Olympic Winter Games 2006 / Nordic skiing

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Nordic skiing at the
XX. Winter Olympics
Olympic rings without rims.svg
Cross country skiing pictogram.svgSki jumping pictogram.svgNordic combined pictogram.svg
information
venue ItalyItaly Pragelato
Competition venue Stadio del Trampolino /
Pragelato map
Nations 53
Athletes 445 (124 women and 321 men)
date 11-26 February 2006
decisions 18th
Salt Lake City 2002

At the XX. During the 2006 Winter Olympics , 18 Nordic skiing competitions were held. The venues were the Stadio del Trampolino and Pragelato Plan, both in the area of ​​the municipality of Pragelato and thus approx. 80 km from Turin .

The ski jumping center was right next to the village center and had a capacity of 7500 spectators. There was a large hill (HS140), a normal hill (HS106) and three training hills. About two kilometers from Pragelato, between the hamlets of Pattemouche and Granges, was the finish area for the cross-country skiing competitions. There were two cross-country trails at an altitude of 1530 to 1620 meters; the "red" was 6.2 km long, the "yellow" 3.8 km. The audience capacity in the finish area was 8,000 (including 5,400 seats).

The pursuit races over 20 km for men and 10 km for women were further developed and now run in one piece - first half of the course classic, second half freestyle . Changing skis was allowed and necessary when changing from the classic to the skating style. The distances were now 30 km for the men and 20 km for the women. For men, the competition held in one style at earlier events over 30 km was not applicable, for women the one over the 5 km distance. Instead, the team sprint was part of the Olympic program for the first time for women and men.

There wasn't such a dominant figure among cross-country skiers this year. The Swede Björn Lind was at least the winner in the individual and the newly introduced team sprint. In the women’s category, Estonian Kristina Šmigun-Vähi won two cross-country gold medals, which later came into doubt due to - unpunished - doping allegations (see below). In ski jumping, the Austrian Thomas Morgenstern won Olympic gold on the normal hill and in team jumping . An Austrian also stood out in particular in the Nordic Combined. Felix Gottwald won the sprint as well as with his team, and he also came second in the individual competition. This surprisingly won the German Georg Hettich , who was also able to book silver with the team and bronze in the sprint.

Doping issue

Even after the doping incidents punished at the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City , at least some athletes had learned nothing from it. After a raid on Austrian cross-country skiers and biathletes, 30 boxes of medication, more than 100 syringes and various devices for blood tests and transfusions were found. In addition, the actually banned coach Walter Mayer was illegally close to the team and then quickly fled. These incidents resulted in subsequent life-long bans - later reduced to 2010 - for the two biathletes Wolfgang Perner and Wolfgang Rottmann as well as for their four cross-country colleagues Roland Diethart , Johannes Eder , Jürgen Pinter and Martin Tauber . In 2009 the public prosecutor's office in Austria brought charges against other functionaries of the ÖSV for violating the Austrian anti-doping laws . a. President Peter Schröcksnadel and Biathlon Director Markus Gandler . Schröcksnadel, Gandler, Mayer, sports medicine specialist Peter Baumgartl and the two cross-country skiers Tauber and Pinter got away with acquittals in 2012. The former cross-country trainer Emil Hoch and the affected biathletes Perner and Rottmann were sentenced in the first instance to conditional imprisonment and unconditional fines.

As part of the doping follow-up tests for Olympic athletes, there were four further positive results for the 2006 Winter Games. According to radio reports by the broadcaster Deutschlandfunk, this includes the cross-country double Olympic champion Kristina Šmigun-Vähi from Estonia - meanwhile Vice-President of the National Olympic Committee of Estonia. There were no consequences from this.

Balance sheet

Medal table

space country gold silver bronze total
1 AustriaAustria Austria 4th 2 1 7th
2 SwedenSweden Sweden 3 - 2 5
3 EstoniaEstonia Estonia 3 - - 3
4th RussiaRussia Russia 2 2 3 7th
5 ItalyItaly Italy 2 - 2 4th
6th NorwayNorway Norway 1 4th 5 10
7th GermanyGermany Germany 1 4th 2 7th
8th Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic 1 2 - 3
9 CanadaCanada Canada 1 1 - 2
10 FinlandFinland Finland - 2 2 4th
11 FranceFrance France - 1 - 1
12 PolandPoland Poland - - 1 1

