Nordic combined at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Individual normal hill/10 km

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Men's individual normal hill/10 km
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
Pictogram for Nordic combined
VenueAlpensia Ski Jumping Centre (ski jumping)
Alpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre (cross-country skiing)
Dates14 February
Competitors48 from 16 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Eric Frenzel  Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Akito Watabe  Japan
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lukas Klapfer  Austria
← 2014
2022 →

The men's individual normal hill/10 km Nordic combined competition for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, was held at the Alpensia Ski Jumping Centre and Alpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre on 14 February 2018.[1][2]

Summary

The defending champion was Eric Frenzel; the field also included the 2014 silver medalist Akito Watabe and the 2010 champion Jason Lamy-Chappuis, who was coming out of retirement and was not considered a medal contender.[3] Frenzel became the champion again, with Watabe again taking silver, and Lukas Klapfer becoming the bronze medalist.

After the ski jumping, Franz-Josef Rehrl was leading, with Watabe third and Frenzel fifth. By 4 km of the cross-country skiing part, the top five athletes after the ski jumping, Rehrl, Jarl Magnus Riiber, Frenzel, Lukas Klapfer, and Akito Watabe, were skiing together, with a gap of 15 seconds between them and Eero Hirvonen. The gap was growing. By 5 km Rehrl started lagging behind the rest of the leading group, and by 6.5 km was out of the medal contention. Klapfer was leading the field, with Watabe and Frenzel 0.6 and 1.3 seconds behind, respectively. At the finish, Frenzel was the fastest, with Watabe second five seconds behind. Klapfer and Riiber were left behind, and Klapfer won the bronze medal four seconds ahead of Riiber.

Qualification

Using the Olympic Quota Allocation List and Continental Cup Standings, when no athletes remain in the allocation list (which includes results from July 1, 2016 to January 21, 2018), the top 50 athletes were awarded quotas (with maximum of five per country). Only maximum of four could be entered into this event. The remaining five quotas were given to countries with three athletes to make a team. If a minimum of ten teams were already formed in the first 50, then the remaining five quotas would be allocated using the allocation list or continental cup standings.[4]

Results

Ski jumping

The ski jumping was held at 15:30.[5]

Rank Bib Name Country Distance (m) Points Time difference
1 27 Franz-Josef Rehrl  Austria 112.0 130.6
2 40 Jarl Magnus Riiber  Norway 111.0 126.9 +0:15
3 48 Akito Watabe  Japan 105.5 123.7 +0:28
4 39 Lukas Klapfer  Austria 109.0 122.6 +0:32
5 41 Eric Frenzel  Germany 106.5 121.7 +0:36
6 42 Eero Hirvonen  Finland 102.0 118.0 +0:50
7 43 Espen Andersen  Norway 104.5 117.2 +0:54
8 29 Yoshito Watabe  Japan 104.0 114.3 +1:05
9 35 Kristjan Ilves  Estonia 104.0 112.8 +1:11
10 34 Maxime Laheurte  France 104.5 110.7 +1:20
11 44 Johannes Rydzek  Germany 101.0 109.1 +1:26
12 33 François Braud  France 101.5 108.6 +1:28
13 38 Vinzenz Geiger  Germany 103.5 105.4 +1:41
14 22 Hideaki Nagai  Japan 101.0 104.2 +1:46
15 28 Go Yamamoto  Japan 97.5 104.0 +1:46
16 45 Fabian Rießle  Germany 94.5 99.9 +2:03
17 37 Ilkka Herola  Finland 97.0 99.7 +2:04
18 26 Bryan Fletcher  United States 97.5 99.0 +2:06
19 14 Jason Lamy-Chappuis  France 96.0 97.7 +2:12
20 19 Szczepan Kupczak  Poland 97.0 96.8 +2:15
21 21 Ernest Yahin  Olympic Athletes from Russia 96.0 96.7 +2:16
22 8 Ondřej Pažout  Czech Republic 97.5 95.8 +2:19
23 46 Jørgen Graabak  Norway 90.0 93.6 +2:28
24 32 Antoine Gérard  France 96.5 92.9 +2:31
25 36 Wilhelm Denifl  Austria 92.0 92.3 +2:33
26 24 Tim Hug  Switzerland 97.0 90.9 +2:39
27 13 Vid Vrhovnik  Slovenia 92.5 90.4 +2:41
28 18 Miroslav Dvořák  Czech Republic 95.5 89.3 +2:43
29 30 Tomáš Portyk  Czech Republic 89.5 89.3 +2:45
30 3 Aaron Kostner  Italy 93.5 89.2 +2:46
31 47 Jan Schmid  Norway 88.0 88.8 +2:47
32 16 Paweł Słowiok  Poland 92.5 88.3 +2:49
33 23 Bernhard Gruber  Austria 91.5 88.2 +2:50
34 25 Arttu Mäkiaho  Finland 91.0 85.2 +3:02
34 17 Hannu Manninen  Finland 90.0 85.2 +3:02
36 15 Viktor Pasichnyk  Ukraine 89.5 84.0 +3:06
37 9 Ben Loomis  United States 86.5 79.5 +3:24
38 31 Alessandro Pittin  Italy 89.0 77.4 +3:33
39 10 Taylor Fletcher  United States 86.0 76.4 +3:37
40 11 Raffaele Buzzi  Italy 88.0 74.6 +3:44
41 6 Lukas Runggaldier  Italy 85.0 73.6 +3:48
42 4 Park Je-un  South Korea 86.0 73.3 +3:49
43 12 Karl-August Tiirmaa  Estonia 87.0 68.9 +4:07
44 7 Adam Cieślar  Poland 81.0 68.7 +4:08
45 2 Wojciech Marusarz  Poland 79.5 61.3 +4:37
46 20 Marjan Jelenko  Slovenia 73.5 60.4 +4:41
47 1 Jasper Good  United States 76.0 58.8 +4:47
5 Lukáš Daněk  Czech Republic DSQ

Cross-country

The cross-country part was held at 18:00.[6]

