Jump to content

2022 Orienteering World Cup: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 199: Line 199:
| align=center| 7 August
| align=center| 7 August
| {{Relay|{{SWE}} 1 |[[Lina Strand]]|[[Sara Hagström]]|[[Tove Alexandersson]]}}
| {{Relay|{{SWE}} 1 |[[Lina Strand]]|[[Sara Hagström]]|[[Tove Alexandersson]]}}
| {{Relay|{{CZE}} 1 |[[Vendula Horcickova]]|[[Adela Finstrlova]]|[[Tereza Janosikova]]}}
| {{Relay|{{CZE}} 1 |[[Vendula Horcickova]]|[[Adela Finstrlova]]|[[Tereza Janošíková]]}}
| {{Relay|{{NOR}} 1 |[[Ane Dyrkorn]]|[[Ingrid Lundanes]]|[[Andrine Benjaminsen]]}}
| {{Relay|{{NOR}} 1 |[[Ane Dyrkorn]]|[[Ingrid Lundanes]]|[[Andrine Benjaminsen]]}}
| -
| -

Revision as of 12:26, 7 August 2022

2022 Orienteering World Cup
World Cup events
Individual6
Relay5
Men's World Cup
1st Tim Robertson (NZL)
2nd Kasper Harlem Fosser (NOR)
3rd Matthias Kyburz (SUI)
Most wins-
Women's World Cup
1st Tove Alexandersson (SWE)
2nd Lina Strand (SWE)
3rd Megan Carter Davies (GBR)
Most wins Tove Alexandersson (SWE) (2)
Team World Cup
1st Sweden
2nd  Switzerland
3rd Norway
Most wins Sweden (1)
2021
2023

The 2022 Orienteering World Cup is the 27th edition of the Orienteering World Cup. The 2022 Orienteering World Cup consists of six individual events and four relay events. The events are located in Sweden, Estonia, and Switzerland.[1] The 2022 World Orienteering Championships in Denmark are not included in the World Cup. But the European Orienteering Championships in Estonia are part of the world cup, and non-European Orienteers can hence participate in the European Championships as well.

Events

Men

No. Venue Distance Date Winner Second Third Ref.
Round 1 - Sweden
1 Sweden Borås, Sweden Sprint 26 May  Kasper Harlem Fosser (NOR)  Tim Robertson (NZL)  Yannick Michiels (BEL) -
2 Knock-out sprint 28 May  Matthias Kyburz (SUI)  Tim Robertson (NZL)  August Mollén (SWE) -
Round 2 - Estonia
3 Estonia Rakvere, Estonia Long 4 August  Martin Regborn (SWE)  Eskil Kinneberg (NOR)  Elias Kuukka (FIN)
4 Middle 6 August  Albin Ridefelt (SWE)  Anton Johansson (SWE)  Gustav Bergman (SWE)
Round 3 - Finals
5 Switzerland Davos Klosters, Switzerland Middle 2 October - - -
6 Long 3 October - - -

Women

No. Venue Distance Date Winner Second Third Ref.
Round 1 - Sweden
1 Sweden Borås, Sweden Sprint 26 May  Tove Alexandersson (SWE)  Lina Strand (SWE)  Hanna Lundberg (SWE)
 Simona Aebersold (SUI)
2 Knock-out sprint 28 May  Tove Alexandersson (SWE)  Megan Carter Davies (GBR)  Andrine Benjaminsen (NOR)
Round 2 - Estonia
3 Estonia Rakvere, Estonia Long 4 August  Venla Harju (FIN)  Tove Alexandersson (SWE)  Marika Teini (FIN)
4 Middle 6 August  Simona Aebersold (SUI)  Evely Kaasiku (EST)  Venla Harju (FIN)
Round 3 - Finals
5 Switzerland Davos Klosters, Switzerland Middle 2 October - - -
6 Long 3 October - - -

Relay

No. Venue Distance Date Winner Second Third Ref.
1 Sweden Borås, Sweden Sprint Relay 29 May  Sweden 2
Lina Strand
Martin Regborn
Emil Svensk
Karolin Ohlsson
 Switzerland
Simona Aebersold
Joey Hadorn
Matthias Kyburz
Elena Roos
 Sweden 1
Hanna Lundberg
Max Peter Bejmer
Gustav Bergman
Tove Alexandersson
2 Estonia Rakvere, Estonia Men's relay 7 August - - - -
3 Women's relay 7 August  Sweden 1
Lina Strand
Sara Hagström
Tove Alexandersson
 Czech Republic 1
Vendula Horcickova
Adela Finstrlova
Tereza Janošíková
 Norway 1
Ane Dyrkorn
Ingrid Lundanes
Andrine Benjaminsen
-
4 Switzerland Davos Klosters, Switzerland Men's Relay 1 October - - - -
5 Women's relay 1 October - - - -

Points distribution

The 40 best runners in each event are awarded points. The winner is awarded 100 points. In WC events 1 to 7, the six best results counts in the overall classification. In the finals (WC 8 and WC 9), both results count.

Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
Points 100 80 60 50 45 40 37 35 33 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Overall standings

This section shows the overall standings after all events.

Men

Rank Athlete Points
1  Tim Robertson (NZL)160
2  Kasper Harlem Fosser (NOR) 150
3  Matthias Kyburz (SUI) 145
4  August Mollén (SWE) 90
5  Gustav Bergman (SWE) 80
5  Martin Regborn (SWE) 80
7  Miika Kirmula (FIN) 65
8  Yannick Michiels (BEL) 64
9  Emil Svensk (SWE) 63
10  Jonatan Gustafsson (SWE)62

Women

Rank Athlete Points
1  Tove Alexandersson (SWE) 200
2  Lina Strand (SWE) 130
3  Megan Carter Davies (GBR) 105
4  Hanna Lundberg (SWE) 100
5  Simona Aebersold (SUI) 90
6  Andrine Benjaminsen (NOR) 84
7  Karolin Ohlsson (SWE) 82
8  Emma Bjessmo (SWE) 75
8  Elena Roos (SUI) 75
10  Tereza Janošíková (CZE) 55

Team

The table shows the standings after all events. This was the first year where individual results counted towards the team world cup, meaning competitors contributed to the team's score in both relay and individual events.

Rank Nation Points
1 Sweden Sweden 2850
2 Switzerland Switzerland 2112
3 Norway Norway 1747
4 United Kingdom Great Britain 1275
5 Finland Finland 1252
6 Denmark Denmark 975
7 France France 864
8 Czech Republic Czech Republic 863
9 Poland Poland 729
10 Austria Austria 648

References

  1. ^ "World Cup | International Orienteering Federation". orienteering.sport.

External links