2021–22 Tour de Ski

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Tour de Ski
2021–22 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
Ski tour details
Venue(s)Lenzerheide, Switzerland
Oberstdorf, Germany
Val di Fiemme, Italy
Dates28 December 2021 (2021-12-28) – 4 January 2022 (2022-01-04)
Stages6
Results
Men
Jersey awarded to the men's overall winner Winner  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR)
  Second  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS)
  Third  Iivo Niskanen (FIN)

Jersey awarded to the men's points classification winner Points  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR)
Women
Jersey awarded to the women's overall winner Winner  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS)
  Second  Ebba Andersson (SWE)
  Third  Heidi Weng (NOR)

Jersey awarded to the women's points classification winner Points  Johanna Hagström (SWE)
← 2021
2022–23 →

The 2021–22 Tour de Ski was the 16th edition of the Tour de Ski and part of the 2021–22 FIS Cross-Country World Cup. The World Cup stage event began in Lenzerheide, Switzerland on 28 December 2021 and concluded with the Final Climb stage in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on 4 January 2022. The tour was the fourth edition starting in Lenzerheide. Alexander Bolshunov from Russia and Jessie Diggins from United States were the title defenders.

Bolshunov wasn't able to win, as Johannes Høsflot Klæbo from Norway took the yellow bib on first stage and extended the lead over Russian to over two minutes. This is second overall victory for Klæbo. Natalya Nepryayeva won the women competition after her two overall second places in the past and became the first Russian female to win Tour de Ski.

Schedule[edit]

Stage Venue Date Event Technique Distance Start time (CET)
Women Men Women Men
1 Lenzerheide (SUI) 28 December 2021 Sprint Free 1.5 km 1.5 km 14:00 14:00
2 29 December 2021 Distance, interval start Classic 10 km 15 km 13:30 15:05
3 Oberstdorf (GER) 31 December 2021 Distance, mass start Free 10 km 15 km 15:25 12:55
4 1 January 2022 Sprint Classic 1.2 km 1.5 km 12:00 12:00
5 Val di Fiemme (ITA) 3 January 2022 Distance, mass start Classic 10 km 15 km 12:40 14:50
6 4 January 2022 Final Climb, mass start Free 10 km 10 km 11:30 15:25

Overall leadership[edit]

Two main individual classifications are contested in the 2021–22 Tour de Ski, as well as a team competition. The most important is the overall standings, calculated by adding each skier's finishing times on each stage. Time bonuses (time subtracted) are awarded at both sprint stages and at intermediate points during mass start stage 5. In the sprint stages, the winners are awarded 60 bonus seconds, while on mass start stage 5, the first ten skiers past the intermediate point receive from 15 seconds to 1 seconds. The skier with the lowest cumulative time is the overall winner of the Tour de Ski. For the third time in Tour history, the skier leading the overall standings wears a yellow bib.

Bonus seconds for the top 30 positions by type
Type 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13–15 16–20 21–25 26–30
In finish Interval start none
Mass start
Sprint 60 54 48 46 44 42 32 30 28 26 24 22 10 8 6 4
Intermediate sprint Mass Start (only stage 5) 15 12 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1 none

The second competition is the points standings, which replaced the sprint competition from past editions. The skiers who receive the highest number of points during the Tour win the points standings. The points available for each stage finish are determined by the stage's type. The leader is identified by a red bib.

Points standings points for the top 10 positions by type
Type 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
In finish
Sprint 30 24 20 16 12 10 8 6 4 2
Intermediate sprint Interval start (1st IT) 15 12 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1
Mass start

The final competition is a team competition. This is calculated using the finishing times of the best two skiers of both genders per team on each stage; the leading team is the team with the lowest cumulative time.

Classification leadership by stage
Stage Men Women
Winner Overall standings
A yellow jersey.
Points standings
A red jersey.
Winner Overall standings
A yellow jersey.
Points standings
A red jersey.
1 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Jessie Diggins Jessie Diggins Jessie Diggins
2 Iivo Niskanen Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Kerttu Niskanen Kerttu Niskanen Jessie Diggins
3 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Jessie Diggins Jessie Diggins Jessie Diggins
4 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Natalya Nepryayeva Natalya Nepryayeva Natalya Nepryayeva
5 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Natalya Nepryayeva Natalya Nepryayeva Natalya Nepryayeva
6 Sjur Røthe Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Heidi Weng Natalya Nepryayeva Johanna Hagström
Final Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Final Natalya Nepryayeva Johanna Hagström

Final standings[edit]

Legend
Denotes the winner of the Overall standings Denotes the winner of the Points standings

Overall standings[edit]

Men[edit]

