2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – Pursuit Men

The 2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – Pursuit Men will start at Saturday December 13, 2009 in Hochfilzen and will finish Saturday March 20, 2010 in Oslo. Defending titlist is Ole Einar Bjørndalen of Norway.

Competition format edit

This is a pursuit competition. The biathletes' starts are separated by their time differences from a previous race, most commonly a sprint race.[1] The contestants ski a distance of 12.5 kilometres (7.8 mi) over five laps. On four of the laps, the contestants shoot at targets; each miss requires the contestant to ski a penalty loop of 150 metres (490 ft). There are two prone shooting bouts and two standing bouts, in that order. The contestant crossing the finish line first is the winner.

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-served basis) at the lane corresponding to the position they arrived for all shooting bouts.

Points are awarded for each event, according to each contestant's finish. When all events are completed. the contestant with the highest number of points is declared the season winner.

2008–09 Top 3 Standings edit

Medal Athlete Points[2]
Gold:   Ole Einar Bjørndalen 342
Silver:   Emil Hegle Svendsen 308
Bronze:   Tomasz Sikora 276

Medal winners edit

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
Hochfilzen
details
Emil Hegle Svendsen
  Norway
34:36.7
(0+0+0+1)
Simon Eder
  Austria
34:38.3
(0+1+0+0)
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
  Norway
34:39.8
(0+1+2+0)
Pokljuka
details
Evgeny Ustyugov
  Russia
34:50.9
(0+1+1+0)
Roland Lessing
  Estonia
35:00.2
(0+0+0+0)
Simon Eder
  Austria
35:01.8
(1+0+0+1)
Antholz
details
Daniel Mesotitsch
  Austria
31:50.4
(0+0+0+1)
Arnd Peiffer
  Germany
31:52.1
(0+1+0+0)
Dominik Landertinger
  Austria
32:10.1
(1+1+1+0)
2010 Winter Olympics
details
Björn Ferry
  Sweden
33:38.4
(0+0+0+1)
Christoph Sumann
  Austria
33:54.9
(0+0+1+1)
Vincent Jay
  France
34:06.6
(0+0+1+1)
Kontiolahti
details
Martin Fourcade
  France
32:35.1
(1+0+0+0)
Christian De Lorenzi
  Italy
32:45.2
(0+0+0+1)
Vincent Jay
  France
32:50.7
(0+0+0+0)
Oslo
details
Martin Fourcade
  France
33:46.9
(1+0+1+1)
Simon Schempp
  Germany
33:55.9
(0+0+0+0)
Ivan Tcherezov
  Russia
34:13.1
(0+0+0+1)

