2011–12 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 3
Appearance
2011–12 Biathlon World Cup |
---|
Men |
Women |
Mixed |
Mixed relay |
World Cup locations |
See also |
The 2011–12 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 3 was held in Hochfilzen, Austria, from 15 December until 18 December 2011. This was the second World Cup event in Hochfilzen in 2011–12 season, due to the lack of snow in Annecy.[1][2][3]
Schedule of events
[edit]The time schedule of the event stands below[4]
Date | Time | Events |
---|---|---|
December 15 | 14:30 CET | Men's 10 km Sprint |
December 16 | 14:30 CET | Women's 7.5 km Sprint |
December 17 | 12:00 CET | Men's 12.5 km Pursuit |
14:30 CET | Women's 10 km Pursuit | |
December 18 | 14:30 CET | Mixed Relay |
Medal winners
[edit]Men
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
10 km Sprint details |
Tarjei Bø Norway |
23:57.2 (1+0) |
Martin Fourcade France |
24:01.2 (1+1) |
Timofey Lapshin Russia |
24:14.4 (0+0) |
12.5 km Pursuit details |
Andreas Birnbacher Germany |
35:40.3 (0+0+0+0) |
Ole Einar Bjørndalen Norway |
35:40.5 (0+0+0+0) |
Simon Fourcade France |
35:41.6 (1+0+0+0) |
Women
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
7.5 km Sprint details |
Olga Zaitseva Russia |
20:36.6 (0+1) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus |
20:50.5 (1+1) |
Helena Ekholm Sweden |
21:06.8 (1+0) |
10 km Pursuit details |
Olga Zaitseva Russia |
31:52.2 (0+0+0+0) |
Helena Ekholm Sweden |
32:21.3 (0+0+0+1) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus |
32:36.9 (1+1+0+1) |
Mixed
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
2 x 6 km + 2 x 7.5 km Relay details |
Russia Olga Vilukhina Olga Zaitseva Alexey Volkov Anton Shipulin |
1:13:33.4 (0+0) (0+3) (0+2) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) |
Czech Republic Veronika Vítková Gabriela Soukalová Ondřej Moravec Michal Šlesingr |
1:14:00.4 (0+1) (0+2) (0+0) (0+0) (0+1) (0+0) (0+0) (0+1) |
France Marie Dorin Habert Sophie Boilley Alexis Bœuf Simon Fourcade |
1:14:11.9 (0+0) (0+2) (0+2) (0+2) (0+0) (0+1) (0+2) (0+0) |
Achievements
[edit]- Best performance for all time
- Timofey Lapshin (RUS), 3rd place in Sprint
- Jean-Guillaume Béatrix (FRA), 4th place in Sprint
- Tomas Holubec (CZE), 9th place in Sprint
- Martin Eng (NOR), 11th place in Sprint
- Vladimir Iliev (BUL), 20th place in Sprint
- Vladimir Alenishko (BLR), 33rd place in Sprint
- Mario Dolder (SUI), 34th place in Sprint
- Rolands Puzulis (LAT), 69th place in Sprint
- Jialin Tang (CHN), 6th place in Sprint
- Nastassia Dubarezava (BLR), 10th place in Sprint
- Anna Karin Strömstedt (SWE), 16th place in Sprint
- Romana Schrempf (AUT), 21st place in Sprint
- Megan Imrie (CAN), 25th place in Sprint and 24th place in Pursuit
- Elisa Gasparin (SUI), 41st place in Sprint
- Iryna Kryuko (BLR), 40th place in Pursuit
- First World Cup race
- Manuel Fernandez Musso (ESP), 104th place in Sprint
- Ane Skrove Nossum (NOR), 34th place in Sprint
- Birgitte Roeksund (NOR), 35th place in Sprint
- Iryna Kryuko (BLR), 46th place in Sprint
References
[edit]- ^ Novickis, Edmunds (14 December 2011). "Pēdējais biatlona posms šogad – vai turēsies Bergmans, vai medaļu sēriju turpinās Noinere?" (in Latvian). Sportacentrs.com. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
- ^ Associated Press (December 15, 2011). "Norway's Tarjei Boe wins 10K sprint at biathlon World Cup event". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
- ^ "E.ON IBU World Cup 3 Relocated to Hochfilzen". IBU. 5 December 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 16 December 2011.
- ^ "E.ON IBU World Cup 3 Biathlon". Archived from the original on 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2011-12-09.