Final overall standings (1–10)[1]
Rank Name Time
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 2:24:56.0
2  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) +2:03.2
3  Iivo Niskanen (FIN) +3:14.5
4  Denis Spitsov (RUS) +3:21.5
5  Pål Golberg (NOR) +4:08.3
6  Ivan Yakimushkin (RUS) +4:28.0
7  Didrik Tønseth (NOR) +4:42.2
8  Erik Valnes (NOR) +4:58.4
9  Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR) +5:13.4
10  Calle Halfvarsson (SWE) +5:33.0

Women[edit]

Final overall standings (1–10)[2]
Rank Name Time
1  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) 1:59:38.5
2  Ebba Andersson (SWE) +46.7
3  Heidi Weng (NOR) +1:07.7
4  Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) +1:48.6
5  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) +1:52.0
6  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) +2:24.7
7  Teresa Stadlober (AUT) +2:35.5
8  Jessie Diggins (USA) +3:15.8
9  Katharina Hennig (GER) +3:21.3
10  Tiril Udnes Weng (NOR) +3:38.6

Points standings[edit]

Men[edit]

Final points standings (1–10)[3]
Rank Name Points
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 111
2  Erik Valnes (NOR) 80
3  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) 64
4  Pål Golberg (NOR) 56
5  Iivo Niskanen (FIN) 35
6  Calle Halfvarsson (SWE) 30
7  Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget (NOR) 24
8  Even Northug (NOR) 20
9  Federico Pellegrino (ITA) 18
10  Sjur Røthe (NOR) 16

Women[edit]

Final points standings (1–10)[4]
Rank Name Points
1  Johanna Hagström (SWE) 60
2  Jessie Diggins (USA) 59
3  Natalia Nepryaeva (RUS) 55
4  Ebba Andersson (SWE) 53
5  Heidi Weng (NOR) 51
6  Anamarija Lampič (SLO) 36
7  Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) 33
8  Johanna Matintalo (FIN) 23
9  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) 21
10  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) 20

Team standings[edit]

Final Team standings (1–5)[5]
Rank Nation Time
1 Norway Norway 8:52:22.4
2 Russia Russia +2:35.0
3 Finland Finland +9:53.7
4 Sweden Sweden +13:15.7
5 Germany Germany +15:25.0

Stages[edit]

Stage 1[edit]

28 December 2021, Lenzerheide, Switzerland

  • Bonus seconds to the 30 skiers that qualifies for the quarter-finals, distributed as following:[6]
    • Final: 60–54–48–46–44–42
    • Semi-final: 32–30–28–26–24–22
    • Quarter-final: 10–10–10–8–8–8–8–8–6–6–6–6–6–4–4–4–4–4
Men – 1.5 km Sprint Free[7]
Rank Name QT Time BS
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 2:36.66 (1) 2:39.04 60
2  Richard Jouve (FRA) 2:39.11 (2) +0.99 54
3  Lucas Chanavat (FRA) 2:39.49 (3) +1.26 48
4  Erik Valnes (NOR) 2:44.08 (13) +1.49 46
5  Federico Pellegrino (ITA) 2:43.15 (8) +1.81 44
6  Pål Golberg (NOR) 2:42.94 (7) +2.01 42
7  Alexander Terentyev (RUS) 2:44.29 (15) SF 32
8  Roman Furger (SUI) 2:44.36 (16) SF 30
9  Even Northug (NOR) 2:41.80 (4) SF 28
10  Valerio Grond (SUI) 2:43.65 (12) SF 26
Women – 1.5 km Sprint Free[8]
Rank Name QT Time BS
1  Jessie Diggins (USA) 3:03.04 (3) 3:00.12 60
2  Mathilde Myhrvold (NOR) 3:02.69 (2) +0.13 54
3  Anamarija Lampič (SLO) 3:05.26 (10) +0.30 48
4  Julia Kern (USA) 3:05.24 (9) +0.59 46
5  Anna Dyvik (SWE) 3:03.42 (4) +3.92 44
6  Coletta Rydzek (GER) 3:09.01 (25) +5.40 42
7  Tiril Udnes Weng (NOR) 3:05.26 (11) SF 32
8  Johanna Hagström (SWE) 3:03.96 (5) SF 30
9  Laura Gimmler (GER) 3:06.83 (15) SF 28
10  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) 3:07.17 (17) SF 26

Stage 2[edit]

