Jump to content

Ivan Babikov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ivan Babikov
Ivan Babikov in 2008
Country Canada
Born (1980-07-04) July 4, 1980 (age 44)
Syktyvkar, Komi ASSR, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Ski clubFoothills Nordic Ski Club
World Cup career
Seasons11 – (20062016)
Starts164
Podiums3
Wins1
Overall titles0 – (20th in 2013)
Discipline titles0

Ivan Sergeyevich Babikov (Russian: Иван Сергеевич Бабиков); born July 4, 1980, in Syktyvkar) is a Russian-born Canadian cross-country skier who competed between 2002 and 2016. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Whistler, he earned his best finish of fifth in the 15 km + 15 km double pursuit, and was fourth in 2013 World Championship 15 km freestyle, representing Canada.

He was raised in Kozhva,Pechora Region, Komi Republic) and studied at Syktyvkar State University Sport faculty (1997–2004).[1]

Skiing

[edit]

Babikov immigrated to Canada in the spring of 2003, as he and his mother joined his sister, who had moved to this country in 1998, in the Toronto area. Initially, Babikov had no intentions of skiing after his career had stalled in Russia. But that fall he moved to Canmore and began competing with the Canadian team, but with a Russian license from the International Skiing Federation (FIS). Without Canadian citizenship, however, he chose to return to Russia and was selected to compete for that country at the 2006 Olympic Winter Games. He continued to compete for Russia in 2006-07 after a bid to fast-track his Canadian citizenship was unsuccessful.

By this time, Babikov was determined to make his home in Canada, especially after his mother was granted her citizenship. Midway through the 2007-08 season, Babikov also officially became Canadian and began representing the maple leaf internationally in 2008-09. In January 2009 he finished first in the final stage of the Tour de Ski, becoming just the second Canadian man (and still just one of four) to win a World Cup race. It was the first World Cup victory by a Canadian man since Pierre Harvey in March 1988.

Babikov was part of the home team at Vancouver 2010, where the men’s cross-country team posted several unprecedented results. In the event now known as the 30 km skiathlon, Babikov placed a Canadian best-ever fifth in a race in which three Canadians were in the top-10. He also finished a best-ever eighth in the 15 km freestyle race and helped the 4 × 10 km relay team to a seventh place finish.

Babikov has 33 individual career victories up to 50 km at lesser events from 2003 to 2006.

He competed in 2006 Winter Olympics for Russia (he was 13th in 30 km skiathlon) and in the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, finishing seventh in the 4 × 10 km relay. In Vancouver he showed his best personal Olympic results: He was fifth in the skiathlon and eighth in 15 km freestyle.

He announced his retirement from cross-country skiing in June, 2016 and joined the coaching staff of the Canadian National Cross-Country Ski Team.[2]

Change of nationality

[edit]

Babikov lived in Canada in spring 2003 on a sponsorship, and got his Canadian citizenship in December 2007. In 2008, he still had to ski for Russia, according to rules about the licenses from International Ski Federation. He officially became a Canadian ski competitor in January 2009.[3] Now he lives in Alberta.

Cross-country skiing results

[edit]

All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).[4]

Olympic Games

[edit]
 Year   Age   15 km 
 individual 
 30 km 
 skiathlon 
 50 km 
 mass start 
 Sprint   4 × 10 km 
 relay 
 Team 
 sprint 
2006 26 22 13 38
2010 30 8 5 33 7
2014 34 39 24 20 12

World Championships

[edit]
 Year   Age   15 km 
 individual 
 30 km 
 skiathlon 
 50 km 
 mass start 
 Sprint   4 × 10 km 
 relay 
 Team 
 sprint 
2007 27 45
2009 29 40 16 5
2011 31 30 15 17 12
2013 33 4 31 DNF 12
2015 35 20 23 30 10

World Cup

[edit]

Season standings

[edit]
 Season   Age  Discipline standings Ski Tour standings
Overall Distance Sprint Nordic
Opening
Tour de
Ski
World Cup
Final
Ski Tour
Canada
2006 26 45 29
2007 27 136 83
2008 28 84 53
2009 29 46 25 NC 35 33
2010 30 23 27 NC 9 17
2011 31 42 33 NC 41 21 16
2012 32 52 34 NC 46 27
2013 33 20 20 NC 25 7 41
2014 34 40 30 NC 36 15 23
2015 35 67 43 NC 28 30
2016 36 38 32 NC 50 29 14

Individual podiums

[edit]
  • 1 victory – (1 SWC)
  • 3 podiums – (3 SWC)
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place
1 2008–09 16 March 2008 Italy Val di Fiemme, Italy 10 km Pursuit F Stage World Cup 1st
2  2012–13  6 January 2013 Italy Val di Fiemme, Italy 9 km Pursuit F Stage World Cup 2nd
3  2013–14  5 January 2014 Italy Val di Fiemme, Italy 9 km Pursuit F Stage World Cup 3rd

Team podiums

[edit]
  • 1 victory – (1 RL)
  • 1 podium – (1 RL)
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place Teammates
1 2006–07 4 February 2007 Switzerland Davos, Switzerland 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Cup 1st Novikov / Chernousov / Shiryayev

References

[edit]
  1. ^ https://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080125.MAKI25/TPStory/Sports/columnists [dead link]
  2. ^ "Babikov retires, moves to coaching". RMO Today. 30 June 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  3. ^ Article Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine from The Province newspaper, 16 Jan 2009
  4. ^ "BABIKOV Ivan". FIS-Ski. International Ski Federation. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
[edit]