2007–08 Biathlon World Cup
The 2007–08 Biathlon World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. The season started 28 November 2007 and ended 16 March 2008.
2007–08 Biathlon World Cup | |||
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Discipline | Men | Women | |
Overall | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | Magdalena Neuner | |
Nations Cup | Norway | Germany | |
Individual | Vincent Defrasne | Martina Glagow | |
Sprint | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | Magdalena Neuner | |
Pursuit | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | Sandrine Bailly | |
Mass start | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | Magdalena Neuner | |
Relay | Norway | Norway | |
Competition | |||
2007–08 Biathlon World Cup |
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Men |
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Women |
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World Cup locations |
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See also |
This article contains the top ten result listings and concise summary comments for each of the season's twenty-seven individual races and five relays for both genders, arranged by World Cup meet 1 through 9 (denoted WC 1–9), accompanied by the top ten Total Cup rankings after each of the meets plus the 2008 World Championships (held between WC 6 and 7, and in the usual way counted as a World Cup meet towards the accumulated scores).
- For a list of the Total and Relay World Cup winners and runners-up of all World Cup seasons since 1977–78, see the Biathlon World Cup article.
Scores and leader bibs
- For the eighth successive season, the race victory gives 50 points, a 2nd place gives 46 pts, a 3rd place 43 pts, a 4th place 40 pts, a fifth place 37 pts, a 6th place 34 pts, then further decreasing by two pts down to the 15th place (16 pts), then linearly decreasing by one point down to the 30th place (see the Place/Points table on the page's upper right). Equal placings, i.e. same-time finishes (ties) give an equal number of points.
- The sum of all WC points of the season, minus the score from a predetermined number of events (say, 3) give the biathlete's accumulated WC score (naturally, the races chosen to be eliminated from the total will be those with the lowest scores). Biathletes with an equal number of accumulated points are ranked by number of victories, 2nd places, 3rd places, and so on, in practice reducing the possibility of ties to just about nil.
- In addition to the Total WC score as described above, the points from races in each separate single-biathlete format—Individual, Sprint, Pursuit, and Mass start—accumulate toward separate scores with associated "sub-Cups" to be won. See the main Biathlon article for a detailed description of the race formats.
- In any given race, the biathlete with the highest accumulated Total WC score before the race wears a yellow number bib. The leader of the specific race format wears a red bib. If the same biathlete leads both the Total and the specific format's World Cup, a combined yellow-and-red bib is worn. In the first races of the season, the winners of the previous season's Cups wear the associated bibs.
- There are also two multi-biathlete Cups to be won, namely the Relay and Nation Cups. The scores of the Relay races are awarded to each nation's team in the same manner as in the single-biathlete Cups. No leader bibs are worn during the Relays. For the Nation Cup, the combined scores of the three best biathletes from each nation in the Individual and Sprint races, as well as the Relay scores, are accumulated. The Nation Cup points scale is different from the World Cup points scale; each place from 1st through 30th scores 100 more points than in the World Cup, and from 31st down to 130th points are awarded on a scale from 100 to 1.
Calendar
Below is the IBU World Cup calendar for the 2007–08 season.[1]
Location | Date | Individual | Sprint | Pursuit | Mass start | Relay | Details |
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Kontiolahti | 29 November–2 December | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Hochfilzen | 6–9 December | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Pokljuka | 12–16 December | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Oberhof | 2–6 January | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Ruhpolding | 8–13 January | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Antholz | 16–20 January | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Östersund | 8–17 February | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | World Championships |
Pyeongchang | 28 February–2 March | ● | ● | details | |||
Khanty-Mansiysk | 5–9 March | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Holmenkollen | 12–16 March | ● | ● | ● | details | ||
Total | 3 | 10 | 8 | 5 | 5 |
Medal table
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
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1 | Germany | 24 | 11 | 21 | 56 |
2 | Norway | 20 | 15 | 10 | 45 |
3 | Russia | 11 | 23 | 17 | 51 |
4 | France | 5 | 4 | 3 | 12 |
5 | Poland | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
6 | Sweden | 1 | 3 | 2 | 6 |
7 | Czech Republic | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
8 | Italy | 0 | 3 | 2 | 5 |
9 | Austria | 0 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
Ukraine | 0 | 1 | 3 | 4 | |
11 | Finland | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
12 | Belarus | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
13 | China | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (13 entries) | 64 | 64 | 64 | 192 |
World Cup podiums
Men
Women
Men's team
Event | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third |
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2 | 9 December 2007 | Hochfilzen | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | Russia | Germany
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3 | 16 December 2007 | Pokljuka | 4x7.5 km Relay | Russia | Germany | Austria |
4 | 4 January 2008 | Oberhof | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | Russia | Germany
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5 | 10 January 2008 | Ruhpolding | 4x7.5 km Relay | Norway | Russia | Germany
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WC | 16 February 2008 | Östersund | 4x7.5 km Relay | Russia | Norway | Germany |
Women's team
Event | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third |
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2 | 9 December 2007 | Hochfilzen | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | Russia
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Sweden |
3 | 16 December 2007 | Pokljuka | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | Russia
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France |
4 | 3 January 2008 | Oberhof | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | France
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Russia
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5 | 9 January 2008 | Ruhpolding | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | Norway
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Russia
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WC | 17 February 2008 | Östersund | 4x6 km Relay | Germany | Ukraine | France |
Mixed
Event | Date | Place | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third |
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WC | 12 February 2008 | Östersund | 2x6 km + 2x7.5 km Mixed Relay |
Germany | Belarus | Russia
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7 | 2 March 2008 | Pyeongchang | 2x6 km + 2x7.5 km Mixed Relay |
Norway | Italy | France
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Standings: Men
Overall
Pos. | Points | |
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1. | Ole Einar Bjørndalen | 869 |
2. | Dmitry Yaroshenko | 696 |
3. | Emil Hegle Svendsen | 687 |
4. | Michael Greis | 596 |
5. | Ivan Tcherezov | 573 |
- Final standings after 26 races.
