Biathlon World Championships 1994
Host city | Canmore, Alberta |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Events | 2 |
Opening | 15 March 1994 (1994-03-15) |
Closing | 20 March 1994 (1994-03-20) |
← Borovets 1993 Anterselva 1995 → |
The 29th Biathlon World Championships held in 1994 in Canmore, Alberta, Canada[1] were only for the team events because these were not part of the Olympic programme in Lillehammer.
Men's results
Team event
Date: 20 March 1994.[2]
Position | Name | Nation | Penalties | Result[3] |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pieralberto Carrara (1) Hubert Leitgeb (0) Andreas Zingerle (2) Wilfried Pallhuber (1) | ITA | (4) | 26:26.5 |
2 | Vladimir Drachev (1) Alexei Kobelev (0) Valeri Kiriyenko (1) Sergei Tarasov (2) | RUS | (4) | 26:27.8 |
3 | Steffen Hoos (0) Marco Morgenstern (1) Peter Sendel (0) Jens Steinigen (1) | GER | (2) | 26:34.3 |
4 | Sylfest Glimsdal (1) Ole Einar Bjørndalen (0) Halvard Hanevold (3) Jon Åge Tyldum (1) | NOR | (5) | 27:50.9 |
5 | Tomáš Kos (0) Ivan Masařík (0) Petr Garabík (3) Jiří Holubec (3) | CZE | (6) | 28:07.3 |
6 | Ludwig Gredler (0) Wolfgang Perner (4) Alfred Eder (2) Hannes Obererlacher (2) | AUT | (8) | 28:12.1 |
7 | Jože Poklukar (1) Matjaž Poklukar (3) Jure Velepec (1) Janez Ožbolt (1) | SLO | (6) | 28:47.5 |
8 | Xavier Blond (1) Gilles Marguet (3) Lionel Laurent (1) Stéphane Bouthiaux (1) | FRA | (6) | 28:55.5 |
9 | Oleg Ryzhenkov (0) Vadim Sashurin (0) Viktor Maigourov (1) Alexandr Popov (0) | BLR | (1) | 29:04.8 |
10 | Jason Sklenar (2) Kenneth Rudd (2) Ian Woods (1) Mike Dixon (1) | GBR | (6) | 29:20.4 |
11 | Olaf Mihelson (1) Aivo Udras (2) Urmas Kaldvee (4) Kalju Ojaste (1) | EST | (8) | 29:21.5 |
12 | Jay Poss (2) Duncan Douglas (2) Jon Engen (2) Ian Harvey (2) | USA | (8) | 30:23.9 |
13 | Glenn Rupertus (2) Ian Robertson (3) Steve Cyr (2) Kevin Quintilio (3) | CAN | (10) | 30:32.2 |
14 | Mitsuru Nishida (3) Kazumasa Takeda (2) Hirohide Sato (2) Kyōji Suga (3) | JPN | (10) | 31:48.1 |
DNF | Stavros Christoforidis (2) Giorgos Avramakis (3) Vassilios Kiakos Angelos Giagkou | GRE | (5) |
Women's results
Team event
Medal | Name | Nation | Penalties | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Natalia Permjakova Natalia Ryschenkova Irina Kokujeva Svetlana Paramygina | BLR | … | … |
2 | Ann Elen Skjelbreid Åse Idland Annette Sikveland Hildegunn Fossen | NOR | … | … |
3 | Emmanuelle Claret Nathalie Beausire Corinne Niogret Véronique Claudel | FRA | … | … |
Medal table
Place | Nation | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Belarus | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
1 | Italy | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
3 | Norway | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
3 | Russia | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
5 | France | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
5 | Germany | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
References
- ^ Sports 123 biathlon results
- ^ "World Championships Team - Canmore/Canmore (CAN) – Men 10 km Team". IBU Datacenter. International Biathlon Union. Archived from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2014.
- ^ Sportsboken 93-94 [The Sports Book 93-94] (in Norwegian). Oslo: VG. (in Norwegian)
- v
- t
- e
- Saalfelden 1958
- Courmayeur 1959
- Umeå 1961
- Hämeenlinna 1962
- Seefeld 1963
- Elverum 1965
- Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1966
- Altenberg 1967
- Zakopane 1969
- Östersund 1970
- Hämeenlinna 1971
- Lake Placid 1973
- Minsk 1974
- Antholz-Anterselva 1975
- Antholz-Anterselva 1976
- Vingrom 1977
- Hochfilzen 1978
- Ruhpolding 1979
- Lahti 1981
- Minsk 1982
- Antholz-Anterselva 1983
- Chamonix 1984
- Ruhpolding / Egg am Etzel 1985
- Oslo / Falun 1986
- Lake Placid / Lahti 1987
- Chamonix 1988
- Feistritz an der Drau 1989
- Minsk / Oslo / Kontiolahti 1990
- Lahti 1991
- Novosibirsk 1992
- Borovets 1993
- Canmore 1994
- Antholz-Anterselva 1995
- Ruhpolding 1996
- Brezno-Osrblie 1997
- Pokljuka / Hochfilzen 1998
- Kontiolahti / Oslo 1999
- Oslo / Lahti 2000
- Pokljuka 2001
- Oslo 2002
- Khanty-Mansiysk 2003
- Oberhof 2004
- Hochfilzen / Khanty-Mansiysk 2005
- Pokljuka 2006
- Antholz-Anterselva 2007
- Östersund 2008
- Pyeongchang 2009
- Khanty-Mansiysk 2010
- Khanty-Mansiysk 2011
- Ruhpolding 2012
- Nové Město na Moravě 2013
- Kontiolahti 2015
- Oslo 2016
- Hochfilzen 2017
- Östersund 2019
- Antholz-Anterselva 2020
- Pokljuka 2021
- Oberhof 2023
- Nové Město na Moravě 2024
- Lenzerheide 2025
- Otepää 2027