Norway won gold ahead of Sweden and Germany in the women’s relay. The French were disappointing.
Norway, Sweden and Germany were quickly the strongest nations, escaping more than a minute ahead of the others when Italy and the Czech Republic cracked. In the last relay, Hanna Oeberg and Ingrid Tandrevold engaged in a beautiful duel, from which the Norwegian emerged victorious while the Swede made four errors and therefore a penalty lap on the last shot. Norway takes gold, ahead of Sweden and Germany.
The French relay was disappointing, too irregular in shooting. The tricolors finished in fifth place, but almost two minutes and thirty seconds behind the winners. Chloé Chevalier, second runner, unfortunately missed her standing shot, taking a penalty lap. Justine Braisaz-Bouchet didn’t really succeed in redressing the situation, and Julia Simon was already too far gone. Italy, deprived of an ill Lisa Vittozzi, also finished very far away.
The French team has announced the composition of the men’s relay, which will take place on Thursday at 3:20 p.m. This composition reserves a surprise, since it is Emilien Claude who will be the first torchbearer, and not Antonin Guigonnat. The younger brother of Fabien Claude is thus rewarded for his first top 10 in his career, during the individual on Sunday thanks to a 20/20 shooting. The rest of the relay is classic, with Emilien Jacquelin, Fabien Claude then Quentin Fillon-Maillet. The women’s sprint will take place on Friday, followed by the men’s sprint on Saturday and the two pursuits on Sunday.
A short weekend, with two relays on Saturday and two individual relays on Sunday, has already delivered its share of emotions for the French. First a beautiful bronze medal in the single mixed relay, carried by Julia Simon at the top of her art who made up for Fabien Claude’s errors (2 penalty laps). It was Sweden who won, at home, in this simple relay.
Then the classic mixed relay, with four athletes, was even more successful for the French: Quentin Fillon Maillet, Émilien Jacquelin, Justine Braisaz-Bouchet and Lou Jeanmonnot obtained the first victory of the season. The men were not flawless, each drawing several times and giving the baton behind the Boe brothers’ Norway. But Justine Braisaz-Bouchet was flawless for her comeback race, then Lou Jeanmonnot finished the job by clearing all the targets on the first try, while the Norwegians were less precise. A deserved and very encouraging success for the season which begins, with successful shots but also very good skiing times, in particular for Justine Braisaz-Bouchet who returns after giving birth to a second child.
The first individual races of the season were less glorious. The women’s individual did not smile on the Blues. In a format where a shooting error costs one minute, mistakes are not really allowed: Julia Simon put three balls out on the last shot and finished 31st, and Justine Braisaz-Bouchet finished 21st with a 16/20 in the shot which was fatal to him despite his excellent form on skis. Same observation for the other tricolors, none of which did better than 17/20. It was Lisa Vittozzi who won the race with a 19/20, ahead of Franziska Preuss by a tenth of a second who was faultless.
For men, the same disappointment. Apart from the good 10th place of Emilien Claude (20/20), the French were poor at shooting. Quentin Fillon-Maillet made three mistakes from the first prone shot and finished at 15/20, Emilien Jacquelin only managed a 16/20. It was the Germans who were the most skilful, with Roman Rees winning ahead of Justus Strelow, both with 19/20. But the big lesson is also that Johannes Boe is far from being as impressive as last year at the start of the season: he still finished third with an 18/20, but is not the fastest on skis and seems less invincible.
In 2023-2024, biathletes will compete in nine World Cup stages and the world championships in Nove Mesto (Czech Republic):
The Biathlon World Cup calendar for the 2023/2024 season has been revealed by the IBU (International Biathlon Union). Here is the schedule:
This 2023/2024 biathlon season will be marked by the world championships taking place in Nove Mesto (Czech Republic). From February 7 to 18, biathletes from each nation will meet at the World Championships to try to win medals. Here is the schedule for the world championships: