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Biathlon at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Women's pursuit

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Women's pursuit
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueAlpensia Biathlon Centre in Pyeongchang, South Korea
Date12 February
Competitors58 from 24 nations
Winning time30:35.3
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Laura Dahlmeier  Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anastasiya Kuzmina  Slovakia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anaïs Bescond  France
← 2014
2022 →

The women's 10 km pursuit biathlon competition of the Pyeongchang 2018 Olympics was held on 12 February 2018 at the Alpensia Biathlon Centre in Pyeongchang, South Korea.[1][2] The field consisted of the top 60 finishers in the sprint event, held two days earlier, with competitors' starting times dependent on their final time in the sprint event. Laura Dahlmeier, who was the champion in the sprint, won a second title, becoming the first female biathlete to win an Olympic sprint-pursuit double. Anastasiya Kuzmina finished second, and Anaïs Bescond was third.[3] This was Bescond's first Olympic medal.

Summary

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Dahlmeier started first, and hit all targets at her first prone shoots. The sprint silver medallist Marte Olsbu missed a target, and between the prone shoots Dalmeier was followed by Veronika Vítková and Anastasiya Kuzmina, who overtook Vítková, and by the second prone shoot closed the gap to Dahlmeier by 10 seconds. Dahlmeier, Kuzmina, and Vítková all missed a target at the second prone shoot, and Anaïs Bescond and Irene Cadurisch, who did not miss, came into contention. By 5 km, Kuzmina was leading, with Dahlmeier 0.7 seconds behind her, followed by Bescond and Cadurisch half a minute behind. In the first standing shoot, Kuzmina missed two targets, Bescond missed one, and Cadurisch missed three and dropped out of medal contention. Dahlmeier did not miss, the only one of the leading group who shot clear, and took a 40 second lead over Kuzmina. Vítková was third, followed by Bescond: all other competitors were more than a minute behind. In the second standing shoot, Dahlmeier and Bescond shot clear, whereas Kuzmina missed once, dropping almost a minute behind Dahlmeier and a second ahead of Bescond. Vítková missed two targets and dropped out of medal contention. Other competitors trailed Kuzmina and Bescond by at least 30 seconds. The only question left at this point was who would win the silver medal. Kuzmina and Bescond ran together until the finish, where Kuzmina won the silver, leaving Bescond with bronze.

In the victory ceremony, the medals were presented by Danka Barteková, member of the International Olympic Committee, accompanied by Olle Dahlin, IBU Vice President of Development.

Qualification

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Schedule

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All times are (UTC+9).

Date Time Round
12 February 19:10 Final

Results

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The race was started at 19:10.[4]

