2016 Orienteering World Cup

The 2016 Orienteering World Cup was the 22nd edition of the Orienteering World Cup. The 2016 Orienteering World Cup consisted of 10 individual events and four sprint relay events. The events were located in Poland, Czech Republic, Sweden and Switzerland.[1] The European Orienteering Championships in Jeseník, Czech Republic and the 2016 World Orienteering Championships in Strömstad, Sweden, were included in the World Cup.

2016 Orienteering World Cup
World Cup events
Individual10
Relay4
Men's World Cup
1st Matthias Kyburz (SUI)
2nd Daniel Hubmann (SUI)
3rd Olav Lundanes (NOR)
Most wins Matthias Kyburz (SUI) (5)
Women's World Cup
1st Tove Alexandersson (SWE)
2nd Judith Wyder (SUI)
3rd Maja Alm (DEN)
Most wins Tove Alexandersson (SWE) (4)
 Judith Wyder (SUI) (4)
Team World Cup
1st Switzerland
2nd Denmark
3rd Sweden
Most wins Switzerland (2)
2015
2017

Matthias Kyburz of Switzerland won his third overall title. Tove Alexandersson of Sweden won her third consecutive overall title in the women's World Cup.

Events

Men

No. Venue Distance Date Winner Second Third Ref.
Round 1
1 Wroclaw, Poland Middle 30 April Olav Lundanes Carl Godager Kaas Albin Ridefeldt
2 Wroclaw, Poland Sprint 1 May Matthias Kyburz Daniel Hubmann Jonas Leandersson
Round 2 - European Championships
3 Jeseník, Czech Republic Sprint (EOC) 22 May Matthias Kyburz Gustav Bergman Florian Howald
4 Jeseník, Czech Republic Long (EOC) 24 May Daniel Hubmann Magne Dæhli Martin Regborn
5 Jeseník, Czech Republic Middle (EOC) 27 May Matthias Kyburz Gustav Bergman Lucas Basset
Round 3 - World Championships
6 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Sprint (WOC) 20 August Jerker Lysell Matthias Kyburz Daniel Hubmann
7 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Middle (WOC) 23 August Matthias Kyburz Olav Lundanes Daniel Hubmann
8 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Long (WOC) 25 August Olav Lundanes Thierry Gueorgiou Daniel Hubmann
Round 4 - Finals
9 Aarau, Switzerland Long 15 October Matthias Kyburz Olav Lundanes Carl Godager Kaas
10 Aarau, Switzerland Sprint 16 October Jonas Leandersson Matthias Kyburz Martin Hubmann

Women

No. Venue Distance Date Winner Second Third Ref.
Round 1
1 Wroclaw, Poland Middle 30 April Helena Jansson Tove Alexandersson Svetlana Mironova
2 Wroclaw, Poland Sprint 1 May Judith Wyder Maja Alm Tove Alexandersson
Marika Teini
Nadiya Volynska
Round 2 - European Championships
3 Jeseník, Czech Republic Sprint (EOC) 22 May Judith Wyder Nadiya Volynska Maja Alm
Galina Vinogradova
4 Jeseník, Czech Republic Long (EOC) 24 May Tove Alexandersson Anne Margrethe Hausken Nordberg Svetlana Mironova
5 Jeseník, Czech Republic Middle (EOC) 27 May Tove Alexandersson Judith Wyder Marika Teini
Round 3 - World Championships
6 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Sprint (WOC) 20 August Maja Alm Judith Wyder Anastasia Denisova
7 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Middle (WOC) 23 August Tove Alexandersson Heidi Østlid Bagstevold Natalia Gemperle
8 Strömstad/Tanum, Sweden Long (WOC) 25 August Tove Alexandersson Natalia Gemperle Anne Margrethe Hausken Nordberg
Round 4 - Finals
9 Aarau, Switzerland Long 15 October Judith Wyder Sabine Hauswirth Tove Alexandersson
10 Aarau, Switzerland Sprint 16 October Judith Wyder Maja Alm Tove Alexandersson

Sprint Relay

Venue Date Winner 2nd 3rd
1 Wroclaw, Poland 2 May Switzerland
Judith Wyder
Andreas Kyburz
Matthias Kyburz
Rahel Friedrich
Sweden
Tove Alexandersson
Emil Svensk
Jonas Leandersson
Helena Jansson
Denmark
Ceciie Friberg Klysner
Tue Lassen
Søren Bobach
Maja Alm
2 Jeseník, Czech Republic (EOC) 24 May Russia
Natalia Vinogradova
Gleb Tikhonov
Andrey Khramov
Galina Vinogradova
Denmark
Ceciie Friberg Klysner
Tue Lassen
Søren Bobach
Maja Alm
Switzerland
Judith Wyder
Andreas Kyburz
Martin Hubmann
Rahel Friedrich
3 Strömstad, Sweden (WOC) 21 August Denmark
Ceciie Friberg Klysner
Tue Lassen
Søren Bobach
Maja Alm
Switzerland
Rahel Friedrich
Florian Howald
Martin Hubmann
Judith Wyder
Sweden
Lina Strand
Gustav Bergman
Jonas Leandersson
Helena Jansson
4 Aarau, Switzerland 14 October Switzerland
Rahel Friedrich
Matthias Kyburz
Daniel Hubmann
Judith Wyder
Sweden
Lina Strand
Emil Svensk
Jonas Leandersson
Helena Jansson
Switzerland 2
Elena Roos
Andreas Kyburz
Florian Howald
Sabine Hauswirth

Points distribution

The 40 best runners in each event were awarded points. The winner was awarded 100 points. In WC events 1 to 8, the seven best results counted in the overall classification. In the finals (WC 9 and WC 10), both results counted.

Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
Points 100 80 60 50 45 40 37 35 33 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Overall standings

This section shows the final standings after all 10 individual events.

Men

RankAthletePoints
1 Matthias Kyburz734
2 Daniel Hubmann427
3 Olav Lundanes380
4 Gustav Bergman330
5 Jonas Leandersson316
6 Carl Godager Kaas285
7 Magne Dæhli276
8 Martin Regborn267
9 Florian Howald259
10 Lucas Basset225

Women

RankAthletePoints
1 Tove Alexandersson660
2 Judith Wyder627
3 Maja Alm490
4 Sabine Hauswirth304
5 Natalia Gemperle290
6 Svetlana Mironova284
7 Merja Rantanen281
8 Julia Gross259
9 Marika Teini241
10 Lina Strand232

Sprint Relay

The table shows the final standings after all four relay events. All results counted in the overall standings.[2]

PlassUtøverPoints
1 Switzerland280
2 Denmark240
3 Sweden220
4 Russia200
5 Norway135
6 Finland127
7 Czech Republic120
8 Great Britain117
9 France108
10 Austria103

Achievements

Only individual competitions.

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References

  1. "Orienteering World Cup 2016". International Orienteering Federation. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
  2. "2016 Sprint Relay World Cup in Orienteering" (PDF). International Orienteering Federation. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
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