2008–09 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4

The 2008-09 Biathlon World Cup/World Cup 4 has been held in Oberhof, Germany. From Wednesday January 7 until Sunday January 11, 2009.

Schedule of events

The provisional timeschedule of the event stands below.[1]

Date Time Events
January 7 17:20 cetWomen's 4 x 6 km Relay
January 8 17:20 cetMen's 4 x 7.5 km Relay
January 9 17:30 cetWomen's 7.5 km Sprint
January 10 17:20 cetMen's 10 km Sprint
January 11 13:00 cetWomen's 12.5 km Mass Start
16:00 cetMen's 15 km Mass Start

Medal winners

Men

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
4 x 7.5 km Relay
details
 Austria
Daniel Mesotitsch
Friedrich Pinter
Dominik Landertinger
Christoph Sumann
1:19:36.6
(0+3)
(0+3)
(0+4)
(0+2)
 Germany
Michael Greis
Michael Rösch
Arnd Peiffer
Toni Lang
1:19:55.8
(1+3)
(0+2)
(0+0)
(0+4)
 Norway
Emil Hegle Svendsen
Rune Brattsveen
Halvard Hanevold
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
1:20:52.6
(0+1)
(1+6)
(0+2)
(1+3)
10 km Sprint
details
Maxim Tchoudov
 Russia
25:49.5
(0+0)
Michael Roesch
 Germany
26:02.2
(0+0)
Tomasz Sikora
 Poland
26:14.7
(1+0)
15 km Mass Start
details
Christoph Sumann
 Austria
38:11.9
(1+0+1+0)
Carl Johan Bergman
 Sweden
38:21.6
(0+0+1+1)
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
38:21.8
(0+1+1+0)

Women

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
4 x 6 km Relay
details
 Ukraine
Olena Pidhrushna
Valj Semerenko
Vita Semerenko
Oksana Khvostenko
1:17:57.9
(0+0)
(0+0)
(0+3)
(0+1)
 Germany
Simone Hauswald
Kati Wilhelm
Sabrina Buchholz
Kathrin Hitzer
1:18:19.1
(1+5)
(0+1)
(1+3)
(0+3)
 France
Marie-Laure Brunet
Sylvie Becaert
Pauline Macabies
Marie Dorin
1:19:02.3
(0+3)
(0+4)
(0+3)
(0+0)
7.5 km Sprint
details
Andrea Henkel
 Germany
22:12.1
(0+0)
Helena Jonsson
 Sweden
22:29.3
(0+0)
Tora Berger
 Norway
22:30.0
(0+0)
12.5 km Mass Start
details
Kati Wilhelm
 Germany
39:55.2
(0+0+2+0)
Olga Medvedtseva
 Russia
40:01.0
(0+0+1+1)
Helena Jonsson
 Sweden
40:07.0
(1+1+0+0)
gollark: We don't actually need paired fluxducts, due to that quirk of their transfer rates. I think.
gollark: Anyway, we can probably just run some itemducts in the planned power cabling tunnels, so it's not too problematic.
gollark: Unless you make the reactor building very big.
gollark: For wiring from the reactor to cells, we can afford most things.
gollark: So if you feed the reactor output straight into a cell and make the cell output into three fluxducts, you could have the actual long range wiring carry all the power, but each machine would only receive 1kRF/t max unless you have a bunch of connections on that machine.

References

  1. "Oberhof World Cup Schedule". Archived from the original on 2008-09-06. Retrieved 2009-01-04.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.