Medalist

Cross-country men
competitor gold silver bronze
Sprint freestyle SwedenSweden Bjorn Lind FranceFrance Roddy Darragon SwedenSweden Thobias Fredriksson
Classic team sprint SwedenSweden Björn Lind ,
Thobias Fredriksson
NorwayNorway Tor Arne Hetland ,
Jens Arne Svartedal
RussiaRussia Ivan Alypow ,
Vasily Rotschew
15 km classic EstoniaEstonia Andrus Veerpalu Czech RepublicCzech Republic Lukáš Bauer GermanyGermany Tobias Angerer
30 km pursuit RussiaRussia Yevgeny Dementiev NorwayNorway Frode Estil ItalyItaly Pietro Piller Cottrer
50 km mass start ItalyItaly Giorgio Di Centa RussiaRussia Yevgeny Dementiev AustriaAustria Mikhail Botvinov
4 × 10 km relay ItalyItaly Giorgio Di Centa ,
Pietro Piller Cottrer ,
Fulvio Valbusa ,
Cristian Zorzi
GermanyGermany Tobias Angerer ,
Jens Filbrich ,
Andreas Schlütter ,
René Sommerfeldt
SwedenSweden Mathias Fredriksson ,
Mats Larsson ,
Johan Olsson ,
Anders Södergren
Cross-country women
competitor gold silver bronze
Sprint freestyle CanadaCanada Chandra Crawford GermanyGermany Claudia Künzel RussiaRussia Alyona Sidko
Classic team sprint SwedenSweden Lina Andersson ,
Anna Olsson
CanadaCanada Sara Renner ,
Beckie Scott
FinlandFinland Virpi Kuitunen ,
Aino-Kaisa Saarinen
10 km classic EstoniaEstonia Kristina Šmigun NorwayNorway Marit Bjørgen NorwayNorway Hilde Pedersen
15 km pursuit EstoniaEstonia Kristina Šmigun Czech RepublicCzech Republic Kateřina Neumannová RussiaRussia Yevgenia Medvedeva
30 km mass start Czech RepublicCzech Republic Kateřina Neumannová RussiaRussia Yulia Chepalova PolandPoland Justyna Kowalczyk
4 × 5 km relay RussiaRussia Natalja Baranowa ,
Larissa Kurkina ,
Yevgenia Medvedeva ,
Julija Tschepalowa
GermanyGermany Viola Bauer ,
Stefanie Böhler ,
Claudia Künzel ,
Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle
ItalyItaly Antonella Confortola ,
Arianna Follis ,
Gabriella Paruzzi ,
Sabina Valbusa
Ski jumping
competitor gold silver bronze
Normal hill NorwayNorway Lars Bystøl FinlandFinland Matti Hautamäki NorwayNorway Roar Ljøkelsøy
Large hill AustriaAustria Thomas Morgenstern AustriaAustria Andreas Kofler NorwayNorway Lars Bystøl
team AustriaAustria Martin Koch ,
Andreas Kofler ,
Thomas Morgenstern ,
Andreas Widhölzl
FinlandFinland Janne Ahonen ,
Janne Happonen ,
Matti Hautamäki ,
Tami Kiuru
NorwayNorway Lars Bystøl ,
Tommy Ingebrigtsen ,
Roar Ljøkelsøy ,
Bjørn Einar Romøren
Nordic combination
competitor gold silver bronze
sprint AustriaAustria Felix Gottwald NorwayNorway Magnus Moan GermanyGermany Georg Hettich
singles GermanyGermany Georg Hettich AustriaAustria Felix Gottwald NorwayNorway Magnus Moan
team AustriaAustria Christoph Bieler ,
Felix Gottwald ,
Michael Gruber ,
Mario Stecher
GermanyGermany Ronny Ackermann ,
Jens Gaiser ,
Georg Hettich ,
Björn Kircheisen
FinlandFinland Anssi Koivuranta ,
Antti Kuisma ,
Hannu Manninen ,
Jaakko Tallus

Cross-country men

Sprint freestyle

space country athlete Time (min)
1 SwedenSweden SWE Bjorn Lind 2: 26.5 (F)
2 FranceFrance FRA Roddy Darragon 2: 27.1 (F)
3 SwedenSweden SWE Thobias Fredriksson 2: 27.8 (F)
4th ItalyItaly ITA Cristian Zorzi 2: 31.7 (F)
5 ItalyItaly ITA Freddy Schwienbacher 2: 23.9 (Theatrical Version)
6th ItalyItaly ITA Loris Frasnelli 2: 25.2 (Theatrical Version)
7th NorwayNorway NOR Johan Kjølstad 2: 25.6 (Theatrical Version)
8th EstoniaEstonia EST Anti Saarepuu 2: 27.9 (Theatrical Version)
9 NorwayNorway NOR Ola Vigen Hattestad 2: 29.0 (HF)
10 NorwayNorway NOR Gate Arne Hetland 2: 43.2 (HF)
20th AustriaAustria AUT Martin Stockinger 2: 27.1 (VF)
24 AustriaAustria AUT Harald Wurm 2: 23.4 (VF)
30th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Christoph Eigenmann 2: 25.6 (VF)

Date: February 22, 2006, 10:30 am (qualification) / 2:00 pm (final)
Length of the route: 1325 m; Difference in altitude: 26 m; Maximum ascent: 26 m; Total ascent: 47 m
80 participants from 34 countries, all in the rating.

F = final; KF = small finale; HF = semifinals; VF = quarter finals

After qualifying, 30 runners reached the quarter-finals (5 runs with 6 runners each) and the semi-finals (2 runs with 5 runners each). This was followed by a B final for places 5 to 8 and the final of 4 runners for the medals. The Swedes Lind and Fredriksson continued the good results of the Swedish team in sprint competitions with the Olympic victory and third place. Favorite Lind, who was already the fastest in the qualifying race, also won his other runs. The result was disappointing for the favorite runners from Norway, none of whom reached the A-final.

The B final for places 5 to 8 was faster than the A final for medals.

Classic team sprint

space country athlete Time (min)
1 SwedenSweden SWE Thobias Fredriksson
Björn Lind
17: 02.9 (F)
2 NorwayNorway NOR Gate Arne Hetland
Jens Arne Svartedal
17: 03.5 (F)
3 RussiaRussia RUS Ivan Alypow
Vasily Rotschew
17: 05.2 (F)
4th GermanyGermany GER Jens Filbrich
Andreas Schlütter
17: 14.0 (F)
5 FinlandFinland FIN Keijo Kurttila
Lauri Pyykönen
17: 21.5 (F)
6th KazakhstanKazakhstan KAZ Yevgeny Koshevoy
Nikolai Chebotko
17: 25.1 (F)
7th PolandPoland POLE Maciej Kreczmer
Janusz Krężelok
17: 26.3 (F)
8th SlovakiaSlovakia SVK Martin Bajčičák
Ivan Bátory
17: 30.9 (F)
9 ItalyItaly ITA Giorgio Di Centa
Freddy Schwienbacher
17: 31.3 (F)
10 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Dušan Kožíšek
Martin Koukal
17: 49.6 (F)
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Reto mayor
Christoph Eigenmann
17: 49.6 (HF)

Date: February 14, 2006, 11:40 a.m.
Route length: 1325 m; Difference in altitude: 26 m; Maximum ascent: 26 m; Total ascent: 47 m
48 participants from 24 countries, 44 of them in the rating.

