2017–18 Biathlon World Cup – Mass start Men

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The 2017–18 Biathlon World Cup – Mass start Men started on Sunday 17 December 2017 in Annecy and will finish on Sunday 25 March 2018 in Tyumen. The defending titlist is Martin Fourcade of France.

Competition format[edit]

In the mass start, all biathletes start at the same time and the first across the finish line wins. In this 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) competition, the distance is skied over five laps; there are four bouts of shooting (two prone and two standing, in that order) with the first shooting bout being at the lane corresponding to the competitor's bib number (bib #10 shoots at lane #10 regardless of position in race), with the rest of the shooting bouts being on a first-come, first-served basis (if a competitor arrives at the lane in fifth place, they shoot at lane 5). As in the sprint and pursuit, competitors must ski one 150 metres (490 ft) penalty loop for each miss. Here again, to avoid unwanted congestion, World Cup Mass starts are held with only the 30 top ranking athletes on the start line (half that of the pursuit) as here all contestants start simultaneously.

2016–17 Top 3 standings[edit]

Medal Athlete Points
Gold: France Martin Fourcade 248
Silver: Germany Simon Schempp 231
Bronze: Russia Anton Shipulin 177

Medal winners[edit]

Event Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time
Annecy
details
Martin Fourcade
 France
36:30.3
(0+0+0+0)
Johannes Thingnes Bø
 Norway
36:34.2
(2+0+0+0)
Erik Lesser
 Germany
36:36.5
(0+0+0+0)
Ruhpolding
details
Johannes Thingnes Bø
 Norway
37:11.2
(0+0+0+1)
Martin Fourcade
 France
37:15.7
(0+0+2+0)
Antonin Guigonnat
 France
37:19.6
(0+0+0+0)
Antholz-Anterselva
details
Martin Fourcade
 France
40:18.6
(0+1+0+1)
Tarjei Bø
 Norway
40:21.4
(1+0+0+1)
Erlend Bjøntegaard
 Norway
40:23.7
(0+1+0+1)
Kontiolahti
details
Julian Eberhard
 Austria
38:04.8
(0+0+1+1)
Martin Fourcade
 France
38:11.7
(2+0+0+0)
Anton Shipulin
 Russia
38:24.1
(0+1+0+0)
Tyumen
details
Maxim Tsvetkov
 Russia
37:37.3
(0+0+0+0)
Erlend Bjøntegaard
 Norway
37:40.0
(0+0+0+0)
Johannes Thingnes Bø
 Norway
37:53.9
(1+0+1+0)

Standings[edit]

# Name ANN RUH ANT KON TYU Total [1]
1  Martin Fourcade (FRA) 60 54 60 54 22 250
2  Johannes Thingnes Bø (NOR) 54 60 38 22 48 222
3  Benedikt Doll (GER) 23 32 43 43 43 184
4  Tarjei Bø (NOR) 30 40 54 21 38 183
5  Anton Shipulin (RUS) 43 26 32 48 25 174
6  Erik Lesser (GER) 48 23 24 40 32 167
7  Arnd Peiffer (GER) 38 36 22 38 31 165
8  Jakov Fak (SLO) 34 31 29 29 30 153
9  Erlend Bjøntegaard (NOR) 31 48 8 54 141
10  Quentin Fillon Maillet (FRA) 21 43 20 31 24 139
11  Simon Desthieux (FRA) 24 30 31 20 29 134
12  Dominik Windisch (ITA) 36 4 34 36 21 131
13  Antonin Guigonnat (FRA) 18 48 16 30 18 130
14  Lukas Hofer (ITA) 26 27 12 28 36 129
15  Simon Eder (AUT) 29 29 26 20 104
16  Fredrik Lindström (SWE) 27 22 26 28 103
17  Julian Eberhard (AUT) 24 4 60 12 100
18  Henrik L'Abée-Lund (NOR) 4 2 30 23 40 99
19  Johannes Kühn (GER) 12 40 4 34 90
20  Alexandr Loginov (RUS) 32 8 23 27 90
21  Michal Krčmář (CZE) 25 25 34 84
22  Anton Babikov (RUS) 28 14 16 26 84
23  Maxim Tsvetkov (RUS) 20 60 80
24  Benjamin Weger (SUI) 40 28 10 2 80
25  Simon Schempp (GER) 12 38 25 4 79
26  Lars Helge Birkeland (NOR) 25 16 10 12 10 73
27  Ondřej Moravec (CZE) 6 27 32 65
28  Andrejs Rastorgujevs (LAT) 8 21 8 18 8 63
29  Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 14 36 50
30  Evgeniy Garanichev (RUS) 22 23 45
31  Lowell Bailey (USA) 16 27 43
32  Krasimir Anev (BUL) 18 24 42
33  Tim Burke (USA) 20 18 38
34  Michal Šlesingr (CZE) 34 34
35  Roman Rees (GER) 28 28
36  Simon Fourcade (FRA) 21 21
37  Timofey Lapshin (KOR) 6 14 20
38  Jesper Nelin (SWE) 16 16
39  Sean Doherty (USA) 14 14
39  Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (SWE) 14 14
41  Scott Gow (CAN) 10 10
41  Dominik Landertinger (AUT) 10 10
43  Ole Einar Bjørndalen (NOR) 6 6
43  Dmitry Malyshko (RUS) 6 6
43  Émilien Jacquelin (FRA) 6 6
46  Leif Nordgren (USA) 2 2
46  Vladimir Chepelin (BLR) 2 2
46  Matvey Eliseev (RUS) 2 2

References[edit]