Nordic combined at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Individual normal hill/10 km

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Individual normal hill/10 km
at the XXIV Olympic Winter Games
VenueKuyangshu Nordic Center and Biathlon Center,
Zhangjiakou
Date9 February
Competitors45 from 17 nations
Winning time25:07.7
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Vinzenz Geiger  Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jørgen Graabak  Norway
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lukas Greiderer  Austria
← 2018
2026 →

The individual normal hill/10 km competition in Nordic combined at the 2022 Winter Olympics was held on 9 February, at the Kuyangshu Nordic Center and Biathlon Center in Zhangjiakou.[1] Vinzenz Geiger of Germany won the event. For him, this was the first Olympic medal in an individual event. Jørgen Graabak of Norway, the 2014 individual large hill and team champion, was second. Lukas Greiderer of Austria won the bronze medal, his first Olympic medal.

The defending champion was Eric Frenzel, who won this event in 2014 and 2018. Frenzel qualified for the Olympics but did not participate in the event. The 2018 silver medalist, Akito Watabe, qualified as well. but the bronze medalist, Lukas Klapfer, did not. Johannes Lamparter was the overall leader of the 2021–22 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup before the Olympics, followed by Jarl Magnus Riiber and Geiger. Riiber was the 2021 World Champion in individual large hill/10 km. Riiber had to withdraw from the event due to a positive COVID-19 test.[citation needed]

Ryota Yamamoto won the jump. In the cross-country part, the three athletes with the next best results in the jump, Greiderer, Julian Schmid, and Johannes Rydzek, soon caught up with Yamamoto and skied together, followed by another group 25–30 seconds behind. At 6 km, Yamamoto has already dropped out of medal contention, and Greiderer, Schmid, and Rydzek were 30 seconds ahead of the second group, then the gap started to narrow. The group caught up with Greiderer, but at 8.5 km Schmid and Rydzek were still 15 seconds ahead. Finally, they were caught up as well, and at the finish line Geiger was first, Graabak second, and Greiderer third, with Lamparter fourth not so far behind.

Qualification

Results

Ski jumping

The ski jumping part was held at 16:00.[2]

Rank Bib Name Country Distance (m) Points Time difference
1 39 Ryōta Yamamoto  Japan 108.0 133.0
2 34 Lukas Greiderer  Austria 103.5 123.4 +0:38
3 42 Julian Schmid  Germany 103.0 123.1 +0:40
4 38 Johannes Rydzek  Germany 104.0 122.2 +0:43
5 46 Johannes Lamparter  Austria 100.0 116.9 +1:04
5 29 Sora Yachi  Japan 103.5 116.9 +1:04
7 32 Franz-Josef Rehrl  Austria 102.0 115.8 +1:09
8 37 Ilkka Herola  Finland 100.0 115.7 +1:09
9 44 Jørgen Graabak  Norway 98.5 114.1 +1:16
9 40 Akito Watabe  Japan 98.0 114.1 +1:16
11 45 Vinzenz Geiger  Germany 98.0 111.4 +1:26
12 20 Mattéo Baud  France 97.5 111.3 +1:27
13 31 Yoshito Watabe  Japan 97.5 110.8 +1:29
13 27 Tomáš Portyk  Czech Republic 97.0 110.8 +1:29
15 34 Espen Bjørnstad  Norway 99.0 110.1 +1:32
16 36 Espen Andersen  Norway 96.0 109.3 +1:35
17 26 Ben Loomis  United States 94.5 105.6 +1:50
18 33 Martin Fritz  Austria 96.0 105.2 +1:51
19 28 Eero Hirvonen  Finland 93.0 104.1 +1:56
20 41 Jens Lurås Oftebro  Norway 92.5 103.8 +1:57
21 30 Laurent Mühlethaler  France 94.0 102.4 +2:02
22 24 Raffaele Buzzi  Italy 93.0 99.9 +2:12
22 12 Ondřej Pažout  Czech Republic 96.0 99.9 +2:12
24 19 Jared Shumate  United States 93.5 99.2 +2:15
25 18 Lukáš Daněk  Czech Republic 97.0 98.2 +2:19
26 2 Iacopo Bortolas  Italy 93.5 97.0 +2:24
27 23 Arttu Mäkiaho  Finland 95.5 95.1 +2:32
28 21 Perttu Reponen  Finland 90.0 94.2 +2:35
29 16 Jan Vytrval  Czech Republic 92.5 93.5 +2:38
30 14 Gaël Blondeau  France 91.0 91.3 +2:47
31 17 Vid Vrhovnik  Slovenia 91.5 88.0 +3:00
32 13 Szczepan Kupczak  Poland 89.5 87.5 +3:02
33 4 Stephen Schumann  United States 88.5 86.4 +3:06
34 22 Taylor Fletcher  United States 86.5 83.3 +3:19
35 11 Dmytro Mazurchuk  Ukraine 87.0 82.5 +3:22
36 8 Park Je-un  South Korea 90.0 82.3 +3:23
37 6 Andrzej Szczechowicz  Poland 82.5 76.4 +3:46
38 10 Chingiz Rakparov  Kazakhstan 79.5 69.9 +4:12
39 3 Artem Galunin  ROC 77.0 66.8 +4:25
40 15 Alessandro Pittin  Italy 75.5 62.9 +4:40
41 5 Viacheslav Barkov  ROC 78.0 61.6 +4:46
42 9 Zhao Jiawen  China 81.0 59.0 +4:56
43 7 Markuss Vinogradovs  Latvia 72.0 55.0 +5:12
44 1 Samir Mastiev  ROC 72.0 47.8 +5:41
25 Antoine Gérard  France Disqualified
43 Terence Weber  Germany Did not start

