FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013

FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013

Official logo for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013.
Host city Val di Fiemme, Italy
Nations participating 56
Events 21
Opening ceremony 20 February
Closing ceremony 3 March
Main venue Trampolino dal Ben
Website Fiemme2013.com
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013
Val di Fiemme, Italy
Cross-country skiing
Individual
Sprint men women
Interval start 15 km men 10 km women
Pursuit 30 km men 15 km women
Mass start 50 km men 30 km women
Team
Team sprint men women
Relay 4×10 km men 4×5 km women
Nordic combined
Normal hill Individual Team
Large hill Individual Team sprint
Ski jumping
Men
Normal hill Individual
Large hill Individual Team
Women
Normal hill Individual
Mixed
Normal hill Team

The FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013 took place between 20 February and 3 March 2013 in Val di Fiemme, Italy, for the third time, the event having been hosted there previously in 1991 and 2003.

Host selection

The 2013 championships had a submission deadline of 1 May 2007 to the International Ski Federation (FIS). The facility was chosen at the International Ski Congress in Cape Town, South Africa, on 29 May 2008.[1] Five cities submitted bids for this event.[2] This bid questionnaire used for the upcoming Nordic skiing championships was also used for the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2013.[3]

City Country Previous championships hosted FIS delegation visit [4]
Falun  Sweden 1954, 1974, 1993 18–19 September 2007
Lahti  Finland 1926, 1938, 1958, 1978, 1989, 2001 17–18 September 2007
Oberstdorf  Germany 1987, 2005 20–21 August 2007
Val di Fiemme  Italy 1991, 2003 27–28 August 2007
Zakopane  Poland 1929, 1939, 1962 22–23 August 2007

The finalist cities' deadline for the application was 15 August 2007. From 20 August to 19 September 2007, the FIS Inspection group, led by Secretary-General Sarah Lewis, visited each candidate city for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013. The FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2013 (Cortina d'Ampezzo (Italy), Schladming (Austria), St. Moritz (Switzerland), and Vail/Beaver Creek, Colorado (United States)) (The deadline for the alpine skiing championships was 31 August 2007) were visited in late 2007. This task force consisted of FIS officials and representatives of the European Broadcasting Union to review the proposed event and act as an advisory body on the feasibility of the implementation. A final report was presented to the FIS Council, FIS Technical Committee, and National Ski Associations in April 2008.[5]

On 12–13 October 2007, delegates for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships (five total), FIS Alpine World Ski Championships (four total), FIS Ski-Flying World Championships (two total), and FIS Freestyle World Championships (two total) met in Cape Town to review the rules regarding the promotional activities during the Congress. The decision took place in Cape Town with the 17-member FIS Council in May 2008.[1]

The finalist candidates were posted in the 14 May 2008 FIS Newsflash in an effort to show their candidancy prior to the 29 May 2008 selection.[6]

The winner was announced to be Val di Fiemme on the third ballot of exhaustive voting, who will host their third championships.[7]

Voting results[8]

City First vote Second vote Final vote
Val di Fiemme 6 7 8
Falun 4 5 5
Zakopane 3 3 2
Lahti 2 1 Out
Oberstdorf 1 Out Out

The four cities that lost the bid for the 2013 championships submitted their bids for the 2015 championships on 1 May 2009.[9]

Coordination group

2008

The coordination group for the event first took place on 24 September 2008.[10] Local organization has already taken place given the area has hosted numerous World Cup events in cross-country skiing, Nordic combined, and ski jumping, along with the Tour de Ski competitions.[10] The focus in 2008 was to develop activities for festivals leading up to and at the championships.[10] A young team called "Vision 2013" will work with the tourism association in the Trentino to develop destination packages with the championships.[10]

2009

The organizing committee for the 2009 championships in Liberec met in Oslo with the organizing committee of the 2011 championships on 20 April 2009 to discuss lessons learned. In the presentation was a comprehensive and frank analysis of the critical areas of Liberec's organization. Key success factors were detailed and lessons learned were elaborated, including several recommendations to both the 2011 championships and the organizing committee for the 2013 championships. Besides the 2009, 2011, and 2013 organizing committees in attendance, other attendees included the Norwegian Ski Federation, the European Broadcasting Union television, FIS, and the APF marketing partners.[11] A second organizing committee meeting took place in Val di Fiemme on 3 June 2009 headed by Piero De Godenz and Angelo Corradini.[12] In discussion was great strides in facility upgrades in time for the 2012 test events, along with legacy usage after the championships.[12] Also included were marketing campaigns with EBU and with support from the local area.[12] At a meeting in Cavalese on 26 October 2009, the organizing committee presented a detailed chart where each person listed had specific responsibilities.[13] Most of coordinating group members also participated in the 1991 and 2003 championships.[13] In January 2010, the city hosted the last two stages in the 2009-10 Tour de Ski, the 100th FIS World Cup staged by the Coordinating Group.[13] Marketing and communications presented the event's mission and vision while the technical side involved sport structure, roads, and media broadcasting.[13]

2010

At a 12 May 2010 meeting held in Cavalese, main issues dealt with were event marketing and communications.[14] Venue construction, most notably the Predazzo ski jump renovation, was also discussed.[14] Host broadcaster RAI presented its proposed infrastructure for broadcasting the event, including the addition fibre-optic cable for coverage.[14] FIS Secretary-General Sarah Lewis stated that 700 people, including many youth, had volunteered for the championships as of May 2010.[14]

Schedule

All times are local.