Rank Bib Name Country Start time Cross-country
time
Cross-country
rank
Finish time Deficit
1st place, gold medalist(s) 5 Eric Frenzel  Germany 0:36 24:15.4 6 24:51.4
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3 Akito Watabe  Japan 0:28 24:28.2 9 24:56.2 +4.8
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 4 Lukas Klapfer  Austria 0:32 24:37.5 11 25:09.5 +18.1
4 2 Jarl Magnus Riiber  Norway 0:15 24:58.9 23 25:13.9 +22.5
5 11 Johannes Rydzek  Germany 1:26 23:53.3 3 25:19.3 +27.9
6 6 Eero Hirvonen  Finland 0:50 24:53.0 19 25:43.0 +51.6
7 16 Fabian Rießle  Germany 2:03 23:53.7 4 25:56.7 +1:05.3
8 17 Ilkka Herola  Finland 2:04 23:52.9 2 25:56.9 +1:05.5
9 13 Vinzenz Geiger  Germany 1:41 24:15.9 7 25:56.9 +1:05.5
10 7 Espen Andersen  Norway 0:54 25:11.1 28 26:05.1 +1:13.7
11 10 Maxime Laheurte  France 1:20 24:54.5 21 26:14.5 +1:23.1
12 8 Yoshito Watabe  Japan 1:05 25:11.2 29 26:16.2 +1:24.8
13 1 Franz-Josef Rehrl  Austria 0:00 26:29.5 44 26:29.5 +1:38.1
14 14 Hideaki Nagai  Japan 1:46 24:44.5 16 26:30.5 +1:39.1
15 12 François Braud  France 1:28 25:12.5 30 26:40.5 +1:49.1
16 9 Kristjan Ilves  Estonia 1:11 25:52.3 38 27:03.3 +2:11.9
17 18 Bryan Fletcher  United States 2:06 24:57.6 22 27:03.6 +2:12.2
18 23 Jørgen Graabak  Norway 2:28 24:53.3 20 27:21.3 +2:29.9
19 38 Alessandro Pittin  Italy 3:33 23:48.9 1 27:21.9 +2:30.5
20 33 Bernhard Gruber  Austria 2:50 24:32.1 10 27:22.1 +2:30.7
21 28 Miroslav Dvořák  Czech Republic 2:43 24:40.4 14 27:23.4 +2:32.0
22 32 Paweł Słowiok  Poland 2:49 24:37.6 12 27:26.6 +2:35.2
23 35 Hannu Manninen  Finland 3:02 24:27.8 8 27:29.8 +2:38.4
24 29 Tomáš Portyk  Czech Republic 2:45 24:46.4 17 27:31.4 +2:40.0
25 31 Jan Schmid  Norway 2:47 24:47.8 18 27:34.8 +2:43.4
26 24 Antoine Gérard  France 2:31 25:05.8 26 27:36.8 +2:45.4
27 26 Tim Hug  Switzerland 2:39 24:59.4 25 27:38.4 +2:47.0
28 27 Vid Vrhovnik  Slovenia 2:41 24:58.9 23 27:39.9 +2:48.5
29 25 Wilhelm Denifl  Austria 2:33 25:08.8 27 27:41.8 +2:50.4
30 36 Viktor Pasichnyk  Ukraine 3:06 24:40.1 13 27:46.1 +2:54.7
31 19 Jason Lamy-Chappuis  France 2:12 25:36.9 35 27:48.9 +2:57.5
32 41 Lukas Runggaldier  Italy 3:48 24:03.2 5 27:51.2 +2:59.8
33 15 Go Yamamoto  Japan 1:46 26:11.1 42 27:57.1 +3:05.7
34 22 Ondřej Pažout  Czech Republic 2:19 25:46.8 37 28:05.8 +3:14.4
35 39 Taylor Fletcher  United States 3:37 24:42.2 15 28:19.2 +3:27.8
36 34 Arttu Mäkiaho  Finland 3:02 25:25.3 31 28:27.3 +3:35.9
37 30 Aaron Kostner  Italy 2:46 25:44.4 36 28:30.4 +3:39.0
38 21 Ernest Yahin  Olympic Athletes from Russia 2:16 26:18.3 43 28:34.3 +3:42.9
39 20 Szczepan Kupczak  Poland 2:15 26:47.6 45 29:02.6 +4:11.2
40 40 Raffaele Buzzi  Italy 3:44 25:29.1 33 29:13.1 +4:21.7
41 37 Ben Loomis  United States 3:24 25:56.8 40 29:20.8 +4:29.4
42 44 Adam Cieślar  Poland 4:08 25:30.7 34 29:38.7 +4:47.3
43 43 Karl-August Tiirmaa  Estonia 4:07 25:58.2 41 30:05.2 +5:13.8
44 46 Marjan Jelenko  Slovenia 4:41 25:27.5 32 30:08.5 +5:17.1
45 47 Jasper Good  United States 4:47 25:52.8 39 30:39.8 +5:48.4
46 42 Park Je-un  South Korea 3:49 27:07.5 47 30:56.5 +6:05.1
47 45 Wojciech Marusarz  Poland 4:37 26:50.5 46 31:27.5 +6:36.1

References

  1. ^ "Venues". www.pyeongchang2018.com/. Pyeongchang 2018 Olympic Organizing Committee for the 2018 Winter Olympics. Archived from the original on 17 February 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ Geffrotin, Thibaud (13 February 2018). "JO 2018 - Jason Lamy-Chappuis : vol n° 2018 direction Pyeongchang". Le Point. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXII Olympic Winter Games, PyeongChang 2018 Cross-country skiing" (PDF). International Ski Federation (FIS). 13 April 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  5. ^ Ski jumping results
  6. ^ Final results