2018–19 Biathlon World Cup – Individual Men

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The 2018–19 Biathlon World Cup – Individual Men started on Thursday 6 December 2018 in Pokljuka and finished on Wednesday 13 March 2019 in Östersund. The defending titlist was Johannes Thingnes Bø of Norway.

The small crystal globe winner for the category was Johannes Thingnes Bø of Norway.

Competition format[edit]

The 20 kilometres (12 mi) individual race is the oldest biathlon event; the distance is skied over five laps. The biathlete shoots four times at any shooting lane, in the order of prone, standing, prone, standing, totalling 20 targets. For each missed target a fixed penalty time, usually one minute, is added to the skiing time of the biathlete. Competitors' starts are staggered, normally by 30 seconds.

2017–18 Top 3 standings[edit]

Medal Athlete Points
Gold: Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø 108
Gold: France Martin Fourcade 108
Bronze: France Quentin Fillon Maillet 75

Medal winners[edit]

Event Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time
Pokljuka
details
Martin Fourcade
 France
47:09.2
(0+0+0+0)
Johannes Kühn
 Germany
47:13.4
(0+0+0+0)
Simon Eder
 Austria
47:28.9
(0+0+0+0)
Canmore
details
Johannes Thingnes Bø
 Norway
35:27.9
(0+0+0+0)
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen
 Norway
37:38.1
(1+0+0+1)
Alexandr Loginov
 Russia
38:08.9
(1+1+0+0)
World Championships
details
Arnd Peiffer
 Germany
52:42.4
(0+0+0+0)
Vladimir Iliev
 Bulgaria
53:51.1
(0+1+0+0)
Tarjei Bø
 Norway
53:51.5
(0+1+0+0)

Standings[edit]

# Name POK CAN ÖST Total [1]
1  Johannes Thingnes Bø (NOR) 36 60 32 128
2  Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (NOR) 30 54 34 118
3  Lars Helge Birkeland (NOR) 31 43 23 97
4  Arnd Peiffer (GER) 0 28 60 88
5  Alexandr Loginov (RUS) 12 48 27 87
6  Simon Desthieux (FRA) 19 30 38 87
7  Simon Eder (AUT) 48 38 DNF 86
8  Erik Lesser (GER) 18 34 30 82
9  Sebastian Samuelsson (SWE) 32 43 75
10  Lukas Hofer (ITA) 14 20 40 74
11  Evgeniy Garanichev (RUS) 5 27 36 68
12  Martin Fourcade (FRA) 60 2 62
13  Johannes Kühn (GER) 54 5 59
14  Simon Fourcade (FRA) 36 22 58
15  Christian Gow (CAN) 25 31 DNF 56
16  Vladimir Iliev (BUL) 0 0 54 54
17  Tarjei Bø (NOR) 6 48 54
18  Quentin Fillon Maillet (FRA) 9 16 29 54
19  Dominik Windisch (ITA) 0 40 12 52
20  Tomáš Krupčík (CZE) 0 29 19 48
21  Andrejs Rastorgujevs (LAT) 18 28 46
22  Antonin Guigonnat (FRA) 34 10 44
23  Michal Krčmář (CZE) 26 0 18 44
24  Jakov Fak (SLO) 43 0 43
25  Scott Gow (CAN) 27 1 15 43
26  Jesper Nelin (SWE) 28 13 41
27  Simon Schempp (GER) 40 40
28  Serhiy Semenov (UKR) 38 0 0 38
29  Sean Doherty (USA) 0 14 24 38
30  Jeremy Finello (SUI) 0 21 17 38
# Name POK CAN ÖST Total
31  Felix Leitner (AUT) 24 2 11 37
32  Roman Rees (GER) 12 21 33
33  Peppe Femling (SWE) 0 32 0 32
34  Benedikt Doll (GER) 0 0 31 31
35  Dominik Landertinger (AUT) 8 22 0 30
36  Dmitry Malyshko (RUS) 29 29
37  Erlend Bjøntegaard (NOR) 3 25 0 28
38  Roland Lessing (EST) 11 16 27
39  Vladimir Chepelin (BLR) 0 26 26
40  Eduard Latypov (RUS) 0 26 26
41  Leif Nordgren (USA) 1 0 25 26
42  Emilien Jacquelin (FRA) 13 13 26
43  Philipp Nawrath (GER) 24 24
44  Alexander Povarnitsyn (RUS) 23 0 23
45  Martin Ponsiluoma (SWE) 23 0 23
46  Anton Sinapov (BUL) 22 0 DNF 22
47  Matvey Eliseev (RUS) 21 21
48  Dimitar Gerdzhikov (BUL) 0 0 20 20
49  Artem Pryma (UKR) 20 20
50  Thomas Bormolini (ITA) 0 19 0 19
51  Julian Eberhard (AUT) 4 15 0 19
52  Grzegorz Guzik (POL) 0 17 0 17
53  Mikito Tachizaki (JPN) 17 17
54  Artem Tyshchenko (UKR) 10 7 0 17
55  Karol Dombrovski (LTU) 16 0 16
56  Mario Dolder (SUI) 15 0 0 15
57  Ondřej Moravec (CZE) 11 4 15
58  Florent Claude (BEL) 0 6 9 15
59  Krasimir Anev (BUL) 0 14 14
60  Tero Seppala (FIN) 3 10 13
# Name POK CAN ÖST Total
61  Taras Lesiuk (UKR) 9 9
62  Matej Kazár (SVK) 8 1 9
63  Raman Yaliotnau (BLR) 0 0 8 8
64  Timofey Lapshin (KOR) 0 0 7 7
65  Roman Yeremin (KAZ) 7 0 7
66  Michal Šlesingr (CZE) 0 0 6 6
67  Kalev Ermits (EST) 0 3 3 6
68  Nikita Porshnev (RUS) 5 5
69  Benjamin Weger (SUI) 0 4 0 4

References[edit]