Rank Bib Name Country Start Time Penalties (P+P+S+S) Deficit
1st place, gold medalist(s) 1 Laura Dahlmeier  Germany 0:00 30:35.3 1 (0+1+0+0)
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 13 Anastasiya Kuzmina  Slovakia 0:54 31:04.7 4 (0+1+2+1) +29.4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 19 Anaïs Bescond  France 1:15 31:04.9 1 (0+0+1+0) +29.6
4 2 Marte Olsbu  Norway 0:24 31:42.6 4 (1+2+0+1) +1:07.3
5 7 Hanna Öberg  Sweden 0:41 31:44.2 3 (1+2+0+0) +1:08.9
6 21 Denise Herrmann  Germany 1:20 31:54.7 2 (1+0+0+1) +1:19.4
7 3 Veronika Vítková  Czech Republic 0:26 32:12.6 3 (0+1+0+2) +1:37.3
8 26 Lena Häcki  Switzerland 1:34 32:16.8 3 (1+1+1+0) +1:41.5
9 24 Tiril Eckhoff  Norway 1:26 32:23.1 5 (0+2+3+0) +1:47.8
10 27 Mona Brorsson  Sweden 1:36 32:29.8 1 (0+0+1+0) +1:54.5
11 6 Lisa Vittozzi  Italy 0:41 32:34.6 4 (1+2+0+1) +1:59.3
12 12 Franziska Hildebrand  Germany 0:54 32:36.5 3 (2+1+0+0) +2:01.2
13 5 Vanessa Hinz  Germany 0:40 32:41.4 4 (1+1+2+0) +2:06.1
14 36 Nadezhda Skardino  Belarus 2:02 32:42.7 1 (0+0+1+0) +2:07.4
15 18 Dorothea Wierer  Italy 1:14 32:48.4 5 (2+2+1+0) +2:13.1
16 8 Irene Cadurisch  Switzerland 0:46 32:52.8 4 (0+0+3+1) +2:17.5
17 17 Iryna Kryuko  Belarus 1:11 32:54.0 2 (1+0+0+1) +2:18.7
18 14 Vita Semerenko  Ukraine 0:55 32:54.4 4 (2+1+1+0) +2:19.1
19 53 Rosanna Crawford  Canada 2:23 33:03.0 2 (0+0+1+1) +2:27.7
20 30 Galina Vishnevskaya  Kazakhstan 1:46 33:05.9 1 (0+0+1+0) +2:30.6
21 37 Linn Persson  Sweden 2:05 33:21.7 3 (1+0+1+1) +2:46.4
22 25 Kaisa Mäkäräinen  Finland 1:30 33:22.2 6 (0+3+3+0) +2:46.9
23 23 Jessica Jislová  Czech Republic 1:23 33:24.3 3 (0+1+1+1) +2:49.0
24 16 Anaïs Chevalier  France 1:09 33:28.0 5 (3+0+0+2) +2:52.7
25 15 Markéta Davidová  Czech Republic 0:57 33:29.8 6 (1+2+1+2) +2:54.5
26 22 Johanna Talihärm  Estonia 1:21 33:34.7 4 (0+1+2+1) +2:59.4
27 4 Marie Dorin Habert  France 0:33 33:37.8 7 (2+0+2+3) +3:02.5
28 40 Julia Ransom  Canada 2:08 33:38.3 1 (0+0+0+1) +3:03.0
29 35 Elisabeth Högberg  Sweden 2:00 33:45.1 2 (1+0+1+0) +3:09.8
30 34 Weronika Nowakowska  Poland 1:57 33:46.2 2 (0+1+1+0) +3:10.9
31 20 Tatiana Akimova  Olympic Athletes from Russia 1:18 33:50.8 4 (1+1+0+2) +3:15.5
32 43 Eva Puskarčíková  Czech Republic 2:14 33:53.8 3 (2+1+0+0) +3:18.5
33 39 Baiba Bendika  Latvia 2:08 33:59.4 3 (1+0+2+0) +3:24.1
34 10 Justine Braisaz  France 0:48 34:08.0 7 (0+2+1+4) +3:32.7
35 31 Elisa Gasparin  Switzerland 1:46 34:11.2 5 (2+2+1+0) +3:35.9
36 28 Krystyna Guzik  Poland 1:37 34:24.3 4 (1+1+1+1) +3:49.0
37 9 Darya Domracheva  Belarus 0:46 34:26.8 6 (0+1+1+4) +3:51.5
38 11 Paulína Fialková  Slovakia 0:51 34:33.6 8 (2+2+2+2) +3:58.3
39 41 Selina Gasparin  Switzerland 2:12 34:40.2 5 (2+2+1+0) +4:04.9
40 29 Katharina Innerhofer  Austria 1:45 34:41.2 5 (1+2+0+2) +4:05.9
41 50 Synnøve Solemdal  Norway 2:18 34:45.5 4 (1+0+2+1) +4:10.2
42 59 Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold  Norway 2:43 34:56.8 4 (0+3+1+0) +4:21.5
43 45 Monika Hojnisz  Poland 2:14 35:05.6 4 (1+1+2+0) +4:30.3
44 52 Nadzeya Pisarava  Belarus 2:23 35:10.3 3 (2+0+0+1) +4:35.0
45 38 Zhang Yan  China 2:08 35:16.7 3 (3+0+0+0) +4:41.4
46 55 Anastasiya Merkushyna  Ukraine 2:26 35:30.4 5 (0+2+2+1) +4:55.1
47 51 Emily Dreissigacker  United States 2:21 35:36.7 4 (0+1+1+2) +5:01.4
48 44 Nicole Gontier  Italy 2:14 35:37.6 7 (3+1+1+2) +5:02.3
49 56 Magdalena Gwizdoń  Poland 2:30 36:07.0 5 (1+2+2+0) +5:31.7
50 32 Anna Frolina  South Korea 1:51 36:14.2 8 (1+2+2+3) +5:38.9
51 47 Anja Eržen  Slovenia 2:15 36:22.6 7 (0+2+2+3) +5:47.3
52 33 Uliana Kaisheva  Olympic Athletes from Russia 1:52 36:33.6 5 (0+2+2+1) +5:58.3
53 54 Emma Lunder  Canada 2:24 36:52.1 4 (0+1+1+2) +6:16.8
54 49 Sari Furuya  Japan 2:15 37:02.1 5 (2+1+1+1) +6:26.8
55 60 Emilia Yordanova  Bulgaria 2:44 37:04.3 6 (2+1+3+0) +6:29.0
56 42 Fuyuko Tachizaki  Japan 2:14 37:07.9 7 (2+0+2+3) +6:32.6
57 58 Darya Klimina  Kazakhstan 2:42 38:00.0 8 (1+1+3+3) +7:24.7
58 48 Dunja Zdouc  Austria 2:15 38:39.1 8 (1+3+1+3) +8:03.8
46 Valentyna Semerenko  Ukraine 2:15 DNS
57 Megan Tandy  Canada 2:37

References

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  1. ^ "Venues". www.pyeongchang2018.com/. Pyeongchang 2018 Olympic Organizing Committee for the 2018 Winter Olympics. Archived from the original on 17 February 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ "Results - Women's 10 km pursuit". 2018 Winter Olympics official site. 12 February 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  4. ^ Final results