Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Men's 30 kilometre skiathlon

The men's 30 kilometre skiathlon cross-country skiing competition at the 2018 Winter Olympics was held on 11 February 2018 at 15:15 KST at the Alpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre in Pyeongchang, South Korea.[1][2] The event, split into half distance classic skiing and half distance skate skiing, was won by Simen Hegstad Krüger, for whom this was the first Olympic medal. There was a podium sweep for Norway with Martin Johnsrud Sundby and Hans Christer Holund winning silver and bronze medals, respectively.

Men's 30 kilometre skiathlon
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueAlpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre
Dates11 February
Competitors68 from 30 nations
Winning time1:16:20.0
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Simen Hegstad Krüger  Norway
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Martin Johnsrud Sundby  Norway
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Hans Christer Holund  Norway
← 2014
2022 →

Summary edit

The field included all the 2014 medalists: the defending champion Dario Cologna, the silver medalist Marcus Hellner, who was also the 2010 champion, and the bronze medalist Martin Johnsrud Sundby. Only Sundby returned to the podium.

At 20 km, a group of 15 skiers, which included all eventual medalists, was leading the race, about 20 seconds ahead of the rest of the field. About 5 km before the finish line, Krüger escaped and was not caught by the rest, winning the gold medal. From the chasing group, Sundby and Holund escaped less than 2 km before the finish. Eventually, Sundby was leading, and Holund did not catch him, winning bronze.

Qualification edit

A total of up to 310 cross-country skiers qualified across all eleven events. Athletes qualified for this event by having met the A qualification standard, which meant having 100 or less FIS Points in the distance classification. The Points list takes into average the best results of athletes per discipline during the qualification period (1 July 2016 to 21 January 2018). Countries received additional quotas by having athletes ranked in the top 30 of the FIS Olympics Points list (two per gender maximum, overall across all events). Countries also received an additional quota (one per gender maximum) if an athlete was ranked in the top 300 of the FIS Olympics Points list. After the distribution of B standard quotas, the remaining quotas were distributed using the Olympic FIS Points list, with each athlete only counting once for qualification purposes. A country could only enter a maximum of four athletes for the event.[3]

Competition schedule edit

All times are (UTC+9).

Date Time Event
11 February 15:15 Final

Results edit

The race was started at 15:15.[4]

