1985–86 Biathlon World Cup

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The 1985–86 Biathlon World Cup (BWC) was a multi-race tournament over a season of biathlon, organised by the UIPMB (Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne et Biathlon). The season started on 16 January 1986 in Antholz-Anterselva, Italy, and ended on 16 March 1986 in Boden, Sweden. It was the ninth season of the Biathlon World Cup.

Calendar

Below is the World Cup calendar for the 1985–86 season.[1][2][3]

Location Date Individual Sprint Relay
Italy Antholz-Anterselva 16–19 January
Austria Feistritz 23–26 January
East Germany Oberhof 30 January–2 February
Norway Holmenkollen 20–23 February
Finland Lahti 7–9 March
Sweden Boden 14–16 March
Total 6 6 6

*The relays were technically unofficial races as they did not count towards anything in the World Cup.

World Cups

World Cup 1 in Italy Antholz-Anterselva
Date Event Podium Top 10
16 January 20 km individual[1][2][3][4][5] 1.  Valeriy Medvedtsev (URS) 1:03:19.8 (0+0+0+0) 4.  Peter Angerer (FRG); 5.  Øivind Nerhagen (NOR); 6.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN); 7.  Franz Wudy (FRG); 8.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 9.  Juri Kashkarov (URS); 10.  Kjell Søbak (NOR);
2.  Gottlieb Taschler (ITA) +1:22.1 (0+0+0+0)
3.  Sergei Antonov (URS) +1:29.6 (0+1+0+1)
18 January 10 km sprint[1][2][3][6][7] 1.  Peter Angerer (FRG) 30:42.3 (0+1) 4.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN); 5.  Øivind Nerhagen (NOR); 6.  Sergei Bulygin (URS); 7.  Eirik Kvalfoss (NOR); 8.  Herbert Fritzenwenger (FRG); 8.  Andreas Zingerle (ITA); 10.  Kjell Søbak (NOR);
2.  Andrei Nepein (URS) +0:04.7 (0+0)
3.  Gisle Fenne (NOR) +0:04.9 (0+0)
19 January 4 × 7.5 km relay[2][6][8] 1.  Soviet Union II 1:35:16 (2)
Dmitry Vasilyev (0)
Konstantin Vaiguin (0)
Alexandr Popov (0)
Valeriy Medvedtsev (0)
4.  West Germany II 1:37:11 (1);
5.  West Germany I 1:37:42 (1);
6.  Norway II 1:37:48 (1) (Thomassen (0), Einang (0), Haugen (0), Skattebo (1));
7.  Austria II 1:38:02 (5);
8.  West Germany III 1:38:52;
9.  Sweden 1:39:38 (2);
10.  Austria I 1:39:55 (1);
2.  Norway I 1:35:22 (1)
Øivind Nerhagen (0)
Eirik Kvalfoss (1)
Kjell Søbak (0)
Gisle Fenne (0)
3.  Soviet Union I 1:36:01 (4)
Andrei Nepein (2)
Sergei Antonov (0)
Juri Kashkarov (2)
Sergei Bulygin (0)


World Cup 2 in Austria Feistritz
Date Event Podium Top 10
23 January 20 km individual[1][2][3][9][10] 1.  Sergei Antonov (URS) 52:31.4 (0+0+0+0) 4.  Sergei Bulygin (URS); 5.  Frank-Peter Roetsch (GDR); 6.  Jan Matouš (TCH) 7.  Peter Angerer (FRG); 8.  Valeriy Medvedtsev (URS); 9.  Eirik Kvalfoss (NOR); 10.  Franz Wudy (FRG);
2.  Dmitry Vasilyev (URS) +0:18.2 (0+0+0+0)
3.  André Sehmisch (GDR) +0:57.2 (0+0+0+1)
25 January 10 km sprint[1][2][3][11][12] 1.  Andrei Nepein (URS) 25:56.8 (0+0) 4.  Juri Kashkarov (URS); 5.  Dmitry Vasilyev (URS); 6.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 7.  Herbert Fritzenwenger (FRG); 8.  Øivind Nerhagen (NOR); 9.  Jürgen Wirth (GDR); 10.  Peter Angerer (FRG);
2.  André Sehmisch (GDR) +0:27.5 (0+1)
3.  Frank-Peter Roetsch (GDR) +0:39.3 (0+1)
26 January 4 × 7.5 km relay[2] 1.  East Germany ...
2.  Soviet Union II
3.  Soviet Union I


World Cup 3 in East Germany Oberhof
Date Event Podium Top 10
30 January 20 km individual[1][2][3][13] 1.  Peter Angerer (FRG) 1:03:02 (1) 4.  Frank-Peter Roetsch (GDR); 5.  Jürgen Wirth (GDR); 6.  Valeri Kiriyenko (URS); 7.  Jan Matouš (TCH); 8.  Matthias Jacob (GDR); 9.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 10.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN);
2.  André Sehmisch (GDR) +1:15 (2)
3.  Anatoly Zhdanovich (URS) +1:32 (3)
1 February 10 km sprint[1][2][3][14] 1.  Matthias Jacob (GDR) 30:58 (0) 4.  Fritz Fischer (FRG); 5.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 6.  Anatoly Zhdanovich (URS); 7.  Andreas Zingerle (ITA); 8.  Peter Angerer (FRG); 9.  Arto Jääskeläinen (FIN); 10.  Walter Hörl (AUT);
2.  André Sehmisch (GDR) +0:08 (1)
3.  Frank-Peter Roetsch (GDR) +0:43 (1)
2 February 4 × 7.5 km relay[1][2][14] 1.  Soviet Union II 1:41:04 (1) 4.  East Germany II 1:46:57 (4);
5.  West Germany 1:47:02 (5);
6.  Italy 1:47:42 (8)
2.  East Germany I 1:44:36 (8)
3.  Soviet Union I 1:46:43 (7)


