2006–07 Tour de Ski explained

Tour de Ski
Series:2006–07 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
Venue:Munich, Germany
Oberstdorf, Germany
Asiago, Italy
Val di Fiemme, Italy
Date:
Stages:8 (6 completed, 2 cancelled)
Menfirst:Tobias Angerer
Menfirst Nat:GER
Menfirst Color:red
Mensecond:Alexander Legkov
Mensecond Nat:RUS
Menthird:Simen Østensen
Menthird Nat:NOR
Mensprint:Tor Arne Hetland
Mensprint Nat:NOR
Mensprint Color:black
Womenfirst:Virpi Kuitunen
Womenfirst Nat:FIN
Womenfirst Color:red
Womensecond:Marit Bjørgen
Womensecond Nat:NOR
Womenthird:Valentyna Shevchenko
Womenthird Nat:UKR
Womensprint:Virpi Kuitunen
Womensprint Nat:FIN
Womensprint Color:black
Next:2007–08

The 2006–07 Tour de Ski was the first Tour to take place, from 31 December 2006 until 7 January 2007. It was won by German Tobias Angerer for men, while Finn Virpi Kuitunen won the women's Tour.

The first edition of the tour was held in Germany and Italy, with six races spread out over eight days, including two separate days of rest.[1] The prize money for the event amounted to 750,000 Swiss francs,[2] shared out on both men and women. Men's and women's events were held together on the same days.

Origin

Cross-country skiing had been through a period of renewal from the early 1980s, when the free technique was first introduced to the World Championships which led to a rush of new events, including pursuit skiing, sprint skiing and eventually long mass start races, to complement the traditional time trial or individual start style of skiing. The Tour de Ski was modelled on the Tour de France of cycling[3] and the idea has been reported to come from a meeting between former Olympic gold medallist Vegard Ulvang and Jürg Capol, the International Ski Federation's (FIS) chief executive officer for cross-country competitions, in Ulvang's sauna in Maridalen, Norway.[4] [5] Their idea was to create a stage competition consisting of different events which they expected would lead to several days of continuous excitement before the most complete skiers would become Tour de Ski champions.[4]

Ranking

The overall results were based on the aggregate time for all events, as well as bonus seconds awarded on sprint and mass start stages.

The two sprint races carried bonus seconds for the finish, which were subtracted from the overall time, as follows:

Finishing position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Seconds deducted 50 40 30 28 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

In mass start competitions, intermediate points carried bonus seconds; 15 to the winner, 10 to number two, and 5 to number three. The same number of seconds were awarded at the finish. In the 30 km race there were two intermediate points, in the 15 km race one intermediate point.

Stages

DatePlaceCountryWomen's distanceMen's distanceEventTechniqueWomen's winnerMen's winner
29 December Nové Město na Moravě Czech Republic 3 km 4.5 km Prologue, interval start - cancelled Classic Not available Not available
30 December Nové Město na Moravě Czech Republic 10 km 15 km Pursuit, starting intervals according to results in prologue - cancelled Freestyle Not available Not available
31 December 1100 m 1100 m Sprint Freestyle Marit Bjørgen (NOR) Christoph Eigenmann (SUI)
2 January 5+5 km 10+10 km Double pursuit Classic/Freestyle Kristin Størmer Steira (NOR) Vincent Vittoz (FRA)
3 January 10 km 15 km Interval start Classic Petra Majdič (SLO) Franz Göring (GER)
5 January 1200 m 1200 m Sprint Freestyle Virpi Kuitunen (FIN)Tor Arne Hetland (NOR)
6 January 15 km 30 km Mass start Classic Virpi Kuitunen (FIN) Eldar Rønning (NOR)
7 January 10 km 15 km Pursuit. Hill climb finish.
Starting intervals according to time differences in overall ranking.
Freestyle Virpi Kuitunen (FIN) Tobias Angerer (GER)

Favourites

Dagbladets Brynjar Skjærli listed Finland's Virpi Kuitunen as the main favourite in the women's event, with Marit Bjørgen the main challenger. Justyna Kowalczyk, Petra Majdič, Kateřina Neumannová, Evi Sachenbacher-Stehle, Claudia Künzel-Nystad, Aino-Kaisa Saarinen, Vibeke Skofterud and Kristina Šmigun were listed as "outsiders" or dark horses.[6] In the men's event, Tobias Angerer was the favourite, with Yevgeny Dementyev, Tor Arne Hetland, Petter Northug, Eldar Rønning, Anders Södergren, Jens Arne Svartedal and Axel Teichmann all listed as challengers. Frode Estil was named as an outsider.

Stage 1: Sprint Munich, 31 December

This was held at Munich Olympic Stadium in front of 6,500 spectators.[7]

Women's event, 822 m[8]

The listed times were achieved in the qualification race.

Men's event, 1200 m[9]

The listed times were achieved in the qualification race.

Northug fell in the first curve of the final, taking Pettersen and Fredriksson with him.

Stage 2: Pursuit Oberstdorf, 2 January

Women's event, 5 km classical + 5 km free[10]

Bonus seconds earned during the race:

SecondsPoint 1Finish
15
10
5
Men's event, 10 km classical + 10 km free[11]

Neither Christoph Eigenmann nor Roddy Darragon, number one and three in the overall standings before the race, finished, and were thus eliminated from the overall competition.

Bonus seconds earned during the race:

SecondsPoint 1Finish
15
10
5

Stage 3: Individual Start Oberstdorf, 3 January

Women's event, 10 km classical[12]
Men's event, 15 km classical[13]

Stage 4: Sprint Asiago, 5 January

Women's event, 1.2 km[14]

The listed times were achieved in the qualification race.