F = final; HF = semifinals

The competition was held in six rounds. It initially consisted of two preliminary runs or the semi-finals, followed by the final race, for which the top five teams from each preliminary run qualified. The teams consisted of two runners each, who took turns in each round.

The Swedish won ahead of the Norwegian tandem, which won the only medal for the Norwegian team in cross-country sprint competitions. The German team had hoped for a medal, but missed it. The Austrian team ranked 17th ( Johannes Eder , Jürgen Pinter ) was subsequently disqualified in April 2007.

15 km classic

space country athlete Time (min)
1 EstoniaEstonia EST Andrus Veerpalu 38: 01.3
2 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Lukáš Bauer 38: 15.8
3 GermanyGermany GER Tobias Angerer 38: 20.5
4th RussiaRussia RUS Vasily Rotschew 38: 24.4
5 EstoniaEstonia EST Jaak Mae 38: 35.2
6th SwedenSweden SWE Johan Olsson 38: 38.8
7th GermanyGermany GER Andreas Schluetter 38: 44.7
8th RussiaRussia RUS Sergei Novikov 39: 15.0
9 FinlandFinland FIN Sami Jauhojärvi 39: 15.3
10 SwedenSweden SWE Södergren is different 39: 17.1
11 GermanyGermany GER René Sommerfeldt 39: 17.2
29 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Christian Stebler 40: 38.6
43 GermanyGermany GER Franz Goering 41: 29.9

Date: February 17, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 76 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 522 m
99 participants from 46 countries, 96 of them in the rating.

After Kristina Šmigun , Andrus Veerpalu also won gold for Estonia. Another Estonian, Jaak Mae, took 5th place. Tobias Angerer won the first medal for the German team after the competitions had been disappointing in terms of both his own expectations and those of the public. Martin Tauber (AUT), originally ranked eighth, was subsequently disqualified in April 2007.

30 km pursuit

space country athlete Time (h)
1 RussiaRussia RUS Yevgeny Dementiev 1: 17: 00.8
2 NorwayNorway NOR Frode Estil 1: 17: 01.4
3 ItalyItaly ITA Pietro Piller Cottrer 1: 17: 01.7
4th ItalyItaly ITA Giorgio Di Centa 1: 17: 03.2
5 SwedenSweden SWE Södergren is different 1: 17: 04.3
6th FranceFrance FRA Vincent Vittoz 1: 17: 07.5
7th AustriaAustria AUT Mikhail Botvinov 1: 17: 08.5
8th SlovakiaSlovakia SVK Martin Bajčičák 1: 17: 08.7
9 UkraineUkraine UKR Maxim Odnodvorzew 1: 17: 09.6
10 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Lukáš Bauer 1: 17: 10.1
11 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein LIE Markus Hasler 1: 17: 10.9
12 GermanyGermany GER Tobias Angerer 1: 17: 12.5
22nd GermanyGermany GER Jens Filbrich 1: 18: 38.2
36 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Remo Fischer 1: 20: 19.7
40 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Toni Livers 1: 21: 08.2
58 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Reto mayor 1: 25: 49.9

Date: February 12, 2006, 1:45 p.m.
Elevation difference: 52 m (A) / 59 m (B); Maximum ascent: 40 m (A) / 54 m (B); Total ascent: 366 m (A) / 498 m (B)
77 participants from 27 countries, 65 of them in the rating.

The race began with a 15-kilometer run in the classic style (mass start), after a ski change was followed by a 15-kilometer run in free style. Dementjew and Estil secured their medals with the fastest and second fastest time in free style, while Piller Cottrer was able to claim his third place after the classic section. Lukáš Bauer , who had led when changing skis, fell back to 10th place. Anders Aukland , who was in second place after the classic section, even lost two and a half minutes and finished 29th. The winner of the silver medal, Frode Estil, broke a ski in a mass fall shortly after the start, which meant that he had now reached the end of the Field of participants had fallen behind.

As for the German women, the first Olympic race was disappointing for the runners of the German Ski Association : While René Sommerfeldt gave up, Tobias Angerer , who was one of the closest favorites , lost the connection shortly before the finish and was only 12th. A good one seventh place went to the Austrian Mikhail Botwinov . His teammate Martin Tauber was subsequently disqualified in April 2007.

50 km mass start freestyle

space country athlete Time (h)
1 ItalyItaly ITA Giorgio Di Centa 2: 06: 11.8
2 RussiaRussia RUS Yevgeny Dementiev 2: 06: 12.6
3 AustriaAustria AUT Mikhail Botvinov 2: 06: 12.7
4th FranceFrance FRA Emmanuel Jonnier 2: 06: 13.5
5 ItalyItaly ITA Pietro Piller Cottrer 2: 06: 14.0
6th SwedenSweden SWE Södergren is different 2: 06: 14.1
7th Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Martin Koukal 2: 06: 14.9
8th Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Jiří Magál 2: 06: 15.1
9 FranceFrance FRA Vincent Vittoz 2: 06: 16.4
10 SwedenSweden SWE Mathias Fredriksson 2: 06: 17.1
17th GermanyGermany GER Jens Filbrich 2: 06: 31.1
21st SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Remo Fischer 2: 06: 40.9
24 GermanyGermany GER Tobias Angerer 2: 07: 00.3
32 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Toni Livers 2: 07: 25.4
36 GermanyGermany GER René Sommerfeldt 2: 08: 03.0
39 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein LIE Markus Hasler 2: 08: 29.0
50 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Christian Stebler 2: 11: 13.0

Date: February 26, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 76 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 1810 m
79 participants from 31 countries, 63 of them in the rating.