Rank Bib Name Country 15 km classic Rank Pitstop 15 km free Rank Finish time Deficit
  7 Simen Hegstad Krüger   Norway 40:46.1 14 27.7 35:06.2 1 1:16:20.0
  6 Martin Johnsrud Sundby   Norway 40:30.5 2 35.1 35:22.4 2 1:16:28.0 +8.0
  5 Hans Christer Holund   Norway 40:33.3 7 28.5 35:28.1 5 1:16:29.9 +9.9
4 16 Denis Spitsov   Olympic Athletes from Russia 40:35.0 13 31.2 35:26.5 3 1:16:32.7 +12.7
5 2 Maurice Manificat   France 40:33.6 8 30.0 35:30.6 6 1:16:34.2 +14.2
6 3 Dario Cologna   Switzerland 40:30.9 3 32.3 35:41.9 12 1:16:45.1 +25.1
7 10 Andrew Musgrave   Great Britain 40:34.9 12 31.9 35:38.9 9 1:16:45.7 +25.7
8 4 Alex Harvey   Canada 40:31.4 4 27.3 35:54.7 14 1:16:53.4 +33.4
9 22 Martin Jakš   Czech Republic 40:53.2 19 33.6 35:27.0 4 1:16:53.8 +33.8
10 1 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo   Norway 40:31.8 5 26.8 36:04.8 18 1:17:03.4 +43.4
11 20 Thomas Bing   Germany 40:34.4 11 28.6 36:00.7 16 1:17:03.7 +43.7
12 14 Marcus Hellner   Sweden 40:34.2 10 30.3 36:00.3 15 1:17:04.8 +44.8
13 18 Clément Parisse   France 40:48.9 17 28.0 35:51.7 13 1:17:08.6 +48.6
14 15 Daniel Rickardsson   Sweden 40:34.0 9 34.1 36:04.1 17 1:17:12.1 +52.2
15 41 Jules Lapierre   France 41:13.0 24 32.9 35:33.2 8 1:17:19.1 +59.1
16 21 Lucas Bögl   Germany 40:47.2 15 27.5 36:05.2 19 1:17:19.9 +59.9
17 25 Jens Burman   Sweden 41:13.4 25 31.1 35:39.4 10 1:17:23.9 +1:03.9
18 33 Scott Patterson   United States 41:14.4 26 31.9 35:41.2 11 1:17:27.5 +1:07.5
19 8 Iivo Niskanen   Finland 40:30.0 1 29.9 36:34.3 26 1:17:34.2 +1:14.2
20 13 Francesco De Fabiani   Italy 41:11.4 22 30.0 36:13.5 20 1:17:54.9 +1:34.9
21 12 Matti Heikkinen   Finland 41:55.6 34 28.3 35:32.0 7 1:17:55.9 +1:35.9
22 35 Jonas Dobler   Germany 40:52.7 18 32.4 36:31.5 25 1:17.56.6 +1:36.6
23 28 Alexey Vitsenko   Olympic Athletes from Russia 41:09.2 20 32.4 36:20.6 22 1:18:02.2 +1:42.2
24 43 Paul Constantin Pepene   Romania 41:16.2 30 26.4 36:37.8 28 1:18:20.4 +2:00.4
25 23 Keishin Yoshida   Japan 41:11.9 23 33.6 36:37.5 27 1:18:23.0 +2:03.0
26 31 Giandomenico Salvadori   Italy 40:47.8 16 28.2 37:20.9 36 1:18:36.9 +2:16.9
27 38 Max Hauke   Austria 41:15.7 29 31.4 36:57.5 32 1:18:44.6 +2:24.6
28 9 Jean-Marc Gaillard   France 40:32.6 6 26.8 37:49.1 38 1:18:48.5 +2:28.5
29 29 Andrey Melnichenko   Olympic Athletes from Russia 41:46.4 32 34.0 36:30.1 24 1:18:50.5 +2:30.5
30 11 Andrey Larkov   Olympic Athletes from Russia 41:37.5 31 35.1 36:38.0 29 1:18:50.6 +2:30.6
31 34 Candide Pralong   Switzerland 42:26.0 39 33.5 36:16.1 21 1:19:15.6 +2:55.6
32 36 Karel Tammjärv   Estonia 41:56.6 35 36.2 36:52.4 31 1:19:25.2 +3:05.2
33 24 Lari Lehtonen   Finland 42:28.9 41 29.6 36:28.1 23 1:19:26.6 +3:06.6
34 49 Vitaliy Pukhalo   Kazakhstan 42:27.0 40 33.8 36:45.9 30 1:19:46.7 +3:26.7
35 32 Andreas Katz   Germany 41:10.3 21 29.5 38:09.4 42 1:19:49.2 +3:29.2
36 37 Devon Kershaw   Canada 41:14.8 27 32.9 38:07.6 41 1:19:55.3 +3:35.3
37 30 Dietmar Nöckler   Italy 41:15.2 28 34.8 38:05.5 40 1:19:55.5 +3:35.5
38 58 Petr Knop   Czech Republic 42:29.8 43 31.6 37:10.7 34 1:20:12.1 +3:52.1
39 19 Jonas Baumann   Switzerland 42:25.7 38 27.6 37:20.1 35 1:20:13.4 +3:53.4
40 27 Toni Livers   Switzerland 42:36.1 44 36.5 37:00.8 33 1:20:13.4 +3:53.4
41 42 Perttu Hyvärinen   Finland 41:57.0 36 33.5 37:58.0 39 1:20:28.5 +4:08.5
42 26 Erik Bjornsen   United States 42:12.4 37 29.6 38:12.7 43 1:20:54.7 +4:34.7
43 44 Yevgeniy Velichko   Kazakhstan 41:47.4 33 32.1 38:44.4 51 1:21:03.9 +4:43.9
44 46 Michail Semenov   Belarus 43:15.4 48 28.7 37:27.9 37 1:21:12.0 +4:52.0
45 54 Graeme Killick   Canada 42:29.4 42 35.7 38:34.5 48 1:21:39.6 +5:19.6
46 39 Irineu Esteve Altimiras   Andorra 42:39.0 45 37.5 38:31.2 46 1:21:47.7 +5:27.7
47 51 Andreas Veerpalu   Estonia 43:03.9 47 33.9 38:33.6 47 1:22:11.4 +5:51.4
48 52 Sergio Rigoni   Italy 42:41.7 46 32.6 39:40.6 57 1:22:54.9 +6:34.9
49 57 Imanol Rojo   Spain 43:27.4 49 33.8 39:05.3 54 1:23:06.5 +6:46.5
50 45 Yury Astapenka   Belarus 44:01.9 54 33.4 38:37.2 49 1:23:12.5 +6:52.5
51 40 Patrick Caldwell   United States 44:01.3 53 32.7 38:44.1 50 1:23:18.1 +6:58.1
52 55 Dominik Bury   Poland 44:00.2 52 35.7 38:44.4 51 1:23:20.3 +7:00.3
53 65 Krešimir Crnković   Croatia 44:31.3 58 30.5 38:25.1 44 1:23:26.9 +7:06.9
54 47 Noah Hoffman   United States 43:27.7 50 30.4 39:30.6 56 1:23:28.7 +7:08.7
55 53 Aleš Razým   Czech Republic 43:28.5 51 36.0 39:29.3 55 1:23:33.8 +7:13.8
56 48 Snorri Einarsson   Iceland 44:02.3 55 36.8 38:54.8 53 1:23:33.9 +7:13.9
57 63 Callum Smith   Great Britain 44:47.1 61 33.2 38:29.6 45 1:23:49.9 +7:29.9
58 62 Callum Watson   Australia 44:47.7 62 31.7 39:56.0 58 1:25:15.4 +8:55.4
59 66 Martin Vögeli   Liechtenstein 44:28.4 57 27.1 41:12.7 59 1:26:08.2 +9:48.2
60 60 Thomas Hjalmar Westgård   Ireland 44:15.2 56 33.1 47:45.9 60 1:32:34.2 +16:14.2
61 59 Oleksiy Krasovsky   Ukraine 44:36.7 59 34.1 LAP
62 61 Knute Johnsgaard   Canada 45:49.7 63 36.0
63 67 Mantas Strolia   Lithuania 47:04.4 65 28.3
64 64 Wang Qiang   China 47:03.8 64 33.9
65 68 Kim Eun-ho   South Korea 48:29.9 66 33.1
56 Edi Dadić   Croatia 44:45.2 60 30.2 DNF
17 Calle Halfvarsson   Sweden DNF
50 Sergei Dolidovich   Belarus DNF

References edit

  1. ^ "Schedule". Archived from the original on 5 November 2017. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXII Olympic Winter Games, PyeongChang 2018 Cross-country skiing" (PDF). International Ski Federation (FIS). 13 April 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  4. ^ Final results