|
| Event type

10 kilometres Sprint, Men1

Date18 February 1998 — 12:15
StatusOlympic
LocationNozawa Onsen Resort, Nozawa Onsen
Participants73 from 30 countries
FormatPenalty loop (150 metres) skied for each missed target.
DetailsCourse Length: 10,000 m
Height Differential: 92 m
Maximum Climb: 32 m
Shooting 1: Prone at 3.0 km, 50 m range
Shooting 2: Standing at 7.0 km, 50 m range
Total Climbing: 380 m

The event started on 17 February but snow and fog made the targets almost invisible and after 40 minutes, it was stopped and re-scheduled for the next day. The leader when the competition was stopped was Aleksandr Popov of Belarus, but the next day he would shoot poorly, ski slower, and place 55th. But on the postponed day, Popov would likely not have won, as Norway’s Ole Einar Bjørndalen was well ahead of his pace. Bjørndalen was leading the World Cup race in the 1997-98 season, had placed second in 1996-97, and was one of the favorites. On the day of the re-scheduled event, he dominated the race, shooting cleanly and winning by over one minute. In second was his teammate, Frode Andresen, who was fortunate about the weather delay, as on the first day he had missed four of his first five targets.

Andresen would become one of the top biathletes in the world in the next few years, winning the sprint at the 2000 World Championships, and four medals at the 1999 and 2000 Worlds. But Bjørndalen would soon become the greatest biathlete ever, and one of the greatest athletes in any sport. At Salt Lake City in 2002, he would four gold medals, helping Norway win the relay, and winning all three individual events. Through 2009 he had won 33 medals at the World Championships, including 14 titles. Bjørndalen was an excellent cross-country skier, having won a 2006 World Cup race in that sport, and placing fifth in the 2002 Winter Olympic 30 km.

