Nordic combined at the 2010 Winter Olympics – Individual normal hill/10 km

The men's individual normal hill/10 km Nordic combined competition for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia, on 14 February.[1]

Men's individual normal hill/10 km
at the XXI Olympic Winter Games
Pictogram for Nordic combined
VenueWhistler Olympic Park
Dates14 February
Competitors45 from 14 nations
Winning time25:47.1
Medalists
Jason Lamy Chappuis  France
Johnny Spillane  United States
Alessandro Pittin  Italy

Germany's Georg Hettich was the defending Olympic champion when the event was known as the 15 km Individual Gundersen, but did not compete in this event.[2] Todd Lodwick of the United States was the defending world champion in this event and would finish fourth in the Olympic event.[3] The last World Cup event prior to the 2010 Games in this format took place on 31 January 2010 in Seefeld, Austria, and was won by Austria's Mario Stecher who would finish seventh.[4] Seefeld was where the Nordic Combined events took place for both the 1964 and the 1976 Winter Olympics, held in neighboring Innsbruck, took place.[5]

Results

Ski jumping

The ski jumping took place with a trial round at 09:00 PST and the competition round at 10:00 PST.[1] One jump in competition was scored similar to that of ski jumping. Finland's Ryynänen had the longest jump to grab the lead after the jump.[6]

RankBibNameCountryDistance (m)PointsTime difference
125Janne Ryynänen Finland105.0135.50:00
233Todd Lodwick United States101.5127.0+0:34
327Christoph Bieler Austria100.5125.0+0:42
438Johnny Spillane United States100.5124.5+0:44
545Jason Lamy-Chappuis France100.0124.0+0:46
635Alessandro Pittin Italy100.0123.5+0.48
740Mario Stecher Austria99.5122.5+0:52
816François Braud France99.5122.0+0:54
834Anssi Koivuranta Finland99.5122.0+0:54
107Brett Camerota United States100.0121.5+0:56
1039Pavel Churavý Czech Republic99.0121.5+0:56
1226Norihito Kobayashi Japan99.0121.0+0:58
135Gašper Berlot Slovenia99.0119.5+1:04
1311Daito Takahashi Japan98.0119.5+1:04
1318Jaakko Tallus Finland98.5119.5+1:04
168Lukas Runggaldier Italy98.5119.0+1:06
1641Tino Edelmann Germany98.5119.0+1:06
1643Eric Frenzel Germany98.0119.0+1:06
1937Björn Kircheisen Germany98.0118.5+1:08
2029David Kreiner Austria97.5117.5+1:12
2124Ronny Heer Switzerland97.0116.5+1:16
2231Hannu Manninen Finland97.0116.0+1:18
2232Petter L. Tande Norway97.0116.0+1:18
2415Tomáš Slavík Czech Republic96.5115.5+1:20
2436Bill Demong United States96.5115.5+1:20
2610Tommy Schmid Switzerland96.5115.0+1:22
2728Akito Watabe Japan96.5114.5+1:24
2819Taihei Kato Japan96.5114.0+1:26
2917Sébastien Lacroix France96.0113.0+1:30
3012Jonathan Felisaz France95.5112.0+1:34
3023Johannes Rydzek Germany95.5112.0+1:34
326Sergej Maslennikov Russia95.5111.5+1:36
3330Jan Schmid Norway94.5110.0+1:42
3420Seppi Hurschler Switzerland94.0109.0+1:46
352Aleš Vodseďálek Czech Republic93.5108.5+1:48
369Mitja Oranič Slovenia93.5108.0+1:50
3613Tim Hug Switzerland93.5108.0+1:50
3814Giuseppe Michielli Italy93.0107.0+1:54
3921Miroslav Dvořák Czech Republic92.5105.5+2:00
4042Magnus Moan Norway91.5104.0+2:06
4144Felix Gottwald Austria91.0102.5+2:12
4222Mikko Kokslien Norway91.0101.5+2:16
434Jason Myslicki Canada87.093.0+2:50
441Armin Bauer Italy86.591.5+2:56
453Volodymyr Trachuk Ukraine85.589.0+3:06

Cross-country

The start for the 10 kilometre race was staggered, with a one-point deficit in the ski jump portion resulting in a four-second deficit in starting the cross-country course. This stagger meant that the first athlete across the finish line would be the overall winner of the event. Cross-country skiing's part of the competition took place at 13:45 PST that same day.[1]

Ryynänen would lead until close to the end of the last part of the first lap before taking a spill where he never recovered. The Finn would finish 26th. A group of eight skiers developed during the middle part of the race which had Bill Demong move from 24th to the final lead group by the 7.5 km mark. Japan's Norihito Kobayashi grabbed the lead with 800 m left only to be passed by Johnny Spillane of the US, France's Jason Lamy-Chappuis, Italy's Alessandro Pittin, and Spillane's teammate Lodwick. Lamy-Chappuis passed Spillane right before the final sprint though Spillane mounted a final charge that fell 0.4 seconds short. Norway's Magnus Moan had the fastest time in the cross-country skiing portion of the event to move from 40th to ninth. It was the first individual medal for all three competitors, along with being the first medals for both the US and Italy in Nordic combined at the Winter Olympics.[7] Italy's best finish prior to this event in Nordic combined was fifth by Ezio Damolin at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble.[8]