Cross-country

The cross-country part was held at 19:00.[3]

Rank Bib Name Country Start time Cross-country Finish time Deficit
Time Rank
1st place, gold medalist(s) 11 Vinzenz Geiger  Germany 1:26 23:41.7 1 25:07.7
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 9 Jørgen Graabak  Norway 1:16 23:52.5 2 25:08.5 +0.8
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 2 Lukas Greiderer  Austria 0:38 24:36.3 7 25:14.3 +6.6
4 5 Johannes Lamparter  Austria 1:04 24:12.7 3 25:16.7 +9.0
5 4 Johannes Rydzek  Germany 0:43 24:46.5 9 25:29.5 +21.8
6 8 Ilkka Herola  Finland 1:09 24:24.1 4 25:33.1 +25.4
7 10 Akito Watabe  Japan 1:16 24:24.1 4 25:40.1 +32.4
8 3 Julian Schmid  Germany 0:40 25:17.9 21 25:57.9 +50.2
9 7 Franz-Josef Rehrl  Austria 1:09 25:08.3 17 26:17.3 +1:09.6
10 20 Jens Lurås Oftebro  Norway 1:57 24:53.2 11 26:50.2 +1:42.5
11 16 Espen Andersen  Norway 1:35 25:17.3 20 26:52.3 +1:44.6
12 18 Martin Fritz  Austria 1:51 25:02.4 14 26:53.4 +1:45.7
13 13 Yoshito Watabe  Japan 1:29 25:25.2 23 26:54.2 +1:46.5
14 1 Ryota Yamamoto  Japan 0:00 26:54.3 34 26:54.3 +1:46.6
15 17 Ben Loomis  United States 1:50 25:07.8 16 26:57.8 +1:50.1
16 22 Raffaele Buzzi  Italy 2:12 24:47.3 10 26:59.3 +1:51.6
17 19 Eero Hirvonen  Finland 1:56 25:06.3 15 27:02.3 +1:54.6
18 12 Mattéo Baud  France 1:27 25:42.0 25 27:09.0 +2:01.3
19 24 Jared Shumate  United States 2:15 24:55.0 13 27:10.0 +2:02.3
20 14 Tomáš Portyk  Czech Republic 1:29 25:47.4 26 27:16.4 +2:08.7
21 25 Lukáš Daněk  Czech Republic 2:19 25:22.8 22 27:41.8 +2:34.1
22 28 Perttu Reponen  Finland 2:35 25:09.7 18 27:44.7 +2:37.0
23 27 Arttu Mäkiaho  Finland 2:32 25:14.3 19 27:46.3 +2:38.6
24 34 Taylor Fletcher  United States 3:19 24:31.9 6 27:50.9 +2:43.2
25 33 Stephen Schumann  United States 3:06 24:46.4 8 27:52.4 +2:44.7
26 29 Jan Vytrval  Czech Republic 2:38 25:26.7 24 28:04.7 +2:57.0
27 15 Espen Bjørnstad  Norway 1:32 26:40.1 32 28:12.1 +3:04.4
28 21 Laurent Mühlethaler  France 2:02 26:24.6 31 28:26.6 +3:18.9
29 23 Ondřej Pažout  Czech Republic 2:12 26:19.4 30 28:31.4 +3:23.7
30 6 Sora Yachi  Japan 1:04 27:34.6 40 28:38.6 +3:30.9
31 30 Gaël Blondeau  France 2:47 25:56.3 27 28:43.3 +3:35.6
32 40 Alessandro Pittin  Italy 4:40 24:53.4 12 29:33.4 +4:25.7
33 26 Iacopo Bortolas  Italy 2:24 27:30.8 38 29:54.8 +4:47.1
34 32 Szczepan Kupczak  Poland 3:02 27:22.3 37 30:24.3 +5:16.6
35 37 Andrzej Szczechowicz  Poland 3:46 26:40.2 33 30:26.2 +5:18.5
36 35 Dmytro Mazurchuk  Ukraine 3:22 27:08.3 35 30:30.3 +5:22.6
37 31 Vid Vrhovnik  Slovenia 3:00 27:34.5 39 30:34.5 +5:26.8
38 41 Viacheslav Barkov  ROC 4:46 26:08.2 28 30:54.2 +5:46.5
39 39 Artem Galunin  ROC 4:25 27:13.8 36 31:38.8 +6:31.1
40 44 Samir Mastiev  ROC 5:41 26:18.0 29 31:59.0 +6:51.3
41 38 Chingiz Rakparov  Kazakhstan 4:12 27:51.1 41 32:03.1 +6:55.4
42 36 Park Je-un  South Korea 3:23 29:11.3 43 32:34.3 +7:26.6
43 42 Zhao Jiawen  China 4:56 28:33.8 42 33:29.8 +8:22.1
44 43 Markuss Vinogradovs  Latvia 5:12 29:22.4 44 34:34.4 +9:26.7

References

  1. ^ "Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games Competition Schedule Version 9" (PDF). inews.gtimg.com. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  2. ^ Ski jumping results
  3. ^ Final results