For a long time there were no serious attempts to blow up the large field of participants: after 25 km, more than 50 runners formed the top group, after 40 km still around 40. Only then was the pace tightened, the closed leadership field dissolved and the result was the elimination race characteristic of a mass start competition, in which weaker runners were gradually left behind - the last on the last climb just before the finish. At the finish line, a sprint decision was made in which about ten runners were still involved.

4 × 10 km relay

space Country / athlete time
1 ItalyItaly Italy
Fulvio Valbusa
Giorgio Di Centa
Pietro Piller Cottrer
Cristian Zorzi
1: 43: 45.7 h
25: 54.0 min
26: 50.6 min
24: 59.1 min
26: 02.0 min
2 GermanyGermany Germany
Andreas Schlütter
Jens Filbrich
René Sommerfeldt
Tobias Angerer
1: 44: 01.4 h
25: 53.9 min
26: 50.2 min
25: 18.9 min
25: 58.4 min
3 SwedenSweden Sweden
Mats Larsson
Johan Olsson
Anders Södergren
Mathias Fredriksson
1: 44: 01.7 h
25: 53.4 min
26: 55.4 min
25: 00.5 min
26: 12.4 min
4th FranceFrance France
Christophe Perrillat-Collomb
Alexandre Rousselet
Emmanuel Jonnier
Vincent Vittoz
1: 44: 22.8 h
26: 05.4 min
26: 46.2 min
25: 47.1 min
25: 44.1 min
5 NorwayNorway Norway
Jens Arne Svartedal
Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset
Frode Estil
Tore Ruud Hofstad
1: 44: 56.3 h
25: 53.0 min
26: 50.8 min
25: 42.8 min
26: 29.7 min
6th RussiaRussia Russia
Sergei Novikow
Wassili Rotschew
Ivan Alypow
Evgeni Dementjew
1: 45: 09.9 h
26: 03.7 min
26: 39.8 min
25: 58.2 min
26: 28.2 min
7th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland
Reto Mayor
Christian Stebler
Toni Livers
Remo Fischer
1:45: 10.9 h
26: 02.0 min
26: 50.2 min
25: 46.4 min
26: 32.3 min
8th EstoniaEstonia Estonia
Aivar Rehemaa
Andrus Veerpalu
Jaak Mae
Kaspar Kokk
1:45: 23.8 h
26: 45.7 min
26: 39.9 min
25: 32.0 min
26: 26.2 min

Date: February 19, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 59 m; Maximum rise: 54; Total ascent: 376 m
16 relays at the start, 15 of them in the classification.

The first two runners mastered the route in classic style, the other two in free style. The host's season won. The Germans, who were also favorites, ran evenly and won the silver medal. Bronze went to outsider Sweden. The victory of the Italians was mainly thanks to Pietro Piller Cottrer, who led his relay on the third leg from 5th to 1st and together with Anders Södergren, who ran from 6th to 2nd and the fastest lap time of all participants Competition temporarily depended. In the last section, Tobias Angerer was able to bring his season closer to the Swedish one and defeat Mathias Fredriksson in the final sprint.

As with the women the day before, the Norwegian relay, Olympic champion of 2002 and reigning world champion, disappointed with a 5th place. The Austrian relay originally placed fourth was subsequently disqualified in April 2007.

Cross-country women

Sprint freestyle

space country sportswoman Time (min)
1 CanadaCanada CAN Chandra Crawford 2: 12.3 (F)
2 GermanyGermany GER Claudia Künzel 2: 13.0 (F)
3 RussiaRussia RUS Alyona Sidko 2: 13.2 (F)
4th CanadaCanada CAN Beckie Scott 2: 14.7 (F)
5 FinlandFinland FIN Virpi Kuitunen 2: 18.1 (Theatrical Version)
6th NorwayNorway NOR Ella Gjømle 2: 18.2 (Theatrical Version)
7th ItalyItaly ITA Arianna Follis 2: 20.3 (Theatrical Version)
8th SloveniaSlovenia SLO Petra Majdič 2: 21.5 (Theatrical Version)
9 SwedenSweden SWE Anna Dahlberg 2: 18.9 (HF)
10 United StatesUnited States United States Kikkan Randall 2: 19.1 (HF)
12 GermanyGermany GER Manuela Henkel 2: 16.4 (VF)
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Laurence Rochat 2: 18.9 (VF)
20th GermanyGermany GER Stefanie Boehler 2: 18.5 (VF)
31 GermanyGermany GER Nicole Fessel 2: 18.35 (Q)
32 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Seraina Mischol 2: 18.83 (Q)

Date: February 22, 2006, 10:30 a.m. (qualification) / 1:45 p.m. (final)
Length of track: 1100 m; Difference in altitude: 16 m; Maximum ascent: 16 m; Total ascent: 37 m
66 participants from 28 countries, all in the rating.

F = final; KF = small finale; HF = semifinals; VF = quarter finals; Q = qualification

After qualifying, 30 runners reached the quarter-finals (5 runs with 6 runners each) and the semi-finals (2 runs with 5 runners each). This was followed by a B final for places 5 to 8 and the final of 4 runners for the medals.

Beckie Scott, the fastest in qualifying, only finished fourth in the final. Aljona Sidko reached the final just as confidently as Claudia Künzel, who won the quarter and semi-finals before she was beaten by Chandra Crawford. Crawford, a hitherto rather unknown outsider, won all of her runs except for qualification and won the final with a sovereign victory, while Künzel narrowly beat Sidko. Marit Bjørgen , the most successful cross-country sprinter of the previous years, was already out of the quarter-finals with poor health.