Standings edit

# Name HOC POK ANT OLY KON OSL Total[3]
1   Martin Fourcade (FRA) 27 43 7 60 60 197
2   Simon Eder (AUT) 54 48 23 43 28 13 196
3   Ivan Tcherezov (RUS) 19 34 29 38 40 48 189
4   Evgeny Ustyugov (RUS) 40 60 2 26 20 38 184
5   Dominik Landertinger (AUT) 21 43 48 27 26 40 184
6   Christoph Sumann (AUT) 43 30 54 25 27 179
7   Vincent Jay (FRA) 30 25 48 48 23 174
8   Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 60 34 36 43 173
9   Arnd Peiffer (GER) 14 40 54 4 32 20 160
10   Björn Ferry (SWE) 36 27 60 34 157
11   Simon Fourcade (FRA) 34 32 34 22 32 154
12   Daniel Mesotitsch (AUT) 25 12 60 0 9 29 135
13   Simon Schempp (GER) 8 31 29 54 122
14   Tomasz Sikora (POL) 25 38 23 30 116
15   Andreas Birnbacher (GER) 13 2 28 28 18 25 114
16   Ole Einar Bjørndalen (NOR) 48 36 24 108
17   Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) 20 4 22 43 9 98
18   Klemen Bauer (SLO) 36 3 32 24 0 95
19   Christian De Lorenzi (ITA) 29 11 54 0 94
20   Sergey Novikov (BLR) 23 19 20 13 18 93
21   Tim Burke (USA) 31 38 0 0 17 86
22   Serguei Sednev (UKR) 23 32 31 0 86
23   Anton Shipulin (RUS) 11 16 36 21 84
24   Jean-Philippe Leguellec (CAN) 28 8 30 16 82
25   Pavol Hurajt (SVK) 0 14 25 34 7 80
26   Nikolay Kruglov (RUS) 38 15 26 79
27   Jakov Fak (CRO) 24 16 7 30 77
28   Michael Greis (GER) 15 40 21 76
29   Lars Berger (NOR) 32 26 18 0 76
30   Maxim Tchoudov (RUS) 28 0 19 26 73
31   Michal Šlesingr (CZE) 2 0 0 12 38 19 71
32   Halvard Hanevold (NOR) 30 17 24 0 71
33   Vincent Defrasne (FRA) 22 19 19 6 66
34   Friedrich Pinter (AUT) 18 18 13 17 0 66
35   Fredrik Lindström (SWE) 0 21 8 31 60
36   Roland Lessing (EST) 54 0 54
37   Alexander Os (NOR) 0 24 27 2 53
38   Christoph Stephan (GER) 40 11 0 51
39   Jaroslav Soukup (CZE) 17 8 22 0 3 50
40   Janez Maric (SLO) 0 6 0 0 11 28 45
41   Frode Andresen (NOR) 22 18 4 44
42   Alexander Wolf (GER) 11 17 0 16 44
43   Thomas Frei (SUI) 0 29 14 43
44   Simon Hallenbarter (SUI) 0 21 0 22 43
45   Tobias Eberhard (AUT) 0 31 11 42
46   Serhiy Semenov (UKR) 20 0 2 12 6 40
47   Victor Vasilyev (RUS) 10 0 15 15 40
48   Andriy Deryzemlya (UKR) 12 7 6 15 40
49   Brendan Green (CAN) 0 0 27 12 39
50   Alexey Volkov (RUS) 1 36 37
51   Paavo Puurunen (FIN) 16 14 7 0 37
52   Lukas Hofer (ITA) 26 9 0 35
53   Tarjei Bø (NOR) 29 4 33
54   Alexsandr Chervyhkov (KAZ) 9 13 0 0 10 32
55   Magnús Jónsson (SWE) 0 0 31 31
56   Mattias Nilsson (SWE) 24 5 29
57   Jeremy Teela (USA) 10 17 27
58   Benjamin Weger (SUI) 23 1 24
59   Rustam Valiullin (BLR) 6 0 8 8 22
60   Alexis Bœuf (FRA) 21 21
61   Hans Martin Gjedrem (NOR) 0 20 20
62   Matthias Simmen (SUI) 4 0 0 13 0 0 17
63   Dušan Šimočko (SVK) 16 16
64   Mattia Cola (ITA) 0 15 0 15
65   Yan Savitskiy (KAZ) 0 14 0 14
66   Tomas Holubec (CZE) 0 14 14
67   Ted Armgren (SWE) 12 12
68   Alexandr Syman (BLR) 1 10 11
69   Ondřej Moravec (CZE) 0 0 10 10
70   Kazuya Inomata (JPN) 10 10
71   Olexander Bilanenko (UKR) 7 1 2 10
72   Ilmārs Bricis (ITA) 9 0 9
73   Krasimir Anev (BUL) 9 0 9
74   Zhang Chengye (CHN) 0 6 6
75   Zdeněk Vítek (CZE) 0 3 3 6
76   Michail Kletcherov (BUL) 5 0 5
77   Vasja Rupnik (SLO) 0 5 0 0 5
78   Lowell Bailey (USA) 0 5 0 5
79   Tanguy Roche (FRA) 5 5
79   Vitali Tsvetau (BLR) 5 5
81   Claudio Böckli (SUI) 0 0 4 0 0 4
82   Michael Rösch (GER) 3 0 3
83   Ronny Hafsås (NOR) 0 3 0 3
84   Evgeny Abramenko (BLR) 1 1 2

References edit

  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. ^ "2008/09 Final standings". Archived from the original on 2012-03-07. Retrieved 2009-12-12.
  3. ^ Standings Pursuit men