2011–12 Biathlon World Cup |
---|
Men |
|
Women |
|
Mixed |
Mixed relay |
World Cup locations |
See also |
The 2011–12 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 7 was held in Holmenkollen, Oslo, Norway, from 2 February until 5 February 2012.[1]
Schedule of events
Date | Time | Events |
---|---|---|
February 2 | 11:30 CET | Women's 7.5 km Sprint |
14:30 CET | Men's 10 km Sprint | |
February 4 | 13:15 CET | Women's 10 km Pursuit |
15:15 CET | Men's 12.5 km Pursuit | |
February 5 | 13:15 CET | Women's 12.5 km Mass Start |
15:15 CET | Men's 15 km Mass Start |
Medal winners
Men
Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
10 km Sprint details |
Evgeniy Garanichev Russia | 25:22.2 (0+0) |
Arnd Peiffer Germany | 25:22.9 (0+0) |
Emil Hegle Svendsen Norway | 25:34.0 (0+2) |
12.5 km Pursuit details |
Arnd Peiffer Germany | 31:44.0 (0+0+0+0) |
Emil Hegle Svendsen Norway | 32:15.2 (0+1+0+1) |
Evgeniy Garanichev Russia | 32:20.3 (0+0+1+1) |
15 km Mass Start details |
Emil Hegle Svendsen Norway | 40:44.1 (0+1+1+0) |
Andreas Birnbacher Germany | 40:50.4 (0+0+0+0) |
Evgeniy Garanichev Russia | 41:01.9 (0+0+1+1) |
Women
Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
7.5 km Sprint details |
Magdalena Neuner Germany | 20:41.9 (0+0) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus | 21:20.1 (0+1) |
Tora Berger Norway | 21:30.8 (1+0) |
10 km Pursuit details |
Magdalena Neuner Germany | 30:31.1 (0+1+1+0) |
Olga Zaitseva Russia | 31:07.6 (0+0+0+0) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus | 31:22.5 (0+0+2+0) |
12.5 km Mass Start details |
Andrea Henkel Germany | 38:01.2 (1+0+0+0) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus | 38:27.8 (1+1+1+1) |
Teja Gregorin Slovenia | 38:28.4 (0+0+0+0) |
Achievements
- Best performance for all time
- Evgeniy Garanichev (RUS), 1st place in Sprint
- Brendan Green (CAN), 9th place in Sprint
- Scott Perras (CAN), 27th place in Sprint
- Maksim Burtasov (RUS), 38th place in Sprint and 32nd in Pursuit
- Karolis Zlatkauskas (LTU), 71st place in Sprint
- Martin Rammelg (EST), 82nd place in Sprint
- Ivan Zlatev (BUL), 86th place in Sprint
- Vincent Naveau (BEL), 87th place in Sprint
- Edin Hodzic (SRB), 88th place in Sprint
- Dmitry Malyshko (RUS), 4th place in Mass Start
- Megan Imrie (CAN), 17th place in Sprint
- Mari Laukkanen (FIN), 20th place in Sprint and 14th in Pursuit
- Luminita Piscoran (ROU), 26th place in Sprint
- Annelies Cook (USA), 33rd place in Sprint
- Tiril Eckhoff (NOR), 45th place in Sprint
- Natalija Kocergina (LTU), 52nd place in Sprint
- Elin Mattsson (SWE), 58th place in Sprint
- Naoko Azegami (JPN), 68th place in Sprint
- Dafinka Koeva (BUL), 74th place in Sprint
- Anna-Carin Strömstedt (SWE), 15th place in Pursuit
- Emilia Yordanova (BUL), 38th place in Pursuit
- First World Cup race
- Christoffer Eriksson (SWE), 49th place in Sprint
- Gabriel Stegmayr (SWE), 79th place in Sprint
- Mykhaylo Serdyuk (UKR), 80th place in Sprint
- Vasil Chorbadzhiev (BUL), 89th place in Sprint
- Kateryna Tseselska (UKR), 66th place in Sprint
- Yan Zhang (CHN), 67th place in Sprint
- Jitka Landová (CZE), 71st place in Sprint
- Florina-Ioana Cirstea (ROU), 73rd place in Sprint
References
- ↑ "E.ON IBU World Cup 7 Biathlon". IBU Datacenter. Archived from the original on 21 August 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.