World Cup 4 in Finland Lahti
Date Event Podium Top 10
7 March 4 × 7.5 km relay[1][2][15] 1.  East Germany 1:34:12 (1)
Jürgen Wirth
Jens Steinigen
Matthias Jacob
André Sehmisch
4.  France 1:38:17 (0);
5.  Italy 1:40:33 (6);
6.  Austria 1:41:29 (3);
9.  Norway/ France 1:44:27 (5);
2.  Norway 1:35:58 (0)
Bjarne Thomassen
Gisle Fenne
Eirik Kvalfoss
Geir Einang
3.  Finland 1:37:42 (0)
Risto Moisejeff
Antero Lähde
Arto Jääskeläinen
Tapio Piipponen
8 March 20 km individual[1][2][3][16] 1.  Peter Angerer (FRG) 1:08:34 (1) 4.  Gisle Fenne (NOR); 5.  Risto Moisejeff (FIN); 6.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN); 7.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 8.  André Sehmisch (GDR); 9.  Herbert Fritzenwenger (FRG); 10.  Franz Schuler (AUT);
2.  Jan Matouš (TCH) +0:32 (1)
3.  Andreas Zingerle (ITA) +0:57 (3)
9 March 10 km sprint[1][2][3][16] 1.  André Sehmisch (GDR) 31:10.3 (0) 4.  Anton Lengauer-Stockner (AUT); 5.  Eirik Kvalfoss (NOR); 6.  Gisle Fenne (NOR); 7.  Matthias Jacob (GDR); 8.  Alfred Eder (AUT); 9.  Jan Matouš (TCH); 10.  Peter Angerer (FRG);
2.  Fritz Fischer (FRG) +0:49.2 (1)
3.  Johann Passler (ITA) +0:56.3 (2)


World Cup 5 in Sweden Boden
Date Event Podium Top 10
14 March 20 km individual[1][2][3][17][18] 1.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN) 1:05:53.3 (0+0+0+0) 4.  Andreas Zingerle (ITA); 5.  Zdeněk Hák (TCH); 6.  Dmitry Vasilyev (URS); 7.  Juri Kashkarov (URS); 8.  Jürgen Wirth (GDR); 9.  Gottlieb Taschler (ITA); 10.  Fritz Fischer (FRG);
2.  André Sehmisch (GDR) +0:45.1 (0+0+0+1)
3.  Alfred Eder (AUT) +2:27.2 (0+0+0+1)
15 March 10 km sprint[1][2][3][19][20] 1.  Matthias Jacob (GDR) 29:51.4 (0+0) 4.  André Sehmisch (GDR); 5.  Alexandr Popov (URS); 6.  Dmitry Vasilyev (URS); 7.  Jan Matouš (TCH); 8.  Tapio Piipponen (FIN); 9.  Juri Kashkarov (URS); 10.  Alfred Eder (AUT);
2.  Sergei Antonov (URS) +0:16.6 (0+0)
3.  Eirik Kvalfoss (NOR) +0:29.9 (1+0)
16 March 4 × 7.5 km relay[1][2][19] 1.  Soviet Union 1:37:23 (0)
Dmitry Vasilyev
Juri Kashkarov
Alexandr Popov
Sergei Antonov
4.  West Germany 1:40:58 (2);
5.  Norway 1:41:47 (4);
2.  East Germany 1:39:39 (0)
3.  Finland 1:39:40 (1)

Results

Achievements

First World Cup career victory
  •  Valeriy Medvedtsev (URS), 21, in his 1st season — the WC 1 Individual in Antholz-Anterselva; it also was his first podium
  •  Andrei Nepein (URS), in his 3rd season — the WC 2 Sprint in Feistritz; first podium was 1985–86 Sprint in Antholz-Anterselva
  •  André Sehmisch (GDR), 21, in his 3rd season — the WC 4 Sprint in Lahti; first podium was 1984–85 Sprint in Lahti
  •  Tapio Piipponen (FIN), 28, in his 7th season — the WC 5 Individual in Boden; first podium was 1981–82 Sprint in Ruhpolding
First World Cup podium
  •  Gottlieb Taschler (ITA), 24, in his 4th season — no. 2 in the WC 1 Individual in Antholz-Anterselva
  •  Andrei Nepein (URS), in his 3rd season — no. 2 in the WC 1 Sprint in Antholz-Anterselva
  •  Gisle Fenne (NOR), 22, in his 3rd season — no. 3 in the WC 1 Sprint in Antholz-Anterselva
  •  Anatoly Zhdanovich (URS), 23, in his 1st season — no. 3 in the WC 3 Individual in Oberhof
  •  Jan Matouš (TCH), 24, in his 3rd season — no. 2 in the WC 4 Individual in Lahti
  •  Andreas Zingerle (ITA), 24, in his 5th season — no. 3 in the WC 4 Individual in Lahti
  •  André Sehmisch (GDR), 20, in his 2nd season — no. 3 in the WC 4 Sprint in Lahti
Victory in this World Cup (all-time number of victories in parentheses)

Retirements

Following notable biathletes retired after the 1985–86 season:

References

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