website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Biathlon IBU World Cup 2023 - 2024


Recommended Posts

5 hours ago, Bohemia said:

It's time they got rid of the Oberhof stage...

:GER TV €€€€€€€€.  But you are correct, once in every five years it’s great, other times problems problems problems.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601334
Share on other sites

On 1/4/2024 at 6:11 PM, Grassmarket said:

:GER TV €€€€€€€€.  But you are correct, once in every five years it’s great, other times problems problems problems.

Stupid take obviously. Germany is the biggest market for biathlon, so getting rid of a german world cup stage would be a clear sign of mental retardation. The beginning of January isn't the right time for Oberhof though, it should host a world cup at the end of January or beginning of February. Sadly there aren't many places left with guaranteed snow at this time of the year. Canada, the US and Japan are irrelevant in biathlon + the problem with travelling. Russia isn't an option for obvious reasons and a country like Kazakhstan also isn't really an option. Maybe they should (have less world cup stages and) don't go to central Europe until the end of January, only Finland/Sweden/Norway before that. Maybe something like:

December: Östersund + Trondheim (not sure if they have a venue)

January: Oslo + KontiolahtIi + Antholz + Annecy

February: Oberhof + Ruhpolding + Nove Mesto

March: World championships (Hochfilzen, Lenzerheide, Pokljuka)

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601432
Share on other sites

Number of individual world cup podiums (world championships included) for the german team:

2019/2020: 14

2020/2021: 13

2021/2022: 14

2022/2023: 12

2023/2024 with 32 races left: 12

 

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601433
Share on other sites

47 minutes ago, OlympicsFan said:

Canada, the US and Japan are irrelevant in biathlon + the problem with travelling.

I’ve said it before, but if an IF’s main competition tour is only going to be in one continent (Europe or Asia in most cases), then they shouldn’t be allowed to use the term “World Cup.”

 

European teams/athletes/fans always complain about competitions outside Europe, but just imagine how athletes from Pan America, Africa, Asia, or Oceania feel.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601435
Share on other sites

38 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

I’ve said it before, but if an IF’s main competition tour is only going to be in one continent (Europe or Asia in most cases), then they shouldn’t be allowed to use the term “World Cup.”

 

European teams/athletes/fans always complain about competitions outside Europe, but just imagine how athletes from Pan America, Africa, Asia, or Oceania feel.

 

If NBA can use the term "World Champions" for mere 32 basketball teams from TWO countries (the second having a total of one team) when there actually is a basketball World Championships taking place elsewhere then using the term "World" for a sports competition is not subject to anyone's approval :p

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601440
Share on other sites

 Vytautas was apparently the fastest he's been all season long,which is great,i'm hoping the shooting comes back to form soon aswell.,and yay for Fomin's best result ever in a sprint.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601448
Share on other sites

Lidia devoured:clap:,31 place for a Lithuanian women in Biathlon is crazy good,and she did it in the SPRINT,not an individual.Best sprint result for a Lithuanian women in ten years,let's see how things go today.  

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601449
Share on other sites

Biathlon isn't usually a sport, where the calendar is a problem, but interesting where to put the German rounds, so they don't have problems every year. Early January was great for them 10-15 years ago.

 

A nice idea for me would be to move the World Championships to the last third of January. Have 1 World Cup after New Years, then a week off, then the 2 weeks of the Worlds. You could then schedule the 2 German rounds in February. But IBU wouldn't like to go against the Australian Open i reckon.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601450
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Olympian1010 said:

I’ve said it before, but if an IF’s main competition tour is only going to be in one continent (Europe or Asia in most cases), then they shouldn’t be allowed to use the term “World Cup.”

 

European teams/athletes/fans always complain about competitions outside Europe, but just imagine how athletes from Pan America, Africa, Asia, or Oceania feel.

You can have that opinion, but your opinion doesn't really make sense. Biathlon isn't really a thing outside of Europe, so the best athletes are all european and pretty much only european fans care about biathlon. "World cup" doesn't have to stand for "All over the world cup", it can stand for "Best in the world cup" and that is exactly what it is. The only plausible reason to host world cups outside of Europe would be to try establish the sport in countries like China, USA or Canada, but if that isn't really a realistic goal (because biathlon never will be a thing in Canada/USA/China), then it wouldn't be in anyone's best interest to host world cups outside of Europe. Athletes from Pan America, Africa, Asia and Oceania are irrelevant in biathlon and i doubt that they will ever be relevant, so they don't really matter. Fairness isn't a relevant category. If hosting world cups outside of Europe is a bad business decision, then they shouldn't host world cups outside of Europe.