Cross-country
Date Time Event
21 February 12:45 Men's & women's sprint
23 February 12:45 Women's 2x7.5 km skiathlon
14:15 Men's 2x15 km skiathlon
24 February 12:00 Men's & women's team sprint
26 February 12:45 Women's 10 km freestyle
27 February 12:45 Men's 15 km freestyle
28 February 12:45 Women's 4 x 5 km relay
1 March 13:30 Men's 4 x 10 km relay
2 March 12:15 Women's 30 km classic
3 March 12:30 Men's 50 km classic

Nordic combined
Date Time Event
22 February 10:00
15:00
HS106 / 10 km
24 February 10:00
15:00
Team HS106 / 4x5 km
28 February 10:00
15:30
HS134 / 10 km
2 March 10:00
15:00
Team sprint HS134 / 2x7.5 km

Ski jumping
Date Time Event
22 February 16:00 Women's HS106
23 February 17:00 Men's HS106
24 February 17:00 Team mix HS106
28 February 17:00 Men's HS134
2 March 16:30 Men's team HS134

Events

Cross-country skiing

Men's

Event Gold Silver Bronze
15 kilometre freestyle interval start[15]
Petter Northug
 Norway
34:37.1 Johan Olsson
 Sweden
34:48.9 Tord Asle Gjerdalen
 Norway
34:59.4
30 kilometre pursuit[16]
Dario Cologna
  Switzerland
1:13:09.3 Martin Johnsrud Sundby
 Norway
1:13:11.1 Sjur Røthe
 Norway
1:13:11.3
50 kilometre classical mass start[17]
Johan Olsson
 Sweden
2:10:41.4 Dario Cologna
  Switzerland
2:10:54.3 Alexey Poltoranin
 Kazakhstan
2:10:58.2
4 × 10 kilometre relay[18]
 Norway
Tord Asle Gjerdalen
Eldar Rønning
Sjur Røthe
Petter Northug
1:41:37.2  Sweden
Daniel Richardsson
Johan Olsson
Marcus Hellner
Calle Halfvarsson
1:41:38.4  Russia
Evgeniy Belov
Maxim Vylegzhanin
Alexander Legkov
Sergey Ustiugov
1:41:39.6
Sprint[19]
Nikita Kriukov
 Russia
3:30.4 Petter Northug
 Norway
3:30.7 Alex Harvey
 Canada
3:31.2
Team sprint[20]
 Russia
Alexei Petukhov
Nikita Kriukov
21:30.9  Sweden
Marcus Hellner
Emil Jönsson
21:31.3  Kazakhstan
Nikolay Chebotko
Alexey Poltoranin
21:31.6

Women's

Event Gold Silver Bronze
10 kilometre freestyle interval start[21]
Therese Johaug
 Norway
25:23.4 Marit Bjørgen
 Norway
25:33.6 Yuliya Chekaleva
 Russia
25:56.1
15 kilometre pursuit[22]
Marit Bjørgen
 Norway
39:04.4 Therese Johaug
 Norway
39:07.8 Heidi Weng
 Norway
39:19.3
30 kilometre classical mass start[23]
Marit Bjørgen
 Norway
1:27:19.9 Justyna Kowalczyk
 Poland
1:27:23.6 Therese Johaug
 Norway
1:27:28.6
4 × 5 kilometre relay[24]
 Norway
Heidi Weng
Therese Johaug
Kristin Størmer Steira
Marit Bjørgen
1:00:36.5  Sweden
Ida Ingemarsdotter
Emma Wikén
Anna Haag
Charlotte Kalla
1:01:02.7  Russia
Julia Ivanova
Alia Iksanova
Mariya Guschina
Yuliya Chekaleva
1:01:22.3
Sprint[25]
Marit Bjørgen
 Norway
3:16.6 Ida Ingemarsdotter
 Sweden
3:18.9 Maiken Caspersen Falla
 Norway
3:20.3
Team sprint[26]
 United States
Jessica Diggins
Kikkan Randall
20:24.4  Sweden
Charlotte Kalla
Ida Ingemarsdotter
20:32.2  Finland
Riikka Sarasoja-Lilja
Krista Lahteenmäki
20:35.3

