Oslo: The OK & The Bad
After looking at all the great performances from Holmenkollen yesterday; today we are taking a closer look at those that performed just okay, and even some that bordered on the poor.
THE OK
Petra Majdic – Yes, she earned a bronze in the sprint which was impressive. However, we still have yet to see the dominant Majdic that we became accustomed to in year’s past where she would be a sure lock in a sprint event, and even more so if it was in the classic technique. The only other individual event we saw her in was the 10km classic where she finished a mediocre 13th for her standards. Will she try to regain her form from year’s past or could she be hanging up the skis for good after Falun?
Andy Newell – He gets a lot of media attention for being one of the best qualifiers in the world, but fails to put it together in the heats. Well, Newell did a 180 and actually finished higher than he qualified, something he’s only done twice in the past 19 World Cup/World Championship races dating back to the end of the 2008-2009 season. He made it to the semi-finals and placed 10th, but for him to qualify 24th, as weird as it sounds, might be a tactic he might want to endorse for future races…
Emil Jönsson – It’s becoming more and more clear, that Jönsson has some sort of inability to put it together at the big shows. Sure he can qualify any given day and will usually be in the top 5, but it’s now been three World Championship or Olympics as he’s gone in as the favourite, but has failed to win the race that mattered. In Liberec he failed to make the final and finished 13th, in Vancouver he again missed the finals and finished seventh and this year he actually made the final and came third, only to be beaten by the biggest male rivalry in the sport in Hellner and Northug.
The German Women – They’ve had a rough ride all year with skiers out of form before, during and after the Tour de Ski and unfortunately they didn’t get it together for the World Championships. They did have some bright spots such as Fessel’s 7th in the 30km and 15km pursuit. Sachenbacher-Stehle hasn’t found her foot this year even though she had two 13th places, we all know that she’s capable of much more when she’s on form.
Ville Nousiainen – There’s no real category to put this guy in, perhaps I should’ve made a sympathy category and thrown him in there with Dolidovich and Eliassen and I feel it’d be harsh to put him in the bad section. Basically, Nousiainen is a good top-25 skier and always has been. His 8th in the 15km classic was a great result and tied his best individual result in over three years. But he was the main reason why the Finnish sprint and relay teams finished the positions they did. There’s weak links in every team, but he sticks out like a sore thumb. He ran the first leg in the relay and handed off to Jauhojaervi with a 55 second deficit. It’s a small miracle the team actually made it back into medal contention. Then the sprint relay Jauhojaervi led out and Nousiainen held the anchor leg. Jauhojaervi did everything humanly possible to tag off to his teammate and give him as big of a lead as possible, but Nousiainen had no legs left and ultimately ended up in fifth.
THE BAD
Dario Cologna – Arguably one of the most talented athletes on the world stage right now. We all know what he’s capable of with two Tour de Ski titles already in his trophy case and an Overall World Cup Crystal Globe, this guy has almost done it all at the age of 24-years old. Before every race, he was one pegged as a favourite, but instead of landing on the podium, he turned into the Swiss miss. He failed to crack the top 20 in any of the individual results with a 20th in the 50km, 25th in the 15km classic and 24th in the 30km pursuit. A shadow of what we saw around Christmas time.
Alexander Legkov – Like Cologna, we’ve seen his ability to take races by the scruff of the neck and destroy competition, the finale to the Kuusamo mini-tour this year springs to mind. His 19th in the 30km pursuit below par for his standards, but it only got worse as the week went on. The next race was the 15km classic where he was 20th and then the relay happened. Oh, how he wished that race never occurred. The first 3km of his leg he managed to real in the leaders, but then Legkov and Russia watched in horror as their medal hopes disappear with every passing second as Legkov lost 1:50 in the last 5km of the leg. Extremely uncharacteristic from the Russian. It’ll be interesting to see if he can rebound before the season is over.
The Swedish Wax Team for the men’s 15km classic – There’s missing the wax and there’s MISSING THE WAX. The Swedish wax techs did the latter for the men’s 15km classic. The Swede’s had the favourite in Rickardsson and with the likes of Hellner fresh of his sprint win and Olsson who prefers the technique, they had the recipe for a great day. You knew it was bad when the only time the TV audience saw Rickardsson was at the first time-check and that was it for the rest of the race. At the end of the day, they didn’t have anyone in the top 15 with Olsson (17th), Södergren (22nd), Hellner (34th) and Rickardsson (42nd). Thankfully, wax techs hit the wax for the rest of the races and the athletes were able to show that it wasn’t their shape that resulted in the poor results, just a bad day in the wax room.
Sprintgutta – The Norwegian sprint boys. What other country has a specific sprint team as publicized as these guys? They even have a website dedicated to their on-goings throughout the year. For the record, Northug isn’t part of that team and trains mostly with the distance team. The sprintgutta are led by Hattestad and fair play to him during the championship as he finished fourth in the individual sprint and second in the team sprint, but other than him, the other guys really sucked it up on home snow. I know, it sounds a little harsh, but it’s true. That program probably has more money poured into it than many national teams. They really had one chance and here’s how it turned out. Hattestad (4th), Gløersen (13th), Brandsdal (17th), Pettersen (41st). Pettersen… 41st… really?! But I guess it’s no surprise as he had the same placing three weeks earlier at the FIS race in Beitostølen.
That’s it for me. I’ll be back this weekend for a look at the races from Lahti.
Til Then.




























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