Classic team sprint

space country Sportswomen Time (min)
1 SwedenSweden SWE Anna Dahlberg
Lina Andersson
16: 36.9
2 CanadaCanada CAN Beckie Scott
Sara Renner
16: 37.5
3 FinlandFinland FIN Virpi Kuitunen
Aino-Kaisa Saarinen
16: 39.2
4th NorwayNorway NOR Marit Bjørgen
Ella Gjømle
16: 50.4
5 GermanyGermany GER Viola Bauer
Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle
17: 03.5
6th RussiaRussia RUS Olga Moskalenko
Aljona Sidko
17: 08.5
7th ItalyItaly ITA Arianna Follis
Gabriella Paruzzi
17: 24.8
8th JapanJapan JPN Nobuko Fukuda
Madoka Natsumi
17: 27.6
9 KazakhstanKazakhstan KAZ Oxana Jazkaja
Jelena Kolomina
17: 42.8
10 United StatesUnited States United States Kikkan Randall
Wendy Kay Wagner
18: 06.9

Date: February 14, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Route length: 1100 m; Difference in altitude: 16 m; Maximum ascent: 16 m; Total ascent: 37 m
32 participants from 16 countries, all in the rating.

The individual races were held in 6 rounds in the classic style. The competition initially consisted of two semi-finals, followed by the final race, for which the top five teams from each run qualified. As in the men's team sprint, the Swedish tandem won. The other medal places went to the Canadian team ahead of the Finnish team. The German team with Evi Dingebacher-Stehle (in their first outing after being blocked due to an increased hemoglobin level) had hoped for a medal, but missed it, as did the Norwegian team with Marit Bjørgen .

10 km classic

space country sportswoman Time (min)
1 EstoniaEstonia EST Kristina Šmigun 27: 51.4
2 NorwayNorway NOR Marit Bjørgen 28: 12.7
3 NorwayNorway NOR Hilde G. Pedersen 28: 14.0
4th NorwayNorway NOR Kristin Størmer Steira 28: 21.0
5 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Kateřina Neumannová 28: 22.2
6th SloveniaSlovenia SLO Petra Majdič 28: 22.3
7th FinlandFinland FIN Aino-Kaisa Saarinen 28: 29.6
8th CanadaCanada CAN Sara Renner 28: 33.0
9 FinlandFinland FIN Virpi Kuitunen 28: 51.4
10 GermanyGermany GER Viola Bauer 29: 03.6
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Seraina Mischol 29: 30.4
17th GermanyGermany GER Claudia Künzel 29: 31.6
20th GermanyGermany GER Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle 29: 38.4
25th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Laurence Rochat 30: 02.2
38 GermanyGermany GER Stefanie Boehler 30: 43.2
41 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Seraina Boner 30: 58.0

Date: February 16, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 76 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 362 m
72 participants from 29 countries, 70 of them in the rating.

The race started with an interval start. Kristina Šmigun won her second gold medal. The classic style 10K race was the only one in which Norwegian runners were successful. Marit Bjørgen , who had disappointed in her previous appearances, won silver. Bronze went to the 41-year-old Hilde G. Pedersen ahead of Kristin Størmer Steira. From the German team, only Viola Bauer, a specialist in classic style races, was able to convince with 10th place.

15 km pursuit

space country sportswoman Time (min)
1 EstoniaEstonia EST Kristina Šmigun 42: 48.7
2 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Kateřina Neumannová 42: 50.6
3 RussiaRussia RUS Yevgenia Medvedeva 43: 03.2
4th NorwayNorway NOR Kristin Størmer Steira 43: 06.3
5 ItalyItaly ITA Gabriella Paruzzi 43: 18.9
6th CanadaCanada CAN Beckie Scott 43: 20.6
7th RussiaRussia RUS Olga Zavyalova 43: 23.7
8th PolandPoland POLE Justyna Kowalczyk 43: 25.6
9 RussiaRussia RUS Yulia Chepalova 43: 39.5
10 NorwayNorway NOR Hilde G. Pedersen 43: 40.5
18th GermanyGermany GER Claudia Künzel 44: 48.1
24 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Natascia Leonardi Cortesi 45: 34.3
28 GermanyGermany GER Stefanie Boehler 45: 56.9
52 GermanyGermany GER Manuela Henkel 48: 21.8

Date: February 12, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 36 m (A) / 59 m (B); Maximum ascent: 33 m (A) / 54 m (B); Total ascent: 252 m (A) / 312 m (B)
67 participants from 28 countries, 64 of them in the evaluation.

The race began with a 7.5-kilometer run in classic style (mass start), followed by a 7.5-kilometer run in free style after a ski switch. Šmigun and Neumannová were already in medal places after the first leg, while Medvedeva improved from 11th to 3rd place in free style. Petra Majdič , who had led when changing skis, lost almost a minute on the second leg and fell back to 11th place. The big favorite Marit Bjørgen ended the race early. The Olympic Games also got off to an unhappy start for the German runners, because Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle , who was one of the favorites , received an automatic five-day safety lock due to her hemoglobin level being too high and was therefore unable to start; the other German runners remained below their possibilities.

30 km mass start freestyle

space country sportswoman Time (h)
1 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Kateřina Neumannová 1: 22: 25.4
2 RussiaRussia RUS Yulia Chepalova 1: 22: 26.8
3 PolandPoland POLE Justyna Kowalczyk 1: 22: 27.5
4th NorwayNorway NOR Kristin Størmer Steira 1: 22: 40.8
5 ItalyItaly ITA Gabriella Paruzzi 1: 23: 00.8
6th GermanyGermany GER Claudia Künzel 1: 23: 02.1
7th UkraineUkraine UKR Valentyna Shevchenko 1: 23: 07.9
8th EstoniaEstonia EST Kristina Šmigun 1: 23: 22.5
9 RussiaRussia RUS Olga Zavyalova 1: 23: 28.5
10 ItalyItaly ITA Sabina Valbusa 1: 23: 37.6
13 GermanyGermany GER Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle 1: 25: 15.8
16 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Natascia Leonardi Cortesi 1: 25: 32.0
20th GermanyGermany GER Stefanie Boehler 1: 26: 19.2
48 GermanyGermany GER Nicole Fessel 1: 34: 06.2

Date: February 24, 2006, 11:30 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 76 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 1086 m
61 participants from 23 countries, 50 of them in the rating.

