Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Women's 15 kilometre skiathlon

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Women's 15 kilometre skiathlon
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueAlpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre
Dates10 February
Competitors61 from 23 nations
Winning time40:44.9
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Charlotte Kalla  Sweden
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marit Bjørgen  Norway
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Krista Pärmäkoski  Finland
← 2014
2022 →

The women's 15 kilometre skiathlon cross-country skiing competition at the 2018 Winter Olympics was held on 10 February 2018 at 16:15 KST at the Alpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre in Pyeongchang, South Korea.[1][2] Charlotte Kalla of Sweden finished first to win the first gold medal of the 2018 Winter Games.[3] The defending champion Marit Bjørgen finished second. For her, this was the eleventh Olympic medal, making her the most successful female cross-country skier. Krista Pärmäkoski took bronze.

Summary[edit]

The defending champion Marit Bjørgen, as well as the silver medalist Charlotte Kalla and the bronze medalist Heidi Weng, participated in the event. After the exchange, a group of about a dozen athletes stayed ahead, and by 11 km only 9 left. Then Charlotte Kalla escaped, leaving behind Bjørgen, Krista Pärmäkoski, and Ebba Andersson chasing her. Kalla became the champion, with Bjørgen second, and Pärmäkoski third.

In the nighttime victory ceremony, the medals for the event were presented by Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee, accompanied by Roman Kumpost, FIS council member.

Medalists
Charlotte Kalla Marit Bjørgen Krista Pärmäkoski
 Sweden  Norway  Finland

Qualification[edit]

A total of up to 310 cross-country skiers qualified across all eleven events. Athletes qualified for this event by having met the A qualification standard, which meant having 100 or less FIS Points in the distance classification. The Points list takes into average the best results of athletes per discipline during the qualification period (1 July 2016 to 21 January 2018). Countries received additional quotas by having athletes ranked in the top 30 of the FIS Olympics Points list (two per gender maximum, overall across all events). Countries also received an additional quota (one per gender maximum) if an athlete was ranked in the top 300 of the FIS Olympics Points list. After the distribution of B standard quotas, the remaining quotas were distributed using the Olympic FIS Points list, with each athlete only counting once for qualification purposes. A country could only enter a maximum of four athletes for the event.[4]

Competition schedule[edit]

All times are (UTC+9).

Date Time Event
10 February 16:15 Final

Results[edit]

The race was started at 16:15.[5]

