2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4

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The 2009–10 Biathlon World Cup – World Cup 4 was the fourth event of the season and was held in Oberhof, Germany from Wednesday, January 6 until Sunday, January 10, 2010.

Schedule of events[]

The schedule of the event is below[1]

Date Time Events
January 6 14:15 cet Women's 4 x 6 km Relay
January 7 14:15 cet Men's 4 x 7.5 km Relay
January 8 14:30 cet Women's 7.5 km Sprint
January 9 12:45 cet Men's 10 km Sprint
January 10 11:00 cet Women's 12.5 km Mass Start
13:20 cet Men's 15 km Mass Start

Medal winners[]

Men[]

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
4 x 7.5 km Relay
details
 Norway
Halvard Hanevold
Tarjei Bø
Emil Hegle Svendsen
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
1:17:03.3
(0+0) (0+0)
(0+2) (0+2)
(0+0) (0+2)
(0+0) (0+1)
 France
Vincent Jay
Vincent Defrasne
Simon Fourcade
Martin Fourcade
1:17:30.8
(0+2) (0+2)
(0+0) (0+3)
(0+0) (0+0)
(0+0) (0+0)
 Germany
Christoph Stephan
Michael Greis
Arnd Peiffer
Simon Schempp
1:17:45.5
(0+1) (0+2)
(0+1) (0+3)
(0+2) (0+0)
(0+0) (0+0)
10 km Sprint
details
Evgeny Ustyugov
 Russia
28:45.0
(0+3)
Michael Greis
 Germany
28:47.8
(0+2)
Carl Johan Bergman
 Sweden
28:53.2
(0+0)
15 km Mass Start
details
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
 Norway
38:57.3
(0+1+0+0)
Tim Burke
 United States
40:00.2
(0+1+1+0)
Tomasz Sikora
 Poland
40:37.9
(0+0+1+2)

Women[]

Event: Gold: Time Silver: Time Bronze: Time
4 x 6 km Relay
details
 Russia
Anna Bogaliy-Titovets
Anna Boulygina
Olga Medvedtseva
Svetlana Sleptsova
1:14:23.6
(0+3) (0+2)
(0+0) (0+0)
(0+1) (0+0)
(0+2) (0+0)
 Germany
Martina Beck
Simone Hauswald
Tina Bachmann
Andrea Henkel
1:14:23.9
(0+1) (0+2)
(0+0) (0+3)
(0+2) (0+3)
(0+0) (0+0)
 France
Marie-Laure Brunet
Sylvie Becaert
Marie Dorin
Sandrine Bailly
1:15:24.5
(0+0) (0+0)
(0+1) (0+3)
(0+0) (0+1)
(0+2) (0+1)
7.5 km Sprint
details
Simone Hauswald
 Germany
22:15.1
(0+1)
Helena Jonsson
 Sweden
22:23.8
(1+0)
Ann Kristin Flatland
 Norway
22:32.6
(0+1)
12.5 km Mass Start
details
Andrea Henkel
 Germany
40:53.6
(1+1+0+0)
Helena Jonsson
 Sweden
41:17.0
(0+1+0+1)
Tora Berger
 Norway
41:33.9
(0+0+0+2)

Achievements[]

Best performance for all time
  •  Martten Kaldvee (EST), 7 place in Sprint
  •  Serhiy Semenov (UKR), 16 place in Sprint
  •  Jean-Guillaume Béatrix (FRA), 17 place in Sprint
  •   (BLR), 31 place in Sprint
  •   (JPN), 36 place in Sprint
  •   (UKR), 67 place in Sprint
  •  Martin Otcenas (SVK), 75 place in Sprint
  •   (JPN), 76 place in Sprint
  •  Andrejs Rastorgujevs (LAT), 82 in Sprint
  •  Tomas Kaukėnas (LTU), 94 in Sprint
  •   (LTU), 102 in Sprint
  •  Ann Kristin Flatland (NOR), 3 place in Sprint
  •  Diana Rasimovičiūtė (LTU), 10 place in Sprint
  •  Ekaterina Yurlova (RUS), 28 place in Sprint
  •  Sarah Murphy (NZL), 45 place in Sprint
  •   (UKR), 57 place in Sprint
  •   (KOR), 63 place in Sprint
  •  Zanna Juskane (LAT), 74 place in Sprint
  •  Alexandra Camenscic (MDA), 81 place in Sprint
  •   (FIN), 82 place in Sprint
  •  Kim Mi-Seon (KOR), 84 place in Sprint
  •  Amanda Lightfoot (GBR), 86 place in Sprint
First World Cup race
  •   (SWE), 26 place in Sprint
  •  Priit Narusk (EST), 33 place in Sprint
  •  Tanja Karisik (BIH), 90 place in Sprint

References[]

  1. ^ "Oberhof World Cup schedule". Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2009-12-22.

Coordinates: 50°42′N 10°43′E / 50.700°N 10.717°E / 50.700; 10.717

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