The race began with a mass start and resembled an elimination race: between km 10 and km 20, a top group of ten to twelve runners was able to break away, about 2 kilometers from the finish on the last climb with a further increase in pace. Only those three runners who finally fought for victory and finished on the podium were able to hold out. Kristin Størmer Steira finished fourth for the third time in an Olympic decision in 2006 and continued the series of unfortunate appearances by the Norwegian team, which had been among the most successful at the World Championships and Olympic Games in previous years. Claudia Künzel lost touch with the leaders shortly before the finish and came in sixth.

4 × 5 km relay

space Country / athletes Time (min)
1 RussiaRussia Russia
Natalja Baranowa
Larissa Kurkina
Julija Tschepalowa
Evgenija Medvedeva
54: 47.7
14: 34.9
14: 41.8
12: 41.2
12: 49.8
2 GermanyGermany Germany
Stefanie Böhler
Viola Bauer
Evi Sachsenbacher-Stehle
Claudia Künzel
54: 57.7
14: 33.9
14: 19.5
12: 50.6
13: 13.7
3 ItalyItaly Italy
Arianna Follis
Gabriella Paruzzi
Antonella Confortola
Sabina Valbusa
54: 58.7
14: 32.0
14: 26.1
13: 05.0
12: 55.6
4th SwedenSweden Sweden
Anna Dahlberg
Elin Ek
Britta Johansson Norgren
Anna-Karin Strömstedt
55: 00.3
14: 23.9
14: 38.6
12: 55.0
13: 02.8
5 NorwayNorway Norway
Kristin Størmer Steira
Hilde G. Pedersen
Kristin Mürer Stemland
Marit Bjørgen
55: 21.8
14: 23.5
14: 29.3
13: 03.7
13: 25.3
6th Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic
Helena Balatková
Kamila Rajdlová
Ivana Janečková
Kateřina Neumannová
55: 46.3
14: 40.8
15: 03.0
13: 16.6
12: 45.9
7th FinlandFinland Finland
Aino-Kaisa Saarinen
Virpi Kuitunen
Riitta-Liisa Lassila
Kati Venäläinen
55: 55.8
14: 21.1
14: 30.4
13: 13.4
13: 50.9
8th UkraineUkraine Ukraine
Kateryna Hryhorenko
Tetjana Savali
Vita Yakymchuk
Walentyna Shevchenko
56: 36.3
14: 56.5
15: 01.8
13: 33.4
13: 04.6
11 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland
Seraina Mischol
Laurence Rochat
Natascia Leonardi Cortesi
Seraina Boner
56: 52.4
14: 25.3
15: 03.4
13: 29.4
13: 54.3

Date: February 18, 2006, 9.45 a.m.
Difference in altitude: 59 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 188 m
17 relays at the start, all in the ranking.

The first two runners of each relay completed their section in the classic style, the two other runners in the free style. The race was extremely varied: after the first leg, the Japanese relay surprisingly led, the later medal winners were in 7th to 9th place at this point. The eventual winners from Russia were about 25 seconds behind at this point, but Julija Tschepalowa was able to bring her squadron back to the leading squadrons on the third leg. Sachsenbacher's performance was also outstanding: at the end of the third stretch, he was around 10 seconds ahead of the field of pursuers. The German final runner Künzel could not defend this lead, was caught up and left on the last climb by the relays from Russia, Sweden and Italy. Thanks to an outstanding catch-up race and a successful final spurt on the home straight, however, Künzel was able to catch up more than 10 seconds behind, overtake the final runners in Italy and Sweden and win the silver medal. Bronze went to the season of the host country ahead of the surprisingly strong Swedes.

The race ended disappointingly for the favored relay from Norway, which was among the top three seasons with every change, but only finished 5th in the end. After a good start, Finland also fell back on the classic routes.

Ski jumping

Normal hill

space country athlete Widths (m) Points
1 NorwayNorway NOR Lars Bystøl 101.5 / 103.5 266.5
2 FinlandFinland FIN Matti Hautamäki 102.0 / 103.5 265.5
3 NorwayNorway NOR Roar Ljøkelsøy 102.5 / 102.5 264.5
4th GermanyGermany GER Michael Uhrmann 101.0 / 104.5 264.0
5 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andreas Kuettel 103.0 / 101.0 262.5
6th FinlandFinland FIN Janne Ahonen 103.5 / 100.0 261.5
7th PolandPoland POLE Adam Malysz 101.5 / 102.5 261.0
8th GermanyGermany GER Michael Neumayer 103.5 / 103.0 260.5
9 AustriaAustria AUT Thomas Morgenstern 103.5 / 099.5 259.5
10 RussiaRussia RUS Dmitri Vasiliev 104.5 / 100.5 257.5
11 AustriaAustria AUT Andreas Kofler 100.5 / 101.5 257.5
12 GermanyGermany GER Georg Späth 099.5 / 100.0 251.0
13 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Michael Möllinger 105.5 / 098.5 249.0
17th AustriaAustria AUT Andreas Widhölzl 098.0 / 099.5 244.0
21st GermanyGermany GER Alexander Lord 098.5 / 094.5 231.0
23 AustriaAustria AUT Martin Koch 097.5 / 094.5 229.5
38 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Simon Ammann 092.5 / 0- 107.0
48 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Guido Landert 089.5 / 0- 097.0

Date: February 12, 6:00 p.m. (1st run), 7:05 p.m. (2nd run)
K-point : 95 m
69 participants from 21 countries, 50 of them in the ranking.

After the first round, the medal winners were only tied for sixth (Bystøl) and (Hautamäki) or fifth (Ljøkelsøy). The leader of the first lap, Dmitri Wassiljew , fell back to 10th place after his second attempt. Michael Uhrmann was the longest jump of the second round with 104.5 m.