RankBibNameCountryStart timeCross country
time
Cross country
rank
Finish time
5Jason Lamy-Chappuis France+0:4625:01.1525:47.1
4Johnny Spillane United States+0:4425:03.56+0.4
6Alessandro Pittin Italy+0:4824:59.94+0.8
42Todd Lodwick United States+0:3425:14.611+1.5
57Mario Stecher Austria+0:5225:08.77+13.6
624Bill Demong United States+1:2024:45.03+17.9
712Norihito Kobayashi Japan+0:5825:11.09+21.9
88Anssi Koivuranta Finland+0:5425:22.913+29.8
940Magnus Moan Norway+2:0624:16.71+35.6
1016Eric Frenzel Germany+1:0625:17.212+36.1
1121Ronny Heer Switzerland+1:1625:09.28+38.1
1210Pavel Churavý Czech Republic+0:5625:32.720+41.6
1323Hannu Manninen Finland+1:1825:12.410+43.3
1441Felix Gottwald Austria+2:1224:20.22+45.1
1520David Kreiner Austria+1:1225:24.515+49.4
1618Lukas Runggaldier Italy+1:0625:30.719+49.6
1722Petter L. Tande Norway+1:1825:29.218+1:00.1
1817Tino Edelmann Germany+1:0625:41.624+1:00.5
1929Sébastien Lacroix France+1:3025:26.316+1:09.2
2025Tomáš Slavík Czech Republic+1:2025:36.821+1:09.7
2127Akito Watabe Japan+1:2425:41.023+1:17.9
2219Björn Kircheisen Germany+1:0826:01.329+1:22.2
2333Jan Schmid Norway+1:4225:27.617+1:22.5
2428Taihei Kato Japan+1:2625:43.925+1:22.8
253Christoph Bieler Austria+0:4226:32.034+1:26.9
261Janne Ryynänen Finland0:0027:21.642+1:34.5
2714Daito Takahashi Japan+1:0426:21.033+1:37.9
2830Johannes Rydzek Germany+1:3425:51.328+1:38.2
2934Seppi Hurschler Switzerland+1:4625:40.622+1.39.5
3031Jonathan Felisaz France+1:3426:03.730+1:50.6
3137Mitja Oranič Slovenia+1:5025:48.327+1:51.2
3242Mikko Kokslien Norway+2:1625:23.214+1:52.1
3338Giuseppe Michielli Italy+1:5425:46.126+1:53.0
349François Braud France+0:5426:58.337+2:05.2
3536Tim Hug Switzerland+1:5026:04.131+2:07.0
3611Brett Camerota United States+0:5627:00.638+2:09.5
3715Gašper Berlot Slovenia+1:0427:15.539+2:32.4
3813Jaakko Tallus Finland+1:0427:21.141+2.38.0
3939Miroslav Dvořák Czech Republic+2:0026:33.535+2:46.4
4026Tommy Schmid Switzerland+1:2227:38.543+3:13.4
4145Volodymyr Trachuk Ukraine+3:0626:18.432+3:37.3
4232Sergej Maslennikov Russia+1:3627:53.345+3:42.2
4344Armin Bauer Italy+2:5626:36.336+3:45.2
4435Aleš Vodseďálek Czech Republic+1:4827:45.844+3:46.7
4543Jason Myslicki Canada+2:5027:20.740+4:23.6

References

  1. 2010 Winter Olympic nordic combined schedule. - accessed 4 November 2009.
  2. 2006 Winter Olympics 15 km Individual Gundersen results. Archived 2009-03-28 at the Wayback Machine - accessed 4 November 2009.
  3. FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009 Individual normal hill/10 km results. - accessed 4 November 2009.
  4. FIS Nordic Combined World Cup Seefeld 31 January 2010 HS 100/ 10 km results. - accessed 31 January 2010.
  5. Wallechinsky, David and Jaime Loucky (2009). "Nordic Combined: Individual". In The Complete Book of the Winter Olympics: 2010 Edition. London: Aurum Press Limited. pp. 273-4.
  6. 2010 Winter Olympics 14 February 2010 Nordic combined individual nh/ 10 km cc ski jumping results. Archived 11 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine - accessed 14 February 2010.
  7. 2010 Winter Olympics 14 February 2010 10 km individual normal hill final results. Archived 2010-04-01 at the Wayback Machine - accessed 14 February 2010.
  8. Wallechinsky, David and Jaime Loucky (2009). "Nordic Combined: Individual". In The Complete Book of the Winter Olympics: 2010 Edition. London: Aurum Press Limited. p. 273.
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