Biathlon at the 2006 Winter Olympics explained

Event:Biathlon
Games:2006 Winter
Venue:Cesana San Sicario
Dates:11–25 February
Num Events:10
Competitors:204
Nations:37
Prev:2002
Next:2010

Biathlon at the 2006 Winter Olympics consisted of ten biathlon events. They were held at the Cesana-San Sicario arena. The events began on 11 February and ended on 25 February 2006. Approximately 6,500 spectators were expected by the organizing committee. In these games, biathlon events were open to both men and women but they raced in different distances in their own events.[1]

Men from 28 nations and women from 27 nations qualified to participate in the events. Only seven nations in total took home medals, Germany winning the most (5 gold, 4 silver, 2 bronze). Six biathletes won 3 medals each: Albina Akhatova, Kati Wilhelm, Martina Glagow, Michael Greis, Ole Einar Bjørndalen, and Sven Fischer. Greis won the most gold medals, with a total of three.[2]

Qualification

The top 20 countries at the International Biathlon Union Nations Cup ranking of 2004–05 are permitted to pick four biathletes for each event, and five biathletes for the whole Olympics. The top five may send a sixth biathlete as a reserve. The countries seeded 21st to 28th (27th for women) may send a maximum of one biathlete. Other countries may not send biathletes unless the top 28 countries do not fill their quota. These restrictions apply to each gender, so that the countries who appear in the top 20 in both the men's and the women's list are able to send five men and five women. All entries were to have been submitted to the organizing committee by 30 January 2006.

The following table lists the 28 nations that qualified for the men's events and the 27 nations that qualified for the women's events:

RankMen[3] Women[4] RankMenWomen
115
216
317
418
519
620
721
822
923
1024
1125
1226
1327
1428

Medal summary

Medal table

Of the thirty-seven competing nations, seven of them took home all the medals. With over double the medals of any other nation, Germany ranked number one.

Men's events

Individual
54:23.054:39.055:31.9
Sprint
26:11.626:19.826:31.3
Pursuit
35:20.235:22.935:35.8
Mass start
47:20.047:26.347:32.9
Relay
1:21:51.51:22:12.41:22:35.1

Women's events

Individual
49:24.150:34.950:55.0
Sprint
22:31.422:33.822:38.0
Pursuit
36:43.637:57.238:05.0
Mass start
40:36.540:55.341:18.4
Relay
1:16:12.51:17:03.21:18:38.7
Olga Pyleva of Russia originally placed second in the women's individual race, but was found to be in violation of anti-doping rules when she tested positive for carphedon, and she was then disqualified.[5]

Participating nations

Thirty-seven nations qualified biathletes to compete in the events. Below is a list of the competing nations; in parentheses are the number of national competitors.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Torino 2006 Official Report - Biathlon . https://web.archive.org/web/20120612013218/http://www.la84foundation.org/6oic/OfficialReports/2006/Results/Biathlon.pdf . dead . 2012-06-12 . Torino Organizing Committee . LA84 Foundation . March 2009 . September 21, 2009.
  2. Web site: Biathlon at the 2006 Torino Winter Games . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417041010/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/winter/2006/BIA/ . dead . 17 April 2020 . Sports Reference . 9 June 2019.
  3. http://data.biathlonworld.com/data/archives.aspx?CupId=BT0405SWRLCP__SMNC Men's Nation Cup Score Final Result after 14 competitions
  4. http://data.biathlonworld.com/data/archives.aspx?CupId=BT0405SWRLCP__SWNC Women's Nation Cup Score Final Result after 14 competitions
  5. Web site: Russian biathlete suspended 2 years after failed drug test. Associated Press. USA Today. February 17, 2006. September 10, 2009.