Rank Bib Name Country 7.5 km classic Rank Pitstop 7.5 km free Rank Finish time Deficit
1st place, gold medalist(s) 5 Charlotte Kalla  Sweden 21:23.4 2 31.8 18:49.7 1 40:44.9
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 8 Marit Bjørgen  Norway 21:23.1 1 31.0 18:58.6 2 40:52.7 +7.8
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 7 Krista Pärmäkoski  Finland 21:27.9 10 27.9 18:59.2 3 40:55.0 +10.1
4 18 Ebba Andersson  Sweden 21:25.4 5 30.6 18:59.8 4 40:55.8 +10.9
5 3 Jessie Diggins  United States 21:29.4 13 27.9 19:02.3 5 40:59.6 +14.7
6 10 Nathalie von Siebenthal  Switzerland 21:27.1 8 30.3 19:05.1 6 41:02.5 +17.6
7 4 Teresa Stadlober  Austria 21:25.8 6 30.4 19:15.3 7 41:11.5 +26.6
8 12 Natalya Nepryayeva  Olympic Athletes from Russia 21:28.2 11 28.1 19:21.6 8 41:17.9 +33.0
9 1 Heidi Weng  Norway 21:23.8 3 28.1 19:33.7 9 41:25.6 +40.7
10 21 Stina Nilsson  Sweden 21:27.5 9 31.6 19:34.7 10 41:33.8 +48.9
11 2 Ingvild Flugstad Østberg  Norway 21:24.3 4 28.5 19:50.4 14 41:43.2 +58.3
12 11 Anastasia Sedova  Olympic Athletes from Russia 21:43.8 19 30.7 19:43.2 12 41:57.7 +1:12.8
13 28 Anouk Faivre Picon  France 21:45.5 20 31.0 19:47.3 13 42:03.8 +1:18.9
14 30 Masako Ishida  Japan 21:39.2 15 30.5 19:54.4 17 42:04.1 +1:19.2
15 6 Ragnhild Haga  Norway 21:40.2 16 33.7 19:53.7 16 42:07.6 +1:22.7
16 9 Kerttu Niskanen  Finland 21:26.6 7 32.0 20:16.6 23 42:15.2 +1:30.3
17 22 Justyna Kowalczyk  Poland 21:28.8 12 32.3 20:29.7 25 42:30.8 +1:45.9
18 26 Yuliya Belorukova  Olympic Athletes from Russia 22:02.5 22 32.6 20:15.9 22 42:51.0 +2:06.1
19 14 Laura Mononen  Finland 21:48.3 21 33.1 20:31.6 26 42:53.0 +2:08.1
20 35 Victoria Carl  Germany 21:43.6 18 29.9 20:40.9 32 42:54.4 +2:09.5
21 34 Alisa Zhambalova  Olympic Athletes from Russia 22:34.9 28 32.3 19:51.9 15 42:59.1 +2:14.2
22 20 Katharina Hennig  Germany 21:40.9 17 30.4 20:48.9 36 43:00.2 +2:15.3
23 29 Aurore Jéan  France 22:20.6 26 34.6 20:05.6 19 43:00.8 +2:15.9
24 25 Johanna Matintalo  Finland 21:32.9 14 29.4 21:00.1 40 43:02.4 +2:17.5
25 16 Stefanie Böhler  Germany 22:19.6 25 33.2 20:09.8 20 43:02.6 +2:17.7
26 24 Elisa Brocard  Italy 22:34.5 27 30.3 20:12.8 21 43:17.6 +2:32.7
27 31 Nadine Fähndrich  Switzerland 22:03.9 23 31.9 21:14.6 45 43:50.4 +3:05.5
28 17 Petra Novaková  Czech Republic 23:25.9 38 32.8 19:56.9 18 43:55.6 +3:10.7
29 23 Coraline Hugue  France 23:43.8 49 31.2 19:41.2 11 43:56.2 +3:11.3
30 56 Sylwia Jaśkowiec  Poland 22:51.2 31 31.3 20:33.8 29 43:56.3 +3:11.4
31 55 Ewelina Marcisz  Poland 22:50.4 29 31.5 20:34.8 30 43:56.7 +3:11.8
32 13 Anna Haag  Sweden 22:14.1 24 34.0 21:13.7 44 44:01.8 +3:16.9
33 53 Cendrine Browne  Canada 23:04.6 35 33.1 20:24.2 24 44:01.9 +3:17.0
34 27 Caitlin Patterson  United States 23:07.1 36 34.9 20:32.9 27 44:14.9 +3:30.0
35 38 Sara Pellegrini  Italy 23:03.7 33 31.9 20:40.7 31 44:16.3 +3:31.4
36 37 Anna Shevchenko  Kazakhstan 22:52.3 32 32.9 20:59.9 39 44:25.1 +3:40.2
37 33 Anna Comarella  Italy 22:50.7 30 29.1 21:06.1 41 44:25.9 +3:41.0
38 32 Kateřina Beroušková  Czech Republic 23:03.9 34 32.5 20:56.3 38 44:32.7 +3:47.8
39 44 Barbara Jezeršek  Australia 23:34.0 43 31.7 20:33.6 28 44:39.3 +3:54.4
40 19 Kikkan Randall  United States 23:29.2 39 35.0 20:43.0 33 44:47.2 +4:02.3
41 58 Martyna Galewicz  Poland 23:31.8 41 34.6 20:44.9 34 44:51.3 +4:06.4
42 57 Yulia Tikhonova  Belarus 23:29.6 40 33.3 20:54.2 37 44:57.1 +4:12.2
43 45 Barbora Havlíčková  Czech Republic 23:52.3 53 31.4 20:48.4 35 45:12.1 +4:27.2
44 50 Emily Nishikawa  Canada 23:36.0 44 32.2 21:08.4 43 45:16.6 +4:31.7
45 43 Tetyana Antypenko  Ukraine 23:32.3 42 34.9 21:24.0 49 45:31.2 +4:46.3
46 41 Polina Seronosova  Belarus 23:09.8 37 31.3 21:53.8 57 45:34.9 +4:50.0
47 42 Petra Hynčicová  Czech Republic 23:42.0 48 37.9 21:22.5 48 45:42.4 +4:57.5
48 61 Anne-Marie Comeau  Canada 23:49.7 51 36.9 21:16.2 46 45:42.8 +4:57.9
49 48 Ilaria Debertolis  Italy 23:38.7 46 41.3 21:24.6 50 45:44.6 +4:59.7
50 59 Jessica Yeaton  Australia 23:45.2 50 39.5 21:20.1 47 45:44.8 +4:59.9
51 52 Li Xin  China 23:51.7 52 38.9 21:31.3 51 46:01.9 +5:17.0
52 60 Dahria Beatty  Canada 23:58.9 54 35.4 21:43.0 55 46:17.3 +5:32.4
53 40 Maryna Antsybor  Ukraine 24:09.3 55 32.4 21:36.5 52 46:18.2 +5:33.3
54 46 Elena Kolomina  Kazakhstan 24:12.1 56 37.8 21:38.6 54 46:28.5 +5:43.6
55 54 Chi Chunxue  China 24:16.1 57 35.7 21:47.2 56 46:39.0 +5:54.1
56 51 Tatjana Mannima  Estonia 24:29.4 58 35.2 21:37.1 53 46:41.7 +5:56.8
57 47 Lee Chae-won  South Korea 25:05.5 59 32.2 21:06.8 42 46:44.5 +5:59.6
58 36 Rosie Brennan  United States 23:36.7 45 42.7 23:16.6 60 47:36.0 +6:51.1
59 49 Manca Slabanja  Slovenia 25:10.1 61 30.9 22:16.8 58 47:57.8 +7:12.9
60 62 Annika Taylor  Great Britain 25:08.0 60 31.5 22:29.6 59 48:09.1 +7:24.2
39 Valeriya Tyuleneva  Kazakhstan 23:41.6 47 42.7 DNF
15 Nicole Fessel  Germany DNS

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Schedule". Archived from the original on 5 November 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ "Winter Olympics: Sweden's Charlotte Kalla wins first gold medal of Pyeongchang 2018". BBC Sport. Retrieved 10 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. ^ Final results