Individual
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Sprint
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Pursuit
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Mass start
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Relay
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Nation
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Standings: Women
Overall
Pos. | Points | |
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1. | Magdalena Neuner | 815 |
2. | Sandrine Bailly | 804 |
3. | Andrea Henkel | 764 |
4. | Kati Wilhelm | 746 |
5. | Martina Glagow | 675 |
- Final standings after 26 races.
Individual
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Sprint
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Pursuit
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Mass start
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Relay
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Nation
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Achievements
- First World Cup career victory
- Tora Berger (NOR), 26, in her 6th season — the WC 1 Pursuit in Kontiolahti; first podium was 2004–05 Sprint in Antholz-Anterselva
- Dmitri Yaroshenko (RUS) 31, in his 6th season — the WC 2 Sprint in Hochfilzen; first podium was 2006–07 Sprint in Östersund
- Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR), 22, in his 3rd season — the WC 3 Individual in Pokljuka; first podium was 2006–07 Sprint in Ruhpolding
- Ekaterina Iourieva (RUS), 24, in her 3rd season — the WC 3 Individual in Pokljuka; first podium was 2006–07 Sprint in Lahti
- Kaisa Varis (FIN), 32, in her 2nd season — the WC 5 Sprint in Ruhpolding; also her first individual podium
- Svetlana Sleptsova (RUS), 21, in her 2nd season — the WC 5 Sprint in Ruhpolding; first podium was 2007–08 in the WC 4 Sprint in Oberhof
- Solveig Rogstad (NOR), 25, in her 3rd season — the WC 5 Pursuit in Ruhpolding; also her first individual podium
- Björn Ferry (SWE), 29, in his 7th season — the WC 6 Pursuit in Antholz-Anterselva; first podium was 2004–05 Sprint in Torino - Cesana San Sicario
- Kathrin Hitzer (GER), 21, in her 2nd season — the WC 8 Pursuit in Khanty-Mansiysk ; first podium was 2006–07 Pursuit in Lahti
- Michal Šlesingr (CZE), 25, in his 7th season — the WC 9 Mass Start in Holmenkollen ; first podium was 2006–07 Sprint in Antholz-Anterselva
- First World Cup podium
- Carsten Pump (GER), 31, in his 6th season — no. 3 in the WC 1 Sprint in Kontiolahti
- Daniel Graf (GER), 26, in his 5th season — no. 3 in the WC 2 Pursuit in Hochfilzen
- Serguei Sednev (UKR), 23, in his 4th season — no. 3 in the WC 3 Individual in Pokljuka
- Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN), 24, in her 3rd season — no. 2 in the WC 3 Sprint in Pokljuka
- Olga Anisimova (RUS), 35, in her 6th season — no. 2 in the WC 4 Mass Start in Oberhof
- Maxim Maksimov (RUS), 28, in his 2nd season — no. 3 in the World Championships 2008 Individual in Östersund
- Friedrich Pinter (AUT), 30, in his 7th season — no. 3 in the WC 7 Sprint in Pyeongchang
- Victory in this World Cup (all-time number of victories in parentheses)
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Retirements
Following notable biathletes retired after the 2007–08 season:
- Ludwig Gredler (AUT)
- Ferréol Cannard (FRA)
- Julien Robert (FRA)
- Alexei Aidarov (UKR)
- Nathalie Santer (BEL)
- Saskia Santer (BEL)
- Kaisa Varis (FIN)
- Delphyne Peretto (FRA)
- Jenny Adler (GER)
- Ute Niziak (GER)
- Gunn Margit Andreassen (NOR)
- Tatiana Moiseeva (RUS)
- Petra Slezakova (SVK)
References and notes
- World Cup Schedule Archived 2008-12-18 at the Wayback Machine