2008–09 Biathlon World Cup – Pursuit Men

World Cup
2008/09
Men

Overall | Sprint | Pursuit | Mass start | Individual | Relay

Women

Overall | Sprint | Pursuit | Mass Start | Individual | Relay

World Cup Events

Östersund | Hochfilzen (1) | Hochfilzen (2) | Oberhof | Ruhpolding
Antholz | Vancouver | Trondheim | Khanty-Mansiysk

World Championships

The 2008-09 Biathlon World Cup/Pursuit Men started at Sunday December 7, 2008 in Östersund and will finish Saturday March 28, 2009 in Khanty-Mansiysk. Defending titlist is Ole Einar Bjørndalen of Norway.

Contents

Competition format

In a pursuit, biathletes' starts are separated by their time differences from a previous race,[1] most commonly a sprint. The contestant crossing the finish line first is the winner. The distance is 12.5 kilometres (7.8 mi), skied over five laps; there are four shooting bouts (two prone, two standing, in that order), and each miss means a penalty loop of 150 m. To prevent awkward and/or dangerous crowding of the skiing loops, and overcapacity at the shooting range, World Cup Pursuits are held with only the 60 top ranking biathletes after the preceding race. The biathletes shoot (on a first-come, first-serve basis) at the lane corresponding to the position they arrived for all shooting bouts.

2007-08 Top 3 Standings

Medal Athlete Points[2]
Gold: Ole Einar Bjørndalen 247
Silver: Dmitri Yaroshenko 233
Bronze: Björn Ferry 221

Medal winners

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
Östersund
details
Tomasz Sikora
 Poland
34:55.5
(0+2+0+1)
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
34:58.0
(1+2+0+0)
Emil Hegle Svendsen
 Norway
35:00.4
(0+1+2+0)
Hochfilzen
details
Emil Hegle Svendsen
 Norway
35:46.3
(1+0+1+1)
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
35:55.7
(0+0+2+0)
Tomasz Sikora
 Poland
35:58.35
(1+0+0+2)
Ruhpolding
details
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
36:17.4
(0+1+0+0)
Emil Hegle Svendsen
 Norway
36:51.8
(1+0+0+0)
Dominik Landertinger
 Austria
37:03.9
(1+1+0+0)
Antholz
details
Björn Ferry
 Sweden
33:19.4
(0+0+1+0)
Simon Eder
 Austria
33:37.0
(0+0+0+0)
Emil Hegle Svendsen
 Norway
33:44.1
(1+0+1+1)
World Championships
details
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
31:46.70
(0+2+0+2)
Maxim Tchoudov
 Russia
32:28.40
(0+0+1+2)
Alexander Os
 Norway
32:39.50
(0+0+2+1)
Trondheim
details
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
33:36.3
(1+0+1+0)
Simon Eder
 Austria
34:01.4
(0+0+1+0)
Tomasz Sikora
 Poland
34:01.6
(0+1+1+0)
Khanty-Mansiysk
details
Emil Hegle Svendsen
 Norway
33:03.3
(0+0+1+1)
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
33:03.4
(1+0+0+1)
Christoph Sumann
 Austria
33:27.1
(0+0+2+0)

