Cross-country skiing at the 2014 Winter Olympics – Qualification

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The following is about the qualification rules and the quota allocation for the cross-country skiing at the 2014 Winter Olympics.[1]

Qualification Rules[edit]

Quotas[edit]

A total of 310 athletes are allowed to compete at the Games. A maximum of 20 athletes per nation will be allowed to compete with a maximum of 12 males or 12 females from a nation being permitted.

A Standard[edit]

An athlete with a maximum of 100 FIS distance points will be allowed to compete in both or one of the event (sprint/distance). An athlete with a maximum 120 FIS sprint points will be allowed to compete in the sprint event and 10 km for women or 15 km for men provided their distance points does not exceed 300 FIS points.

B Standard[edit]

NOC's who do not have any athlete meeting the A standard can enter one competitor of each sex (known as the basic quota) in the sprint event or 10 km classical event for women/15 km classical event for men. They must have a maximum of 300 FIS distance points at the end of qualifying on January 20, 2014. The qualification period begins in July 2012.

Allocation of quotas[edit]

Basic Quota

Every NOC will be assigned one male and one female quota spot meeting the B standard.

Top 300 on Points list

Every NOC with at least one male and/or female in the top 300 of any event will be allocated one additional male and/or female quota in addition to the basic quota.

Top 30 on Points list

Every NOC with at least one male and/or female in the top 30 of any event will be allocated one additional male and/or female quota in addition to the basic quota top 500 and 100 quota. If an NOC has two or more fitting this criterion it will be given an additional quota.

Remaining quotas

The remaining quotas will be assigned using the Olympic Quota allocation list on January 20, 2014. The spots will be assigned until a maximum of 310 quotas are reached including the above. When a nation reaches its maximum, remaining athletes from that country will be skipped over. The list is a table of athletes in the top 500 in both events (distance and sprint).

An athlete can be counted only once for the above three criteria. For example, if a country has only one athlete meeting all three criteria then only one quota will be given (not 3).

Quota allocation[edit]

This is the Olympic allocation quota.[2]

Current summary[edit]

Nations Men Women Additional Athletes
 Argentina 1 1
 Armenia 2 1 3
 Australia 2 2 4
 Austria 4 2 2 8
 Belarus 2 2 2 6
 Bermuda 1 1
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 1 2
 Brazil 1 1 2
 Bulgaria 2 2 4
 Canada 4 3 6 13
 Chile 1 1
 China 2 2 4
 Croatia 1 1 2
 Czech Republic 3 3 4 10
 Denmark 1 1
 Dominica 1 1 2
 Estonia 2 2 3 7
 Finland 4 4 9 17
 France 3 4 8 15
 Germany 4 4 10 18
 Great Britain 2 2 4
 Greece 1 1 2
 Hungary 1 1 2
 Iceland 1 1
 Independent Olympic Athletes 1 1
 Iran 1 1 2
 Ireland 1 1
 Italy 4 4 8 16
 Japan 2 3 1 6
 Kazakhstan 4 2 5 11
 Latvia 2 1 3
 Liechtenstein 1 1
 Lithuania 1 1 2
 Luxembourg 1 1
 Macedonia 1 1 2
 Moldova 1 1 2
 Mongolia 1 1 2
 Nepal 1 1
 Norway 4 4 12 20
 Peru 1 1
 Poland 2 3 5 10
 Romania 2 1 3
 Russia 4 4 12 20
 Slovakia 2 2 4
 Slovenia 4 1 5
 South Korea 1 1 2
 Serbia 2 1 3
 Spain 2 1 3
 Sweden 4 4 11 19
 Switzerland 4 3 7 14
 Togo 1 1
 Turkey 1 1 2
 Ukraine 2 3 3 8
 United States 4 4 6 14
Total: 54 NOCs 104 91 115 310

Men[edit]

Criteria Athletes per NOC Total Athletes Qualified
Top 300, Basic quota + 2 spots in top 30 4 44  Austria
 Canada
 Finland
 Germany
 Italy
 Kazakhstan
 Norway
 Russia
 Switzerland
 Sweden
 United States
Top 300, Basic quota + 1 spot in top 30 3 6  Czech Republic
 France
Top 300, Basic quota 2 30  Armenia
 Australia
 Belarus
 Bulgaria
 China
 Estonia
 Great Britain
 Japan
 Latvia
 Poland
 Romania
 Serbia
 Slovakia
 Slovenia
 Spain
 Ukraine
Basic quota 1 24  Argentina
 Bermuda
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Brazil
 Chile
 Croatia
 Denmark
 Dominica
 Greece
 Hungary
 Iceland
 Independent Olympic Athletes
 Iran
 Ireland
 Liechtenstein
 Lithuania
 Luxembourg
 Macedonia
 Moldova
 Mongolia
 Nepal
 Peru
 South Korea
 Turkey
 Algeria
 Andorra
 New Zealand
TOTAL 104

Women[edit]

Criteria Athletes per NOC Total Athletes Qualified
Top 300, Basic quota + 2 spots in top 30 4 36  Finland
 France
 Germany
 Italy
 Norway
 Russia
 Slovenia
 Sweden
 United States
Top 300, Basic quota + 1 spot in top 30 3 18  Canada
 Czech Republic
 Japan
 Poland
 Switzerland
 Ukraine
Top 300, Basic quota 2 18  Australia
 Austria
 Belarus
 Bulgaria
 China
 Estonia
 Great Britain
 Kazakhstan
 Slovakia
Basic quota 1 19  Armenia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Brazil
 Croatia
 Dominica
 Greece
 Hungary
 Iran
 Latvia
 Lithuania
 Macedonia
 Moldova
 Mongolia
 Romania
 Serbia
 South Korea
 Spain
 Togo
 Turkey
 Denmark
 Netherlands
 New Zealand
TOTAL 91

Remaining Quotas[edit]

Athletes per NOC Total Qualified
12 24  Norway
 Russia
11 11  Sweden
10 10  Germany
9 9  Finland
8 16  Italy
 France
7 7  Switzerland
6 6 12  Canada
 United States
5 10  Kazakhstan
 Poland
4 4  Czech Republic
3 6  Ukraine
 Estonia
2 4  Austria
 Belarus
1 2  Japan
 Slovenia
TOTAL 115

Next eligible NOC per event[edit]

If a country rejects a quota spot then additional quotas become available. Countries in bold indicate that country received a rejected quota spot. Here are the top 42 eligible countries per event. Note: a country can be eligible for more than one quota spot in the reallocation process. Countries in bold have gotten a reallocation of a quota spot in the respective event, a country with a strike means they rejected that quota spot.

Country  Italy
 Italy

 France
 Ukraine
 Japan
 Canada
 Japan
 Poland
 Austria
 Italy
 Japan
 Italy
 Austria
 Austria
 Switzerland
 Kazakhstan
 Ukraine
 Canada
 Canada
 Kazakhstan
 United States
 Czech Republic
 France
 Estonia
 Canada
 Switzerland
 France
 Switzerland
 Canada
 France
 Switzerland
 United States
 United States
 Slovenia
 Kazakhstan
 Switzerland
 Austria
 Poland
 China
 Belarus
 Ukraine
 Kazakhstan
 Estonia

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXII Olympic Winter Games, Sochi 2014" (PDF). International Ski Federation. December 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 16, 2013. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
  2. ^ Final allocation list Archived 2014-01-29 at the Wayback Machine