Numindividualevents: | 6 |
Numrelayevents: | 4 |
Menmostwins: | (3) |
Womenmostwins: | (4) |
Teamfirst: | Sweden |
Teamsecond: | Switzerland |
Teamthird: | Norway |
Teammostwins: | Sweden (2) |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous: | 2019 |
Next: | 2022 |
The 2021 Orienteering World Cup was the 26th edition of the Orienteering World Cup. The 2021 Orienteering World Cup consisted of six individual events and four relay events. The events were located in Switzerland, Sweden, and Italy.[1] The 2021 World Orienteering Championships in the Czech Republic were not included in the World Cup.
Venue | Distance | Date | Winner | Second | Third | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 - Switzerland | |||||||
1 | Neuchâtel, Switzerland | Knock-out sprint | 15 May | Matthias Kyburz | Joey Hadorn | Kasper Harlem Fosser | [2] |
2 | Sprint | 16 May | Emil Svensk | Yannick Michiels | Gustav Bergman | [3] | |
Round 2 - Sweden | |||||||
3 | Idre, Sweden | Long | 12 August | Kasper Harlem Fosser | Magne Dæhli | Daniel Hubmann | [4] |
4 | Middle | 14 August | Joey Hadorn | Daniel Hubmann | Simon Hector | ||
Round 3 - Finals | |||||||
5 | Cansiglio, Italy | Long | 30 September | Kasper Harlem Fosser | Matthias Kyburz | Daniel Hubmann | |
6 | Middle | 2 October | Kasper Harlem Fosser | Matthias Kyburz | Riccardo Scalet |
Venue | Distance | Date | Winner | Second | Third | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 1 - Switzerland | |||||||
1 | Neuchâtel, Switzerland | Knock-out sprint | 15 May | Tove Alexandersson | Simona Aebersold | Andrine Benjaminsen | |
2 | Sprint | 16 May | Tove Alexandersson | Elena Roos | Simona Aebersold | ||
Round 2 - Sweden | |||||||
3 | Idre, Sweden | Long | 12 August | Simona Aebersold | Andrine Benjaminsen | Tove Alexandersson | [5] |
4 | Middle | 14 August | Hanna Lundberg | Simona Aebersold | Natalia Gemperle | ||
Round 3 - Finals | |||||||
5 | Cansiglio, Italy | Long | 30 September | Tove Alexandersson | Simona Aebersold | Natalia Gemperle | |
6 | Middle | 2 October | Tove Alexandersson | Simona Aebersold | Andrine Benjaminsen |
Venue | Distance | Date | Winner | Second | Third | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Neuchâtel, Switzerland | Sprint relay | 13 May | [6] | ||||
2 | Idre, Sweden | Men's relay | 15 August | |||||
3 | Women's relay | 15 August | ||||||
4 | Cansiglio, Italy | Sprint Relay | 3 October | [7] |
The 40 best runners in each event are awarded points. The winner is awarded 100 points. In WC events 1 to 7, the six best results counts in the overall classification. In the finals (WC 8 and WC 9), both results count.
This section shows the overall standings after all events.
The table shows the standings after all events. This was the first year where individual results counted towards the team world cup, meaning competitors contributed to the team's score in both relay and individual events.
Rank | Nation | Points | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | align=left | Sweden | 7404 | |
2 | align=left | Switzerland | 6432 | |
3 | align=left | Norway | 6115 | |
4 | align=left | Finland | 3774 | |
5 | align=left | Czech Republic | 3451 | |
6 | align=left | Russia | 2904 | |
7 | align=left | Denmark | 2501 | |
8 | align=left | Austria | 2235 | |
9 | align=left | France | 2052 | |
10 | align=left | Poland | 2020 |