PosCompetitorNOCTimeMissesShooting 1 MissesShooting 1Shooting 2 MissesShooting 2
1Ole Einar BjørndalenNOR27:16.2008:36.3 (1)019:42.3 (1)Gold
2Frode AndresenNOR28:17.8219:01.7 (10)120:30.4 (3)Silver
3Ville RäikkönenFIN28:21.7108:49.1 (3)120:24.9 (2)Bronze
4Viktor MaygurovRUS28:36.0009:08.9 (17)020:44.1 (5)
5Jēkabs NākumsLAT28:36.9119:29.4 (33)020:45.5 (6)
6Oļegs MaļuhinsLAT28:37.4109:06.7 (=12)120:46.2 (7)
7Frank LuckGER28:40.3119:00.9 (8)020:49.6 (8)
8Halvard HanevoldNOR28:40.8219:23.1 (27)121:06.8 (16)
9Paavo PuurunenFIN28:44.0009:00.7 (9)020:34.5 (4)
10Pieralberto CarraraITA28:44.2219:13.5 (=19)120:53.7 (13)
11Ludwig GredlerAUT28:44.3208:44.3 (2)220:52.5 (12)
12Vladimir DrachovRUS28:46.4108:54.3 (4)120:51.2 (10)
13Egil GjellandNOR28:49.1119:17.9 (24)020:50.9 (9)
14Wilfried PallhuberITA28:50.1119:14.3 (22)020:51.1 (11)
15Ivan MasaříkCZE28:58.6219:19.9 (26)121:06.5 (17)
16Jože PoklukarSLO29:00.5109:07.1 (=15)121:01.5 (14)
17Ricco GroßGER29:13.9108:56.4 (=5)121:02.2 (15)
=18Dimitri BorovikEST29:19.4109:12.9 (18)121:10.2 (18)
=18Kyoji SugaJPN29:19.4208:56.4 (=5)221:12.8 (19)
20Harri ElorantaFIN29:21.8219:29.8 (34)121:28.6 (26)
21Fredrik KuoppaSWE29:22.0209:00.0 (7)221:25.3 (25)
22Sergey TarasovRUS29:23.2329:37.2 (42)121:15.6 (21)
23Wojciech KozubPOL29:28.5329:42.6 (45)121:28.1 (27)
24Dmitry PozdnyakovKAZ29:30.1009:13.4 (21)021:14.6 (20)
25Mikael LöfgrenSWE29:31.6109:06.7 (=12)121:16.5 (22)
26Wiesław ZiemianinPOL29:34.4109:06.0 (14)121:17.7 (23)
27Aleh RyzhankouBLR29:38.2209:03.0 (11)221:29.9 (28)
28Tomasz SikoraPOL29:40.8119:40.3 (43)021:34.4 (29)
29Sven FischerGER29:47.1219:27.8 (32)121:37.2 (31)
30Ruslan LysenkoUKR29:49.6009:07.1 (=15)021:20.9 (24)
31Valery IvanovKAZ29:58.8519:26.0 (31)422:07.8 (44)
32Ilmārs BricisLAT30:01.7429:49.2 (52)222:01.9 (40)
33Tomaž GlobočnikSLO30:04.4319:31.8 (38)221:53.5 (34)
34Carsten HeymannGER30:09.6209:17.6 (25)221:58.2 (38)
35Hubert LeitgebITA30:10.0119:26.5 (30)021:34.1 (30)
36Indrek TobrelutsEST30:11.3319:34.6 (40)222:08.1 (46)
37Aliaksei AydarauBLR30:12.3219:29.7 (35)121:48.1 (32)
38Wolfgang PernerAUT30:13.5429:44.1 (48)222:06.1 (42)
39Wolfgang RottmannAUT30:16.0209:14.6 (23)221:58.6 (36)
40Sašo GrajfSLO30:24.2329:47.4 (=49)122:01.1 (39)
41Ľubomír MachyniakSVK30:30.3119:37.1 (41)021:54.9 (35)
42Tomaž ŽemvaSLO30:32.1109:23.6 (28)121:58.8 (37)
=43Shuichi SekiyaJPN30:33.43310:35.7 (66)022:20.9 (54)
=43Janno PrantsEST30:33.43310:26.1 (65)022:17.1 (52)
45Andriy DeryzemliaUKR30:33.6319:34.3 (39)222:17.7 (53)
46Vadzim SashurynBLR30:34.0119:42.4 (46)022:07.2 (43)
47Mike DixonGBR30:34.4009:31.2 (36)021:52.1 (33)
48Steve CyrCAN30:35.03310:25.3 (64)022:09.2 (48)
49Dan WestoverUSA30:39.5119:52.8 (53)022:04.9 (41)
50Thierry DusserreFRA30:43.6119:54.6 (54)022:07.6 (45)
51Zdeněk VítekCZE30:46.5219:41.2 (44)122:09.1 (47)
52René CattarinussiITA30:50.0419:13.5 (=19)322:12.5 (51)
53Petr GarabíkCZE30:51.3319:23.3 (29)222:12.4 (50)
54Dmitry PantovKAZ30:51.83210:05.5 (59)122:28.7 (55)
55Aliaksandr PapouBLR30:53.02210:14.7 (60)022:33.4 (56)
56Aleksey KobelevRUS31:02.84210:00.3 (58)222:43.0 (58)
57Georgi KasabovBUL31:09.5009:31.6 (37)022:10.0 (49)
58Thanasis TsakirisGRE31:14.6219:55.1 (56)122:37.2 (57)
59Liutauras BarilaLTU31:23.75410:49.6 (68)123:11.6 (63)
60Jay HakkinenUSA31:31.6319:47.4 (=49)222:53.2 (60)
61Atsushi KazamaJPN31:41.2629:43.4 (47)423:12.9 (64)
62Reinhard NeunerAUT31:45.3419:47.4 (=49)323:08.8 (62)
63János PanyikHUN31:50.0119:54.0 (55)022:48.9 (59)
64Marius EneROU31:54.82210:21.9 (62)023:04.9 (61)
65Aleksandr TropnikovKGZ31:55.84310:45.9 (67)123:24.9 (65)
66Kevin QuintilioCAN32:32.63210:21.3 (61)123:27.8 (68)
67Julien RobertFRA32:52.4009:56.2 (57)023:25.5 (66)
68Mark GeeGBR33:00.35411:16.8 (70)124:16.5 (69)
69Andreas HeymannFRA33:06.92210:22.2 (63)023:25.2 (67)
70Jeon Jae-WonKOR35:09.56412:10.3 (71)226:13.1 (70)
71Ion BucsaMDA36:33.86211:09.7 (69)427:12.9 (71)
DNFRaphaël PoiréeFRA4– (–)– (–)
DNFJean-Marc ChablozSUI– (–)– (–)