Large hill

space country athlete Widths (m) Points
1 AustriaAustria AUT Thomas Morgenstern 133.0 / 140.0 276.9
2 AustriaAustria AUT Andreas Kofler 134.0 / 139.5 276.8
3 NorwayNorway NOR Lars Bystøl 127.5 / 131.5 250.7
4th NorwayNorway NOR Roar Ljøkelsøy 131.0 / 125.0 242.8
5 FinlandFinland FIN Matti Hautamäki 126.0 / 129.5 242.4
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andreas Kuettel 127.5 / 127.0 239.1
7th NorwayNorway NOR Bjørn Einar Romøren 128.5 / 125.5 238.2
8th JapanJapan JPN Takanobu Okabe 125.0 / 128.5 236.8
9 FinlandFinland FIN Janne Ahonen 123.5 / 128.5 234.1
10 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Jakub Janda 122.0 / 128.0 230.5
11 GermanyGermany GER Michael Neumayer 123.5 / 128.5 229.1
13 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Michael Möllinger 120.5 / 127.5 224.9
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Simon Ammann 121.0 / 122.0 218.0
16 GermanyGermany GER Michael Uhrmann 121.0 / 122.0 214.9
19th GermanyGermany GER Martin Schmitt 116.5 / 125.5 212.6
20th GermanyGermany GER Georg Späth 122.0 / 119.5 212.2
21st AustriaAustria AUT Andreas Widhölzl 123.0 / 119.0 210.1
32 AustriaAustria AUT Martin Koch 116.0 / - 94.8
37 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Guido Landert 111.0 / - 85.3

Date: February 18, 6:00 p.m. (1st run), 7:05 p.m. (2nd run)
K-point: 125 m
69 participants from 21 countries, 50 of them in the ranking.

Team jumping

space Country / athlete Widths (m) Points
1 AustriaAustria Austria
Andreas Widhölzl
Andreas Kofler
Martin Koch
Thomas Morgenstern

122.0 / 129.0
133.5 / 130.0
122.0 / 128.5
129.5 / 140.5
984.0
229.8
259.8
226.9
267.5
2 FinlandFinland Finland
Tami Kiuru
Janne Happonen
Janne Ahonen
Matti Hautamäki

124.5 / 131.5
122.5 / 124.0
129.0 / 132.0
128.0 / 138.0
976.6
240.8
221.7
251.8
262.3
3 NorwayNorway Norway
Lars Bystøl
Bjørn Einar Romøren
Tommy Ingebrigtsen
Roar Ljøkelsøy

126.0 / 135.5
124.5 / 126.0
116.5 / 116.5
128.5 / 141.0
950.1
254.2
230.9
194.4
270.6
4th GermanyGermany Germany
Michael Neumayer
Martin Schmitt
Michael Uhrmann
Georg Späth

126.0 / 127.5
125.5 / 118.0
120.5 / 130.0
123.0 / 134.0
922.6
231.8
217.3
230.4
243.1
5 PolandPoland Poland
Stefan Hula
Kamil Stoch
Robert Mateja
Adam Małysz

118.0 / 119.0
122.0 / 124.5
126.0 / 123.5
128.0 / 129.5
894.4
201.1
220.7
227.1
245.5
6th JapanJapan Japan
Daiki Itō
Tsuyoshi Ichinohe
Noriaki Kasai
Takanobu Okabe

121.5 / 121.5
121.0 / 119.5
122.5 / 130.5
121.0 / 132.0
893.1
213.4
207.4
236.9
235.4
7th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland
Michael Möllinger
Simon Ammann
Guido Landert
Andreas Küttel

121.5 / 121.5
122.5 / 122.0
116.5 / 122.0
123.5 / 136.0
886.9
215.9
216.1
204.3
250.6
8th RussiaRussia Russia
Denis Kornilow
Dmitri Ipatow
Dmitri Wassiljew
Ildar Fatkullin

121.5 / 117.5
121.0 / 123.0
125.0 / 131.0
117.5 / 117.0
856.8
204.2
215.2
240.3
197.1

Date: February 20, 6:00 p.m.
K-point: 125 m
16 teams at the start, all in the ranking. Only the best eight teams got into the second round.

Nordic combination

sprint

space country athlete Points in
jumping
Time (noun)
1 AustriaAustria AUT Felix Gottwald 112.1 (12.) 18: 29.0
2 NorwayNorway NOR Magnus Moan 111.8 (13.) 18: 34.4
3 GermanyGermany GER Georg Hettich 125.7 0(1.) 18: 38.6
4th FranceFrance FRA Jason Lamy Chappuis 124.4 0(2.) 18: 51.5
5 FinlandFinland FIN Jaakko Tallus 120.9 0(4.) 18: 58.1
6th NorwayNorway NOR Petter Tande 118.2 0(5.) 18: 59.1
7th GermanyGermany GER Björn Kircheisen 106.5 (21.) 19: 05.7
8th GermanyGermany GER Ronny Ackermann 114.0 (10.) 19: 07.7
9 United StatesUnited States United States Todd Lodwick 107.3 (19.) 19: 11.4
10 United StatesUnited States United States Johnny Spillane 109.5 (14.) 19: 15.2
13 AustriaAustria AUT Michael Gruber 116.9 0(6.) 19: 23.3
14th AustriaAustria AUT Mario Stecher 108.9 (15.) 19: 30.3
20th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ronny Heer 105.6 (22.) 19: 37.7
21st SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andreas Hurschler 098.1 (33.) 19: 41.6
23 AustriaAustria AUT Christoph Bieler 115.8 0(8.) 19: 44.0
24 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Seppi Hurschler 105.3 (24.) 19: 51.4
29 GermanyGermany GER Sebastian Haseney 090.7 (42.) 20: 09.1
36 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ivan Rieder 105.5 (23.) 20: 42.0

Jumping: February 21, 2006, 11:00 a.m.
large hill; K point : 125 m

Cross-country skiing 7.5 km: February 21, 2006, 3:00 p.m.
Elevation difference: 59 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 270 m
48 participants from 15 countries, all in the rating.