Men's event, 1.2 km[15]

The listed times were achieved in the qualification race.

Stage 5: Mass Start Cavalese, Val di Fiemme, 6 January

The sprint jersey was awarded after this stage; Virpi Kuitunen of Finland earned 45 bonus points and won the women's black jersey, while Tor Arne Hetland from Norway successfully defended the men's jersey.

Women's event, 15 km[16]

Bonus seconds earned during the race:[17]

SecondsPoint 1Point 2Finish
15
10
5
Men's event, 30 km[18]

Bonus seconds earned during the race:[19]

SecondsPoint 1Point 2Finish
15
10
5

Stage 6: Final Climb Cavalese, Val di Fiemme, 7 January

Athletes started in order of the aggregate standings, and the first athlete to reach the finish won. After the first 15 athletes, the remainder were released in a "wave start" five minutes behind Kuitunen, the leader, but their total time behind Kuitunen was added to the final time.

Women's event, 10 km[20] [21]
RankNameNationStage timeStage rankTotal time
1 36:36.7 31 2:20.15.3
2 35:44.4 16 +1:17.5
3 34:30.2 3 +1:20.8
4 36:19.0 24 +1:21.8
5 34:24.0 1 +1:23.8
6 35:48.4 17 +1:52.0
7 34:25.3 2 +1:53.8
8 35:25.4 10 +1:58.2
9 35:59.7 20 +2:23.7
10 35:18.8 9 +2:41.5
11 35:33.1 13 +3:08.5
12 34:56.2 6 +3:20.4
13 35:39.2 14 +3:22.0
14 35:27.0 11 +3:36.0
15 36:32.7 29 +3:41.1
Top stage times
34 34:44.7 4
18 34:50.7 5
30 34:56.2 7
35 35:28.8 12
Men's event, 11 km[22] [23]

A wave start was also employed in the men's event, but the first 30 started according to the time differences in the overall Tour standings. The remainder started six minutes behind Angerer.

RankNameNationStage timeStage rankTotal time
1 33:39.5 18 3:29:49.7
2 32:12.8 2 +46.4
3 34:14.5 33 +50.2
4 34:08.1 30 +1:07.0
5 33:43.1 20 +1:09.4
6 33:41.4 19 +1:18.7
7 33:46.9 22 +1:24.3
8 32:55.6 7 +1:32.2
9 33:36.6 16 +1:34.8
10 33:07.5 9 +1:46.1
11 34:12.8 32 +1:56.9
12 32:08.4 1 +2:18.5
13 33:46.0 21 +2:38.1
14 33:30.8 14 +2:53.9
15 32:54.0 5 +3:05.2
Top stage times
20 32:49.7 3
26 32:51.8 4
34 32:55.3 6
32 32:56.8 8
36 33:12.7 10
19 33:23.9 11
16 33:28.3 12

See also

Notes and References

  1. Neppe full kvote til Tour de Ski, Kjetil Skaufel, Trønder-Avisa, published 29 November 2006
  2. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/fr/news/latest-news.html?actu_id_17=43&actu_page_17=1 Tour Facts
  3. Tour-favoritter i kø, Tor Kise Karlsen, ANB, published 10 November 2006
  4. Web site: Den ble født i en badstue . It was born in a sauna . www.dagsavisen.no. Dagsavisen . 3 January 2015 . Norwegian.
  5. Web site: Ny æra for langrenn . A new era in cross-country skiing . www.dagsavisen.no . Dagsavisen . 25 November 2006 . Norwegian .
  6. Sorry Norge - utlendingene vinner, Dagbladet, 30 December 2006, pg. 34
  7. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2301/2007CC2301News.pdf FIS COMPETITION FACTS – Viessmann FIS World Cup Cross-Country
  8. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2300/2007CC2300RL.pdf Ladies 0.8 km Free Sprint - Results
  9. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2302/2007CC2302RL.pdf Mens 1.2 km Free Sprint - Results
  10. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2303/2007CC2303RL.pdf Women's 5 km Classical + 5 km Free Pursuit - Results
  11. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2304/2007CC2304RL.pdf Men's 10 km Classical + 10 km Free Pursuit - Results
  12. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2305/2007CC2305RL.pdf Women's 10 km Classical Individual - Results
  13. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2306/2007CC2306RL.pdf Men's 15 km Classical Individual - Results
  14. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2399/2007CC2399RL.pdf Women's 1.2 km Free Sprint - Results
  15. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2401/2007CC2401RL.pdf Mens 1.2 km Free Sprint - Results
  16. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2402/2007CC2402RL.pdf Women's 15 km Classical Sprint - Results
  17. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2402/2007CC2402TDSSP.pdf Tour de Ski - Sprint Ranking Ladies
  18. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2403/2007CC2403RL.pdf Men's 30 km Classical Mass Start - Results
  19. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2403/2007CC2403TDSSP.pdf FIS Tour De Ski - Sprint Ranking Men
  20. Web site: Tour de Ski Overall Ranking (Ladies) . www.fis-ski.com . . 22 January 2019.
  21. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2404/2007CC2404TDS.pdf FIS Tour De Ski - Overall Ranking Ladies
  22. Web site: Tour de Ski Overall Ranking (Men) . www.fis-ski.com . . 22 January 2019.
  23. http://www.tour-de-ski.com/pdf/2007/CC/2405/2007CC2405TDS.pdf FIS Tour De Ski - Overall Ranking Men