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Race Snapshot: IBU WC Pursuit

Now that must have been one exciting women’s biathlon race! As usual, I was asleep.

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Race Snapshot: Davos 15/30km Freestyle

Interesting day. I may have to switch to using percent behind the median skier for these, though, if people keep winning these things by such large margins.

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Race Snapshot: IBU WC Men/Women Sprint

Another good day for Lowell Bailey…!

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Hoffman & Stephen In Seefeld

Christian Hoffmann

Christopher Tassava chimed in with another request, regarding the news this week about Christian Hoffman’s 6 year suspension. Since I did post looking at who stood to gain if you removed Andrus Veerpalu from past results, he wanted to know what it would look like if we did the same thing with Christian Hoffmann.

It turns out in this case that the beneficiaries aren’t nearly as concentrated on a few individuals, so I’m going to pick and choose who I highlight here. Removing Hoffmann from the results would impact the winner in three instances. One is of course the famous 2002 Olympic race, in which the “official” second place finisher was Mikhail Botvinov,  so let’s just call that new podium Skjeldal, Piller Cottrer and Bjoerndalen. For the other two, it would have meant regular WC victories for Teichmann and Sommerfeldt.

Ultimately, I think Piller Cottrer and Skjeldal would have the biggest complaints, since they also would be bumped up from 4th to 3rd on at least one other occasion. Alexei Prokourovov would also have gained two 3rd place WC finishes, but the rest were split between a range of skiers.

Moving back to the top ten, we can turn to an American, Carl Swenson, who would have notched two more top ten results. Vincent Vittoz would have picked up three additional top ten results.

As for scoring WC points at all, we can identify a few North Americans again: Carl Swenson would have picked up WC points on two more occasions, James Southam (once), Donald Farley (once), Stephan Kunz (once) and reaching way back, Marcus Nash (once). At this level, the list of names is an eclectic mix of the famous (Piller Cottrer, Elofsson, Hjelmeset, etc.) to the not so famous (Diego Ruiz, Kay Bochert, Peter Michl, etc.).

In all, 90 different skiers would have gained an additional top 30, top 10 or victory. That includes several other skiers also suspected or convicted of a doping offense. Maybe during the off-season I’ll attempt a more complete assessment that attempts to remove every single skier possibly connected to doping, but that’s a bigger project.

Seefeld

Some of the other US skiers skipped the sprint relay to do a FIS race in Austria on Sunday, and by all accounts skied fairly well. Liz Stephen rather handily won the 5k freestyle, and Noah Hoffman finished 3rd, 9 seconds ahead of Kris Freeman.

But of course, comparing Hoffman to just Freeman is risky, since any one skier can have an off day. So let’s see how that result compares to his past results against the entire field:

So, remember that positive, higher values indicate better performances for Hoffman. Up is good.

The blue dots are from this particular race in Seefeld (notice only two are below zero, corresponding to the folks who beat him). You can see that this is more or less in line with how he’s fared against these skiers in past seasons. Perhaps a little better, but not dramatically so.

As for Liz Stephen, here is the equivalent graph for her race: Continue reading ›

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Men’s Biathlon & Chandra Crawford

Men’s Biathlon

The US men’s biathlon team had an auspicious start to the season. Lowell Bailey in particular skied some of the best races of his life. Let’s focus on the following three North Americans (click for larger version):

Obviously, the shooting statistics for this season are based on only this past weekend’s racing, so that’s a small sample size. The sprint race from Friday is circled in blue. I’d note that the performances in that race for Green and Burke are at the limits of what they’ve done in the past, but not beyond. In Bailey’s case, though, that was definitely something he hasn’t shown before. He’s been very consistently topping out at around 1 standard deviation better than the median skier, and that race was nearly double that. The statistician in me says “Outlier”, but the fan in me says “Yes!”. We shall see…

Chandra Crawford

While Kikkan Randall grabbed a lot of headlines with the win last weekend, how about the return of Chandra Crawford? It’s taken her a while, but she’s has been improving her sprint racing over the past few seasons:

I’ll bet that her results will be better this season than they were last season. But will they be 2008 good or 2006 good? Here’s hoping…

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Düsseldorf Roundup

Sprint Recap

Thanks again to Jan over at WorldOfXC.com (and FIS’s ability to not wreck them, although they tried!) we have the sprint heat times from Saturday. Starting with the women’s semifinals:

Semifinal 1 was markedly faster, no? It doesn’t appear that Kikkan suffered for it, but then the Düsseldorf course is unusually short for the women. Almost too short, in my opinion. Here are the heat times for the finalists: Continue reading ›

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Race Snapshot: IBU WC Men/Women’s Pursuit

 

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