29 December 2021, Lenzerheide, Switzerland

  • No bonus seconds are awarded on this stage.
Men – 15 km Individual Classic[9]
Rank Name Time
1  Iivo Niskanen (FIN) 34:51.7
2  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) +19.3
3  Pål Golberg (NOR) +25.2
4  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) +34.3
5  Ivan Yakimushkin (RUS) +34.6
6  Francesco De Fabiani (ITA) +54.1
7  Denis Spitsov (RUS) +55.7
8  Erik Valnes (NOR) +59.6
9  Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget (NOR) +1:14.0
10  Didrik Tønseth (NOR) +1:16.1
Women – 10 km Individual Classic[10]
Rank Name Time
1  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) 27:04.0
2  Ebba Andersson (SWE) +18.2
3  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) +30.5
4  Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) +34.0
5  Frida Karlsson (SWE) +44.6
6  Teresa Stadlober (AUT) +45.8
7  Yuliya Stupak (RUS) +48.1
8  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) +48.3
9  Johanna Matintalo (FIN) +55.0
10  Anne Kjersti Kalvå (NOR) +55.7

Stage 3[edit]

31 December 2021, Oberstdorf, Germany

  • No bonus seconds are awarded on this stage.
Men – 15 km Mass Start Free[11]
Rank Name Time
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 32:26.4
2  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) +3.4
3  Sjur Røthe (NOR) +4.0
4  Andrew Musgrave (GBR) +5.6
5  Francesco De Fabiani (ITA) +23.6
6  Calle Halfvarsson (SWE) +23.6
7  Clément Parisse (FRA) +25.1
8  Hugo Lapalus (FRA) +27.8
9  Pål Golberg (NOR) +30.8
10  Ivan Yakimushkin (RUS) +35.2
Women – 10 km Mass Start Free[12]
Rank Name Time
1  Jessie Diggins (USA) 21:30.8
2  Frida Karlsson (SWE) +0.5
3  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) +0.8
4  Ebba Andersson (SWE) +1.2
5  Heidi Weng (NOR) +2.6
6  Katharina Hennig (GER) +3.5
7  Teresa Stadlober (AUT) +4.6
8  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) +8.0
9  Delphine Claudel (FRA) +12.1
10  Anne Kjersti Kalvå (NOR) +18.5

Stage 4[edit]

1 January 2022, Oberstdorf, Germany

  • Bonus seconds to the 30 skiers that qualifies for the quarter-finals, distributed as following:
    • Final: 60–54–48–46–44–42
    • Semi-final: 32–30–28–26–24–22
    • Quarter-final: 10–10–10–8–8–8–8–8–6–6–6–6–6–4–4–4–4–4
Men – 1.5 km Sprint Classic[13]
Rank Name QT Time BS
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 2:55.78 (1) 2:54.77 60
2  Erik Valnes (NOR) 2:58.15 (3) +0.37 54
3  Pål Golberg (NOR) 3:01.85 (7) +3.35 48
4  Even Northug (NOR) 3:02.14 (8) +3.39 46
5  Calle Halfvarsson (SWE) 3:03.07 (10) +3.90 44
6  Francesco De Fabiani (ITA) 3:03.15 (11) +11.71 42
7  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) 2:59.39 (5) SF 32
8  Jovian Hediger (SUI) 3:06.43 (21) SF 30
9  Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR) 3:01.38 (6) SF 28
10  Michal Novák (CZE) 3:02.69 (9) SF 26
Women – 1.2 km Sprint Classic[14]
Rank Name QT Time BS
1  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) 2:42.05 (14) 2:36.41 60
2  Johanna Hagström (SWE) 2:37.46 (2) +0.32 54
3  Johanna Matintalo (FIN) 2:36.97 (1) +0.86 48
4  Anamarija Lampič (SLO) 2:38.24 (3) +1.29 46
5  Mathilde Myhrvold (NOR) 2:41.81 (13) +4.22 44
6  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) 2:41.38 (11) +7.53 42
7  Greta Laurent (ITA) 2:39.87 (5) SF 32
8  Nadine Fähndrich (SUI) 2:43.11 (21) SF 30
9  Ane Appelkvist Stenseth (NOR) 2:38.58 (4) SF 28
10  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) 2:43.07 (19) SF 26

Stage 5[edit]

3 January 2022, Val di Fiemme, Italy

Men – 15 km Mass Start Classic[15]
Rank Name Time BS
1  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 41:31.2 15
2  Iivo Niskanen (FIN) +20.8 12
3  Aleksey Chervotkin (RUS) +23.7 3
4  Denis Spitsov (RUS) +24.0 8
5  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) +27.9 2
6  Didrik Tønseth (NOR) +40.1 10
7  Erik Valnes (NOR) +50.0 4
8  Hugo Lapalus (FRA) +54.1 1
9  Ivan Yakimushkin (RUS) +56.2
10  Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR) +56.5 5
Women – 10 km Mass Start Classic[16]
Rank Name Time BS
1  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) 29:51.3 6
2  Heidi Weng (NOR) +3.7 12
3  Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) +4.8 10
4  Ebba Andersson (SWE) +7.5 15
5  Katharina Hennig (GER) +10.9 8
6  Teresa Stadlober (AUT) +14.3 5
7  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) +43.5 4
8  Tiril Udnes Weng (NOR) +51.2 2
9  Johanna Matintalo (FIN) +51.3
10  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) +53.1 3

