2011–12 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4
Appearance
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2011–12 Biathlon World Cup |
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Men |
Women |
Mixed |
Mixed relay |
World Cup locations |
See also |
The 2011–12 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4 was held in Oberhof, Germany, from 4 January until 8 January 2012.[1] It was the fourth of nine scheduled events on the World Cup schedule, with both men and women competing in three different disciplines.
Schedule of events
[edit]Date | Time | Events |
---|---|---|
January 4 | 18:15 CET | Women's 4 x 6 km Relay |
January 5 | 18:20 CET | Men's 4 x 7.5 km Relay |
January 6 | 18:30 CET | Women's 7.5 km Sprint |
January 7 | 14:30 CET | Men's 10 km Sprint |
January 8 | 13:30 CET | Women's 12.5 km Mass Start |
15:30 CET | Men's 15 km Mass Start |
Medal winners
[edit]Men
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
4 x 7.5 km Relay details |
Italy Christian de Lorenzi Markus Windisch Dominik Windisch Lukas Hofer |
1:30:49.1 (0+0) (0+1) (0+0) (0+1) (0+1) (0+1) (0+0) (0+1) |
Russia Anton Shipulin Evgeniy Garanichev Evgeny Ustyugov Alexey Volkov |
1:30:55.2 (0+0) (0+2) (0+2) (0+3) (0+0) (2+3) (0+2) (0+1) |
Sweden Tobias Arwidson Björn Ferry Fredrik Lindström Carl Johan Bergman |
1:31:21.8 (0+0) (0+0) (0+0) (0+1) (0+0) (0+1) (0+3) (0+1) |
10 km Sprint details |
Arnd Peiffer Germany |
25:57.5 (1+0) |
Simon Fourcade France |
25:58.6 (0+0) |
Evgeny Ustyugov Russia |
26:02.3 (0+0) |
15 km Mass Start details |
Andreas Birnbacher Germany |
38:34.6 (0+0+0+0) |
Simon Fourcade France |
38:38.9 (0+1+0+0) |
Emil Hegle Svendsen Norway |
39:04.2 (0+1+2+0) |
Women
[edit]Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
4 x 6 km Relay details |
Russia Anna Bogaliy-Titovets Svetlana Sleptsova Olga Zaitseva Olga Vilukhina |
1:19:32.0 (0+2) (0+2) (0+2) (0+0) (0+3) (0+3) (0+0) (0+1) |
Norway Fanny Welle-Strand Horn Elise Ringen Synnøve Solemdal Tora Berger |
1:19:37.9 (0+0) (2+3) (0+1) (0+1) (0+2) (0+2) (0+1) (0+1) |
France Marie Dorin Habert Anais Bescond Marine Bolliet Sophie Boilley |
1:20:38.4 (0+1) (0+0) (1+3) (1+3) (0+1) (0+2) (0+0) (0+2) |
7.5 km Sprint details |
Magdalena Neuner Germany |
22:27.6 (0+0) |
Darya Domracheva Belarus |
23:04.9 (0+1) |
Olga Zaitseva Russia |
23:11.0 (0+0) |
12.5 km Mass Start details |
Magdalena Neuner Germany |
40:02.2 (1+1+1+0) |
Tora Berger Norway |
40:14.7 (1+0+1+0) |
Andrea Henkel Germany |
40:34.2 (1+0+0+0) |
Achievements
[edit]- Best performance of all time
- Yuryi Liadov (BLR), 30th place in Sprint
- Milanko Petrovic (SRB), 61st place in Sprint
- Ville Simola (FIN), 63rd place in Sprint
- Stefan Gavrila (ROU), 76th place in Sprint
- Nastassia Dubarezava (BLR), 7th place in Sprint
- Natalya Burdyga (UKR), 8th place in Sprint
- Diana Rasimovičiūtė (LTU), 9th place in Sprint
- Marine Bolliet (FRA), 16th place in Sprint
- Laure Soulie (AND), 26th place in Sprint
- Ingela Andersson (SWE), 58th place in Sprint
- Seora Kim (KOR), 74th place in Sprint
- First World Cup race
- Simon Kocevar (SLO), 80th place in Sprint
- Arturs Kolesnikovs (LAT), 91st place in Sprint
- Juliya Dzhyma (UKR), 34th place in Sprint
- Irene Cadurisch (SUI), 69th place in Sprint
- Eevamari Oksanen (FIN), 79th place in Sprint
- Yuki Nakajima (JPN), 81st place in Sprint
- Mika Torii (JPN), 84th place in Sprint
References
[edit]- ^ "E.ON IBU World Cup 4 Biathlon". IBU Datacenter. Archived from the original on 16 December 2011. Retrieved 16 December 2011.