Skeleton at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Qualification

The following were the criteria, rules, and standings for qualification for the Skeleton competitions at the 2018 Winter Olympics.[1]

Qualification rules edit

A maximum of 50 quota spots were available to athletes to compete at the games. A maximum 30 men and 20 women could qualify. The qualification was based on the combined rankings (across all four tours) of 14 January 2018 (after the seventh World Cup event of the season, in St. Moritz). Competitors had to have competed in five different races on three different tracks during the 2016/17 season or 2017/18 season. Males had to be in the top 60 of the world rankings, while women needed to be in the top 45, after eliminating non-quota-earning competitors from countries that have earned their maximum quota. Each continent (Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania) and the hosts were allowed to enter a competitor provided they meet the above standard. If any of these automatic places had gone unfilled, they were reallocated to unrepresented countries with qualified competitors in order of ranking. Thirty men were allowed to compete (maximum of three NOCs with three and six NOCs with two). Twenty women were allowed to compete (maximum of two NOCs with three, four NOCs with two).

Qualification timeline edit

Races from October 15, 2017 until January 14, 2018 applied to qualification for the Olympics. In general this meant that the Olympic field is established by using the first seven world cup races of the 2017-18 season, but also includes results from Intercontinental, Europe, and America cup races. Four competitors were then allocated in both competitions, first for the host (if not already qualified), and then for continents not previously represented. If a nation refused a quota it was reallocated. Unused or reallocated spots were filled on January 19, 2018 by nations not previously entered.

Quota allocation edit

The following summary is a break down of Olympic qualification based on the IBSF rankings and adjustments, following reallocation.[2][3] Numbers beside the nation indicate the rank of the sled that establishes the NOC's number of qualifiers.

Final summary edit

Nations Men Women Athletes
  Australia 1 1 2
  Austria 1 1 2
  Belgium 0 1 1
  Canada 3 3 6
  China 1 0 1
  Germany 3 3 6
  Ghana 1 0 1
  Great Britain 2 2 4
  Israel 1 0 1
  Italy 1 0 1
  Jamaica 1 0 1
  Japan 2 1 3
  Latvia 2 1 3
  Netherlands 0 1 1
  New Zealand 1 0 1
  Nigeria 0 1 1
  Norway 1 0 1
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 2 0 2
  Romania 1 1 2
  South Korea 2 1 3
  Switzerland 0 1 1
  Ukraine 1 0 1
  United States 2 2 4
Total: 23 NOCs 30 20 50

Men edit

Final rankings by nation.[4]

Sleds qualified Countries Athletes total Nation
3 2 6   Germany 7
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 14
  Canada 23
2 6 12   Latvia 4
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 93
  United States 16
  Great Britain 20
  South Korea 22
  Japan 44
  Austria 451
1 11 11   Austria 111
  New Zealand 18
  China 27
  Spain 31
  Australia 34
  Switzerland 391
  Italy 42
  Romania 43
  Ukraine 46
  Norway 601
  Israel 611
  Jamaica 793
  Ghana 992
30 19 30
  1. ^ Switzerland and Austria declined one quota each. Norway and Israel accepted reallocations.
  2. ^ Qualified as continental representative for Africa.
  3. ^ Olympic Athletes From Russia were permitted to enter only 2 spots (Nikita Tregubov and Vladislav Marchenkov) and excluded Alexander Tretiatov. This spot was reallocated to Jamaica.[3]

Women edit

Final rankings by nation.[5]

Sleds qualified Countries Athletes total Nation
3 2 6   Canada 7
  Germany 8
2 2 4   Great Britain 13
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 165
  United States 18
  Netherlands 221
1 10 10   Austria 9
  Latvia 11
  Belgium 12
  Netherlands 141
  Switzerland 151
  Australia 202
  South Korea 323
  Japan 365
  Romania 415
  Nigeria 714
20 12 20
  1. ^ Netherlands accepted one quota place but declined the second quota which was accepted by Switzerland
  2. ^ Australia qualified as a continental representative.
  3. ^ South Korea qualified as the host.
  4. ^ Nigeria qualified as a continental representative through the application of IBSF rule 4.1.
  5. ^ Olympic Athletes From Russia were not permitted to enter any women. These spots were reallocated to Romania and Japan.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXIII Olympic Winter Games, PyeonChang 2018" (PDF). International Bobsleigh & Skeleton Federation. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  2. ^ "IBSF publishes Olympic list". International Bobsleigh & Skeleton Federation. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "XXIII Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018 Skeleton – Participation" (PDF). www.ibsf.org. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Quota Allocation PyeongChang Olympic Winter Games 2018 - Men's Skeleton - IBSF 14 January 2018" (PDF). www.ibsf.org. International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF). 15 January 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  5. ^ "Quota Allocation PyeongChang Olympic Winter Games 2018 - Women's Skeleton - IBSF 14 January 2018" (PDF). www.ibsf.org. International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF). 15 January 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2018.