Stage 5 bonus seconds[edit]

  • Men: 1 intermediate sprint, bonus seconds to the 10 first skiers (15–12–10–8–6–5–4–3–2–1) past the intermediate point.
  • Women: 1 intermediate sprint, bonus seconds to the 10 first skiers (15–12–10–8–6–5–4–3–2–1) past the intermediate point.
  • No bonus seconds are awarded at the finish
Bonus seconds (Stage 5 – Men)
Name Point 1
 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) 15
 Iivo Niskanen (FIN) 12
 Didrik Tønseth (NOR) 10
 Denis Spitsov (RUS) 8
 Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget (NOR) 6
 Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR) 5
 Erik Valnes (NOR) 4
 Aleksey Chervotkin (RUS) 3
 Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) 2
 Hugo Lapalus (FRA) 1
Bonus seconds (Stage 5 – Women)
Name Point 1
 Ebba Andersson (SWE) 15
 Heidi Weng (NOR) 12
 Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) 10
 Katharina Hennig (GER) 8
 Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) 6
 Teresa Stadlober (AUT) 5
 Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) 4
 Tatiana Sorina (RUS) 3
 Tiril Udnes Weng (NOR) 2
 Anne Kyllönen (FIN) 1

Stage 6[edit]

4 January 2022, Val di Fiemme, Italy

The race for "Fastest of the Day" counts for 2021–22 FIS Cross-Country World Cup points. No bonus seconds are awarded on this stage.

Men – 10 km Final Climb Mass Start Free[17]
Rank Name Time
1  Sjur Røthe (NOR) 31:42.1
2  Denis Spitsov (RUS) +2.4
3  Friedrich Moch (GER) +18.9
4  Lucas Bögl (GER) +30.0
5  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR) +34.9
6  Irineu Esteve Altimiras (AND) +37.0
7  Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) +38.1
8  Naoto Baba (JPN) +39.6
9  Didrik Tønseth (NOR) +41.1
10  Artem Maltsev (RUS) +51.1
Women – 10 km Final Climb Mass Start Free[18]
Rank Name Time
1  Heidi Weng (NOR) 35:41.2
2  Ebba Andersson (SWE) +7.0
3  Delphine Claudel (FRA) +28.5
4  Natalya Nepryayeva (RUS) +32.3
5  Sophia Laukli (USA) +49.9
6  Krista Pärmäkoski (FIN) +59.9
7  Novie McCabe (USA) +1:04.4
8  Kerttu Niskanen (FIN) +1:05.3
9  Teresa Stadlober (AUT) +1:08.8
10  Tatiana Sorina (RUS) +1:15.0

World Cup points distribution[edit]

The table shows the number of 2021–22 FIS Cross-Country World Cup points to win in the 2021–22 Tour de Ski for men and women.

Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 - 40 >40
Overall Standings 400 320 240 200 180 160 144 128 116 104 96 88 80 72 64 60 56 52 48 44 40 36 32 28 24 20 20 20 20 20 10 5
Each Stage 50 46 43 40 37 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

[19]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Men's 16th Tour de Ski Overall Standing" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Women's 16th Tour de Ski Overall Standing" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  3. ^ "Tour de Ski points standings (Men)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com. International Ski Federation. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Tour de Ski points standings (Women)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com. International Ski Federation. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Tour de Ski team standings" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com. International Ski Federation (FIS). Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  6. ^ "RULES FOR THE FIS CROSS-COUNTRY WORLD CUP" (PDF). International Ski Federation (FIS). Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Men's Sprint Free – Lenzerheide" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 28 December 2021.
  8. ^ "Women's Sprint Free – Lenzerheide" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 28 December 2021.
  9. ^ "Men's 15 km Individual Classic – Lenzerheide" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 29 December 2021.
  10. ^ "Women's 10 km Individual Classic – Lenzerheide" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 29 December 2021.
  11. ^ "Men's 15 km Mass Start Free – Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 31 December 2021.
  12. ^ "Women's 10 km Mass Start Free – Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 31 December 2021.
  13. ^ "Men's Sprint Classic – Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation.
  14. ^ "Women's Sprint Classic – Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 1 January 2022.
  15. ^ "Men's 15 km Mass Start Classic – Val di Fiemme" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 3 January 2022.
  16. ^ "Women's 10 km Mass Start Classic – Val di Fiemme" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 3 January 2022.
  17. ^ "Men's 10 km Mass Start Free – Val di Fiemme" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 4 January 2022.
  18. ^ "Women's 10 km Mass Start Free – Val di Fiemme" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 4 January 2022.
  19. ^ "FIS Cross-Country World Cup Tour de Ski (FIS)". www.fis-ski.com.

Sources[edit]