The jumping was stopped after 16 jumpers because of the strong head wind and restarted with a shortened run-up. This also made it necessary to postpone the final cross-country ski run by one hour from the originally planned start time (2:00 p.m.).

singles

space country athlete Points in
jumping
Time (noun)
1 GermanyGermany GER Georg Hettich 265.5 0(1.) 39: 44.6
2 AustriaAustria AUT Felix Gottwald 234.5 (11.) 39: 54.2
3 NorwayNorway NOR Magnus Moan 237.5 0(9.) 40: 00.8
4th NorwayNorway NOR Petter Tande 262.0 0(2.) 40: 00.9
5 FinlandFinland FIN Jaakko Tallus 257.0 0(3.) 40: 01.9
6th GermanyGermany GER Sebastian Haseney 212.5 (28.) 40: 35.7
7th GermanyGermany GER Björn Kircheisen 224.0 (16.) 40: 55.1
8th United StatesUnited States United States Todd Lodwick 232.0 (13.) 40: 56.6
9 FinlandFinland FIN Hannu Manninen 238.0 0(8.) 41: 20.2
10 RussiaRussia RUS Sergei Maslennikov 251.0 0(5.) 41: 28.2
12 AustriaAustria AUT Michael Gruber 248.5 0(7.) 41: 47.9
13 AustriaAustria AUT Christoph Bieler 251.0 0(5.) 41: 49.3
18th GermanyGermany GER Ronny Ackermann 213.5 (26.) 42: 58.9
19th AustriaAustria AUT Mario Stecher 223.0 (17.) 42: 59.2
22nd SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Seppi Hurschler 211.0 (30.) 43: 18.4
23 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andreas Hurschler 193.5 (39.) 43: 21.9
24 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ronny Heer 213.5 (26.) 43: 27.0
27 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ivan Rieder 230.0 (14.) 43: 58.6

Jumping: February 11, 2006, 10:00 a.m.
normal hill; K point: 95 m

Cross-country skiing 15 km: February 11, 2006, 3 p.m.
Elevation difference: 59 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 270 m
50 participants from 15 countries, 48 ​​of them in the rating.

After jumping, Hettich and Tande were the first to go out onto the track together. They worked well together and for a surprisingly long time defended their leading position in front of the strong runners. Shortly before the end of the race, when they were overtaken by a small field of pursuers, Gottwald took the lead and was able to shake off everyone except Hettich. In the final sprint, Hettich took the initiative again and surprisingly defeated Gottwald, who was tired from catching up. This made Hettich the second German Olympic champion at these games. Haseney showed the best mileage in the field and ran from 28th place after the jumping to 6th place. The bronze medal winner was only determined in the photo finish . The two Norwegians Moan and Tande were only a tenth of a second apart.

team

space country athlete Points in
jumping
Time (noun)
1 AustriaAustria AUT Michael Gruber
Christoph Bieler
Felix Gottwald
Mario Stecher
903.2 (2.) 49: 52.6
2 GermanyGermany DEU Björn Kircheisen
Georg Hettich
Ronny Ackermann
Jens Gaiser
913.5 (1.) 50: 07.9
3 FinlandFinland FIN Antti Kuisma
Anssi Koivuranta
Jaakko Tallus
Hannu Manninen
878.6 (4.) 50: 19.4
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ronny Heer
Jan Schmid
Andreas Hurschler
Ivan Rieder
839.6 (4.) 51: 14.9
5 FranceFrance FRA François Braud
Ludovic Roux
Jason Lamy Chappuis
Nicolas Bal
848.2 (6.) 51: 24.6
6th JapanJapan JPN Daito Takahashi
Takashi Kitamura
Norihito Kobayashi
Yosuke Hatakeyama
864.2 (5.) 51: 36.0
7th United StatesUnited States United States Johnny Spillane
Carl Van Loan
Bill Demong
Todd Lodwick
820.6 (8.) 51: 52.5
8th Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Ladislav Rygl
Pavel Churavý
Aleš Vodseďálek
Tomáš Slavík
805.1 (9.) 53: 58.5

Jumping: February 15, 2006, 09:30 am (1st run) / February 16, 2006, 9:00 am (2nd run)
normal hill; K point: 95 m

Cross-country skiing 4 × 5 km: February 16, 2006, 3:00 p.m.
Elevation difference: 59 m; Maximum ascent: 54 m; Total ascent: 270 m
10 teams at the start, 9 of them in the classification.

The jumping had to be canceled after the first round due to strong winds. This postponed the second round of jumping and the cross-country relay by one day. The Norwegian team decided not to start because three of the four athletes fell ill with the flu. After the postponement, Italy also had to forego further participation for health reasons.

literature

  • Cross-country skiing at the Olympic Winter Games: List of Olympic champions in cross-country skiing. Edited by the Bucher Group, General Books Verlag, 2010, 188 pages.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Doping at Winter Games - 2002 Salt Lake City. Süddeutsche Zeitung , February 22, 2014, accessed April 30, 2017 .
  2. ^ Draconian punishments against Austrian doping sinners. Der Tagesspiegel , April 25, 2007, accessed April 30, 2017 .
  3. Doping: Chronology of the doping scandal in Turin 2006. Tiroler Tageszeitung , February 18, 2002, accessed on March 6, 2020 .
  4. ^ Doping follow-up tests from Turin 2006: Four positive tests. Süddeutsche Zeitung , February 19, 2014, accessed on August 9, 2020 .
  5. a b c d The IOC punishes six Austrian athletes for doping at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, life ban. Berliner Zeitung , April 26, 2007, accessed on April 30, 2017 .