2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – Mass start Men

The 2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – Mass start Men started on Sunday, January 10, 2010, in Oberhof and finished on Saturday, March 27, 2010, in Khanty-Mansiysk. Defending titlist was Dominik Landertinger of Austria.

Competition format edit

In the mass start, all biathletes start at the same time and the first across the finish line wins. In this 15.0 kilometres (9.3 mi) competition, the distance is skied over five laps; there are four bouts of shooting (two prone, two standing, in that order) with the first shooting bout being at the lane corresponding to your bib (Bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of position in race.) with rest of the shooting bouts being at the lane in the position they arrived (Arrive at the lane in fifth place, you shoot at lane five.). As in sprint races, competitors must ski one 150 m penalty loop for each miss. Here again, to avoid unwanted congestion, World Cup Mass starts are held with only the 30 top ranking athletes on the start line (half that of the Pursuit as here all contestants start simultaneously).

2008–09 Top 3 Standings edit

Medal Athlete Points[1]
Gold:   Dominik Landertinger 208
Silver:   Ole Einar Bjørndalen 199
Bronze:   Christoph Sumann 197

Medal winners edit

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
Oberhof
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)
Ruhpolding
details
Emil Hegle Svendsen
  Norway
39:19.5
(0+0+0+0)
Evgeny Ustyugov
  Russia
39:24.6
(0+0+0+1)
Simon Eder
  Austria
39:29.4
(0+0+1+0)
2010 Winter Olympics
details
Evgeny Ustyugov
  Russia
35:35.7
(0+0+0+0)
Martin Fourcade
  France
35:46.2
(2+0+0+1)
Pavol Hurajt
  Slovakia
35:52.3
(0+0+0+0)
Oslo
details
Ivan Tcherezov
  Russia
40:10.1
(0+0+0+0)
Christoph Sumann
  Austria
40:36.4
(2+0+0+1)
Emil Hegle Svendsen
  Norway
40:44.7
(0+1+0+1)
Khanty-Mansiysk
details
Dominik Landertinger
  Austria
38:19.8
(1+0+0+0)
Arnd Peiffer
  Germany
38:23.4
(0+0+0+0)
Halvard Hanevold
  Norway
38:31.0
(0+0+0+0)

Standings edit

# Name OBE RUH OLY OSL KHA Total[2]
1   Evgeny Ustyugov (RUS) 43 54 60 40 13 197
2   Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 18 60 28 48 27 163
3   Arnd Peiffer (GER) 40 43 24 14 54 161
4   Christoph Sumann (AUT) 27 36 43 54 18 160
5   Dominik Landertinger (AUT) 25 34 36 27 60 157
6   Ivan Tcherezov (RUS) 24 24 38 60 32 154
7   Ole Einar Bjørndalen (NOR) 60 38 14 28 26 152
8   Martin Fourcade (FRA) 20 40 54 20 38 152
9   Simon Fourcade (FRA) 36 27 27 38 40 141
10   Simon Eder (AUT) 23 48 16 23 43 137
11   Halvard Hanevold (NOR) 31 20 22 32 48 133
12   Vincent Jay (FRA) 19 30 34 36 31 131
13   Daniel Mesotitsch (AUT) 15 28 40 30 30 128
14   Tim Burke (USA) 54 22 23 18 25 124
15   Andreas Birnbacher (GER) 14 31 26 43 23 123
16   Alexander Os (NOR) 38 32 29 20 119
17   Maxim Tchoudov (RUS) 29 25 34 24 112
18   Michael Greis (GER) 30 21 31 16 29 111
19   Tomasz Sikora (POL) 48 30 24 102
20   Andriy Deryzemlya (UKR) 17 15 31 34 97
21   Björn Ferry (SWE) 23 29 25 15 92
22   Anton Shipulin (RUS) 28 29 19 13 89
23   Pavol Hurajt (SVK) 48 12 28 88
24   Klemen Bauer (SLO) 26 12 13 26 22 87
25   Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) 13 26 22 11 72
26   Jean-Philippe Leguellec (CAN) 22 19 11 17 14 72
27   Michal Šlesingr (CZE) 25 21 21 67
28   Sergey Novikov (BLR) 16 14 21 15 12 66
29   Serguei Sednev (UKR) 11 20 11 19 61
30   Christoph Stephan (GER) 18 19 17 54
31   Nikolay Kruglov (RUS) 34 13 47
32   Friedrich Pinter (AUT) 12 18 16 46
33   Victor Vasilyev (RUS) 21 17 38
34   Christian De Lorenzi (ITA) 36 36
35   Jakov Fak (CRO) 32 32
36   Lars Berger (NOR) 32 32
37   Thomas Frei (SUI) 17 17
38   Fredrik Lindström (SWE) 16 16
39   Jaroslav Soukup (CZE) 15 15
40   Jeremy Teela (USA) 12 12
41   Tarjei Bø (NOR) 11 11

References edit

  1. ^ "2008/09 Final standings". Archived from the original on 2012-03-06. Retrieved 2010-01-10.
  2. ^ Standings Mass start women