Final standings

# Name ÖST HOC RUH ANT WCH TRO KHA Total[3]
   Ole Einar Bjørndalen 54 54 60 60 60 54 342
2 Emil Hegle Svendsen 48 60 54 48 38 60 308
3 Tomasz Sikora 60 48 34 43 43 48 32 276
4 Michael Greis 43 36 27 38 28 43 43 231
5 Björn Ferry 31 40 7 60 10 34 40 215
6 Simon Eder 23 54 27 54 28 186
7 Maxim Tchoudov 29 27 21 26 54 17 29 186
8 Ivan Tcherezov 23 2 40 34 15 29 19 160
9 Christoph Sumann 9 32 32 32 6 48 159
10 Michal Šlesingr 0 30 27 22 40 38 157
11 Halvard Hanevold 38 20 24 38 36 0 156
12 Dominik Landertinger 19 48 25 7 31 14 144
13 Alexander Os 27 18 11 48 32 7 143
14 Simon Fourcade 40 0 29 22 31 21 143
15 Michael Rösch 13 38 31 32 27 0 141
16 Carl Johan Bergman 22 29 43 23 19 3 138
17 Alexander Wolf 34 30 6 20 23 8 13 128
18 Daniel Mesotitsch 25 8 13 28 17 12 27 122
19 Martin Fourcade 26 16 34 20 22 118
20 Jean Philippe Leguellec 24 34 18 36 0 0 5 117
21 Tim Burke –5 30 20 28 34 112
22 Evgeny Ustyugov 19 19 21 15 36 110
23 Lars Berger 3 36 40 21 100
24 Christian De Lorenzi 5 38 24 0 29 96
25 Markus Windisch 26 22 25 18 91
26 Nikolay Kruglov, Jr. 32 43 9 83
27 Andreas Birnbacher 7 20 25 30 82
28 Jaroslav Soukup 18 2 17 0 30 10 77
29 Zdeněk Vítek 14 14 17 13 18 0 76
30 Friedrich Pinter 4 31 2 23 15 75
31 Mattias Nilsson 0 19 0 0 14 24 17 74
32 Andriy Deryzemlya 12 24 36 72
33 Christoph Stephan 36 21 0 15 0 0 72
34 Vincent Jay 0 31 13 2 26 72
35 Rustam Valiullin 28 16 0 18 62
36 Pavol Hurajt 11 5 0 22 24 62
37 Serguei Sednev 8 1 40 8 57
38 Vyacheslav Derkach 16 14 0 5 20 55
39 Maxim Maksimov 0 28 22 0 2 52
40 Simon Hallenbarter 17 0 0 12 0 23 52
41 Andrei Makoveev 0 6 1 0 24 14 6 51
42 Vincent Defrasne 17 28 1 1 47
43 Tobias Eberhard 10 9 21 4 0 44
44 Arnd Peiffer 8 9 0 26 43
45 Magnús Jónsson 0 16 0 26 42
46 Ronny Hafsas 22 0 15 0 4 41
47 Jay Hakkinen 30 0 10 40
48 Rene Laurent Vuillermoz 10 0 29 0 39
49 Janez Maric 0 14 6 16 0 36
50 Ivan Joller 23 0 11 0 34
51 Sergey Novikov 20 5 0 0 9 0 34
52 Matthias Simmen 0 25 7 0 32
53 Tomáš Holubec 2 15 4 11 32
54 Simon Schempp 31 31
55 Klemen Bauer 0 30 0 0 30
56 Lowell Bailey 19 10 29
57 Olexander Bilanenko 0 18 9 27
58 Zhang Chengye 13 0 4 10 27
59 Stian Eckhoff 26 26
60 Paavo Puurunen 0 25 0 25
61 Artem Gusev 25 25
62 Jakov Fak 0 16 3 0 19
63 Roland Lessing 0 0 5 13 18
64 Toni Lang 7 11 0 18
65 Frode Andresen 6 11 17
66 Rune Bratsveen 16 16
67 Roman Dostál 15 0 15
68 Robin Clegg 0 3 12 0 0 15
69 Anton Shipulin 12 12
69 Oleg Berezhnoy 12 12
69 Hans Martin Gjedrem 12 12
72 Sergey Balandin 11 11
73 Hidenori Isa 4 0 6 10
74 Jörgen Brink 0 9 9
75 Christian Martinelli 9 9
76 Roman Pryma 0 0 0 8 8
77 Alexis Boeuf 7 0 7
78 Alexandr Syman 0 5 0 5
79 Zhang Qing 4 4
80 Lois Habert 0 3 3
81 Ilmars Bricis 0 3 3
81 Dusan Simocko 3 3
83 David Ekholm 0 0 0 0 2 2
84 Mattia Cola 0 1 1
85 Jeremy Teela 1 0 0 1
86 Christoph Knie 1 1

References

  1. ^ To be precise; the pursuit competition start intervals are determined by common rounding to the nearest whole second of the biathletes' time differences from the previous race– the amount of time each biathlete lagged after the winner to the finish line.
  2. ^ 2007/08 Final standings
  3. ^ Standings Pursuit men