
5 | 6 | Germany | 1:07:51.1 19:37.1 18:00.0 15:23.0 14:51.0 |
1+10 1+8 1+3 1+3 0+3 0+3 0+3 0+1 0+1 0+1 |
+1:05.5 |
6 | 2 | Belarus | 1:08:00.2 17:49.8 19:05.0 15:32.8 15:32.6 |
0+6 2+8 0+1 0+1 0+3 2+3 0+0 0+2 0+2 0+2 |
+1:14.6 |
7 | 19 | United States | 1:08:58.3 18:52.3 17:38.8 15:27.8 16:59.4 |
1+8 0+4 0+3 0+2 0+1 0+0 0+1 0+0 1+3 0+2 |
+2:12.7 |
8 | 14 | Switzerland | 1:09:06.0 18:39.9 18:44.0 15:23.8 16:18.3 |
2+6 0+5 1+3 0+1 1+3 0+1 0+0 0+1 0+0 0+2 |
+2:20.4 |
9 | 7 | Italy | 1:09:25.3 17:35.3 18:30.2 16:23.0 16:56.8 |
0+4 2+10 0+0 0+1 0+1 0+3 0+0 1+3 0+3 1+3 |
+2:39.7 |
10 | 11 | Austria | 1:09:44.2 19:25.7 18:41.6 15:49.8 15:47.1 |
1+6 1+7 0+2 1+3 1+3 0+0 0+1 0+3 0+0 0+1 |
+2:58.6 |
11 | 8 | Finland | 1:10:06.7 19:24.1 18:14.2 15:12.5 17:15.9 |
1+6 0+6 0+0 0+0 0+2 0+3 0+1 0+0 1+3 0+3 |
+3:21.1 |
12 | 9 | Czech Republic | 1:10:20.2 18:40.2 18:44.1 17:11.7 15:44.2 |
2+7 1+10 0+3 0+2 0+0 0+3 2+3 1+3 0+1 0+2 |
+3:34.6 |
13 | 10 | Ukraine | 1:10:21.7 20:46.4 17:50.2 15:45.1 16:00.0 |
3+9 1+6 2+3 1+3 0+0 0+2 0+3 0+1 1+3 0+0 |
+3:36.1 |
14 | 18 | Canada | 1:11:12.4 19:48.9 18:48.1 16:30.5 16:04.9 |
0+5 3+12 0+1 0+3 0+1 0+3 0+3 2+3 0+0 1+3 |
+4:26.8 |
15 | 12 | China | 1:11:28.1 19:15.9 19:46.1 16:20.4 16:05.7 |
0+3 0+9 0+0 0+3 0+3 0+2 0+0 0+2 0+0 0+2 |
+4:42.5 |
16 | 13 | Estonia | 1:11:56.5 18:50.6 19:19.0 16:13.1 17:33.8 |
0+8 1+6 0+3 0+1 0+0 1+3 0+2 0+0 0+3 0+2 |
+5:10.9 |
17 | 15 | Slovakia | LAP 19:59.3 19:45.2 LAP |
3+3 0+3 1+3 0+1 5+3 |
|
18 | 20 | Japan | LAP 19:53.9 LAP |
0+3 0+3 0+2 3+3 |
|
19 | 17 | Bulgaria | LAP 19:38.6 LAP |
0+2 1+3 0+1 2+3 |
|
20 | 16 | Slovenia | LAP 19:15.0 LAP |
0+1 0+3 3+3 1+3 |
References
[edit]- ^ "Beijing Organising Committee for the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games". www.beijing2022.cn. Archived from the original on 2021-07-20. Retrieved 2021-07-18.
- ^ "Beijing". Inside IBU. International Biathlon Union. Retrieved 2022-01-16.
- ^ "Final results" (PDF). Ibu.blob.core.windows.net. 5 February 2022. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 February 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2022.