Attachment is the great fabricator of illusions; reality can be obtained only by someone who is detached.
 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/24410-biathlon-ibu-world-cup-2023-2024/page/9/#findComment-601459
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • mixed 10m Air Rifle   Gold:  China 1 (Wang Zifei & Sheng Lihao) Silver:  Hungary 1 (Eszter Denes & Istvan Marton Peni) Bronze:  Norway 1 (Jeanette Hegg Duestad & Jon-Hermann Hegg)   Full Results & Rankings https://www.issf-sports.org/competitions/3280/results
    • 2026 LPGA Tour Aramco Championship - Las Vegas    Results (April 2-5, 2026)   (Ladies European Tour) (66.11 points)   Women's: 1. Lauren Couhglin 2. Leona Maguire 2. Nelly Korda 4. Miyu Yamashita 5. Akie Iwai 5. Karis Davidson   7. Yin Ruoning 7. Nanna Koertz Madsen 9. Nasa Hataoka 9. Carlota Ciganda   11. Lydia Ko 11. Allisen Corpuz   13. Kim Hyo-joo   13. Anna Huang 15. Angel Yin 15. Charley Hull 17. Jeeno Thitikul 17. Yoon I-na 17. Chiara Tamburlini 17. Jing Yan 17. Jenny Shin 17. Pajaree Anannarukarn 23. Choi Hye-jin   23. Andrea Lee   23. Brooke Henderson   23. Erika Hara     Results
    • 2026 LPGA Tour Ford Championship - Arizona    Results (March 26-29, 2026)   (61.43 points)   Women's: 1. Kim Hyo-joo 2. Nelly Korda 3. Minami Katsu 4. Lydia Ko 5. Chun In-gee 6. Yoon In-a   6. Mimi Rhodes   6. Frida Kinhult   9. Esther Henseleit 9. Chizzy Iwai 9. Rose Zhang   9. Dewi Weber   13. Cassie Porter   14. Nastasia Nadaud   15. Anna Nordqvist 15. Lindy Duncan   15. Manon de Roey   15. Lee Il-hee   15. Jing Yan 15. Sophia Schubert   15. Julia Lopez Ramirez   15. Lee So-mi   15. Chien Pei-yun 15. Yana Wilson     Results
    • 2026 LPGA Tour Fortinet Founders Cup - California   Results (March 19-22, 2026)   (59.28 points)   Women's: 1. Kim Hyo-joo 2. Nelly Korda 3. Im Jin-hee 3. Kim Sei-young 5. Carla Tejedo Mulet   5. Nasa Hataoka   5. Miyu Yamashita   5. Gaby Lopez 5. Lee Min-jee   5. Ryu Hae-ran   5. Cassie Porter 12. Robyn Choi 12. Kim A-lim   14. Aditi Ashok 14. Perrine Delacour 14. Choi Hye-jin 14. Lottie Woad 14. Jeeno Thitikul     Results
    • 2026 LPGA Tour Blue Bay LPGA - Hainan   Results (March 5-8, 2026)   (China LPGA Tour) (19.70 points)   Women's: 1. Lee Mi-hyang 2. Zhang Weiwei 3. Auston Kim 3. Aditi Ashok 5. Rio Takeda 5. Choi Hye-jin 5. Kim A-lim 5. Liu Yu 9. Jenny Bae 10. Lucy Li 10. Erika Hara 12. Esther Henseleit 12. Liu Yan 12. Liu Yujie 15. Lindy Duncan 15. Erica Shepherd 15. Ayaka Furue     Results
    • The women's weights are okay given the distribution of competitors. The men's weights are definitely underweight. Adding 2-3kg in each event would make it more balanced.
    • Australian Open, best of Day #2   men's 50m Fly:  Kyle Chalmers, 22.77 women's 400m Free:  Lani Pallister, 3.59.36;  Erika Fairweather, 4.02.09; Maria Costa, 4.03.41 men's 200m Free:  Lewis Clareburt, 1.45.57;  Edward Sommerville, 1.46.08;  Kai Taylor, 1.46.67; anybody else over the 1.47-sec mark women's 100m Fly:  Alexandria Perkins, 57.21 men's 100m Breast: all swimmers well beyond the 1-minute mark women's 100m Back:  Kaylee McKeown, 58.06;  Mollie O'Callaghan, 58.98 men's 100m Back:  Mark Nikolaev, 54.69 women's 50m Free:  (doping cheater) Shayna Jack, 24.60;  Olivia Wunsch, 24.84;  Mollie O'Callaghan, 24.89;  Alexandria Perkins, 24.92 men's 200m IM:  Lewis Clareburt, 1.58.42 women's 200m Breast:  Tara Kinder, 2.24.19 men's 800m Free:  Samuel Short, 7.41.04;  Elijah Winnington, 7.51.74
    • Stage #2 in  Granada is on!    mixed 10m Air Pistol   Gold:  India 1 (Palak & Mukesh Nelavalli) Silver:  China 1 (Yao Qianxun & Hu Kai) Bronze:  Hungary 1 (Veronika Major & Akos Karoly Nagy)   Full Results & Rankings https://www.issf-sports.org/competitions/3280/results
    • c'mon! stop those idiots! they're trying hard to ruin athletics in almost every aspect (road running, field events, the same cross country that has already been killed in practice)   please, someone shoot to death Coe and his accolades as soon as possible!!! 
×
×
  • Create New...