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Thingnes Bø has won the Biathlon World Cup five times, in the 2018/19, 2019/20, 2020/21, 2022/23, and 2023/24 seasons. He is the male biathlete with the second most individual World Cup victories in history, totaling 90, including victories at the Winter Olympic Games .
The Men's individual competition at the Biathlon World Championships 2024 was held on 14 February 2024. [1] [2]Johannes Thingnes Bø was the defending champion and successfully defended his title.
Running the last lap, Bø secured Norway the victory; this was the first time Norway had won this event. Two days later, Bø came in third in the sprint discipline, behind runner-up Martin Fourcade and Arnd Peiffer. [23] By finishing third, Bø won the Overall Sprint Cup. In the pursuit discipline, Bø again claimed the bronze medal. [24]
The Men's mass start competition at the Biathlon World Championships 2024 will be held on 18 February 2024. [1] [2] Sebastian Samuelsson was the defending champion. He did not defend his title, finishing the competition in 23rd place. Reigning Olympic champion in mass start Johannes Thingnes Bø from Norway became
The Norwegian Biathlon Championships is the national biathlon championships of Norway and have been held every year since 1959. Men. Individual (20 km) This event was ...
The Men's pursuit competition at the Biathlon World Championships 2024 was held on 11 February 2024. [1] [2]Johannes Thingnes Bø was the defending champion and successfully defended his title.
Norway: Erik Lesser Germany: Oberhof 10 km Sprint details: Martin Fourcade France: Emil Hegle Svendsen Norway: Johannes Thingnes Bø Norway: Oberhof 12.5 km Pursuit details: Martin Fourcade France: Johannes Thingnes Bø Norway: Tarjei Bø Norway: Ruhpolding 20 km Individual details: Martin Fourcade France: Ondřej Moravec Czech Republic ...
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.