Nordic combined

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Individual large hill/10 km[27]
Eric Frenzel
 Germany
27:22.8 Bernhard Gruber
 Austria
27:59.5 Jason Lamy-Chappuis
 France
28:00.0
Individual normal hill/10 km[28]
Jason Lamy-Chappuis
 France
29:13.2 Mario Stecher
 Austria
29:13.4 Björn Kircheisen
 Germany
29:13.5
Team normal hill/4 × 5 km[29]
 France
François Braud
Maxime Laheurte
Sébastien Lacroix
Jason Lamy-Chappuis
57:34.0  Norway
Jørgen Gråbak
Håvard Klemetsen
Magnus Krog
Magnus Moan
57:34.4  United States
Taylor Fletcher
Bryan Fletcher
Todd Lodwick
Bill Demong
57:38.2
Team sprint large hill/2 × 7,5 km[30]
 France
Sébastien Lacroix
Jason Lamy-Chappuis
35:37.9  Austria
Wilhelm Denifl
Bernhard Gruber
35:54.5  Germany
Tino Edelmann
Eric Frenzel
36:21.8

Ski jumping

Men's

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's individual normal hill (HS106)[31]
Anders Bardal
 Norway
252.6 Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Austria
248.4 Peter Prevc
 Slovenia
244.3
Men's individual large hill (HS134)[32]
Kamil Stoch
 Poland
295.8 Peter Prevc
 Slovenia
289.7 Anders Jacobsen
 Norway
289.1
Men's team large hill (HS134)[33]
 Austria
Wolfgang Loitzl
Manuel Fettner
Thomas Morgenstern
Gregor Schlierenzauer
1135.9  Germany
Andreas Wank
Severin Freund
Michael Neumayer
Richard Freitag
1121.8  Poland
Maciej Kot
Piotr Żyła
Dawid Kubacki
Kamil Stoch
1121.0

Women's

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Women's individual normal hill (HS106)[34]
Sarah Hendrickson
 United States
253.7 Sara Takanashi
 Japan
251.0 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
 Austria
237.2

Mixed

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Mixed team normal hill (HS106)[35]
 Japan
Yuki Ito
Daiki Ito
Sara Takanashi
Taku Takeuchi
1011.0  Austria
Chiara Hölzl
Thomas Morgenstern
Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
Gregor Schlierenzauer
986.7  Germany
Ulrike Gräßler
Richard Freitag
Carina Vogt
Severin Freund
984.9

Medal table

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Norway85619
2 France3014
3 Russia2035
4 United States2013
5 Sweden1607
6 Austria1517
7 Germany1135
8 Poland1113
9 Japan1102
  Switzerland1102
11 Slovenia0112
12 Kazakhstan0022
13 Canada0011
 Finland0011
Total 21 21 21 63

Participating nations

700 athletes 56 countries are scheduled to compete, an increase of 6 from 2011.[36] Togo is scheduled to make its debut appearance.

References

  1. 1 2 FIS Newsflash 148. 10 October 2007.
  2. FIS Newsflash 125. 2 May 2007.
  3. FIS-Ski.com questionnaire for the FIS World Ski Championships 2013 (Alpine and Nordic) – Accessed 24 January 2008.
  4. FIS Newsflash 146. 26 September 2007.
  5. FIS Newsflash 140. 15 August 2007.
  6. FIS Newsflash 179. 14 May 2008.
  7. Eurosport.com Germany announcement of Val di Fiemme's awarding of FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013. (German) – accessed 29 May 2008.
  8. FIS announces winners of the 2012 and 2013 championships (Nordic shown for report). – accessed 31 May 2008.
  9. FIS-Ski.com 5 May 2009 announcement on the applicants for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2015. – accessed 8 May 2009.
  10. 1 2 3 4 FIS NewsFlash 198. 24 September 2008.
  11. FIS Newsflash 228. 22 April 2009. Accessed 23 April 2009.
  12. 1 2 3 FIS-Ski.com 4 June 2009 on the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013. – accessed 6 June 2009.
  13. 1 2 3 4 28 October 2009 FIS-Ski.com article on Coordination Group meeting going ahead of schedule. – accessed 1 November 2009.
  14. 1 2 3 4 "Val di Fiemme 2013 on track." – 12 May 2010 FIS article accessed 14 May 2010.
  15. Men's 15 kilometre freestyle interval start Results
  16. Men's 30 kilometre pursuit Results
  17. Men's 50 kilometre classical mass start Results
  18. Men's 4 × 10 kilometre relay Results
  19. Men's Sprint Results
  20. Men's team sprint Results
  21. Women's 10 kilometre freestyle Results
  22. Women's 15 kilometre pursuit Results
  23. Women's 30 kilometre classical mass start Results
  24. Women's 4 × 5 kilometre relay Results
  25. Women's Sprint Results
  26. Women's team sprint Results
  27. Individual large hill/10km Results
  28. Individual normal hill/10km Results
  29. Team normal hill/4 × 5 km Results
  30. Team sprint large hill/2 × 7,5 km Results
  31. Men's individual normal hill Results
  32. Men's individual large hill Results
  33. Men's team large hill Results
  34. Women's individual normal hill Results
  35. Mixed team normal hill Results
  36. Teams Enrolled

External links

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