Biathlon

A biathlon competition consists of a race in which contestants ski around a cross-country trial system, and where the total distance is broken up by either two or four shooting rounds, half in prone position, the other half standing. Depending on the shooting performance, extra distance or time is added to the contestant's total running distance/time. As in most races, the contestant with the shortest total time wins. The target range shooting distance is 50 metres (160 ft). There are five circular targets to be hit in each shooting round. When shooting in the prone position the target diameter is 45 millimetres (1.8 in), when shooting in the standing position the target diameter is 115 millimetres (4.5 in). On all modern biathlon ranges, the targets are self-indicating, in that they flip from black to white when hit, giving the biathlete as well as the spectators instant visual feedback for each shot fired. For each shooting round, the biathlete must hit five targets; each missed target must be "atoned for" in one of three ways, depending on the competition format.
There are five race formats used in Biathlon Competition. Race distances are dependent on age class and venue.


Individual Competition 
This race is the most traditional format. It is a 20 kilometer competion for the men and 15 kilometers for the women. In this race there are four shooting stages which rotate between prone and standing. In a competition for the men for example, a biathlete will ski four kilometers, shoot five prone shots, ski four kilometers, shoot five standing shots, ski four kilometers, shoot five prone shots, ski four kilometers, shoot five standing shots, ski four kilometers, finish. At the finish the total amount of penalties are added up and a one minute penalty is added to the finish time for each missed target. This makes shooting very important, because it is very difficult to make up one minute skiing on a competitor. 

Sprint Competition 
If there could be just one competition to determine the best biathlete, it would be the sprint competition. The race covers 10 kilometers for men and 7.5 kilometers for the women. There is one prone stage and one standing stage. For each target an athlete misses, immediately after the shooting stage the athlete has to ski a 150 meter loop before going back onto the ski course. Whoever has the fastest time at the finish wins the race. This race often favors the faster skiers, since the penalty loop only takes between 20 to 30 seconds. 

Pursuit Competition 
The Pursuit Competition is a second chance for everybody. It is based upon the results from the sprint competition, so the biathlete who was first place in the sprint starts first in the pursuit. Then the biathlete who was second in the sprint race starts at the same amount of time he or she finished behind the winner in the sprint. For example, if the second place starter was five seconds behind the winner in the sprint, he or she starts the pursuit five seconds behind the first starter. The field is limited to sixty starters. There are four shooting stages (prone, prone, standing, standing), and the competition covers 12.5 kilometers for the men and 10 kilometers for the women. Since the ski distance is just a little bit longer than the sprint and there are two more shooting stages, the good shooters tend to move up the result list in this competition. Like the sprint, for every missed target a 150 meter penalty loop must be done. The first biathlete to cross the finish line is the winner. 

Mass Start Competition 
The Mass start is a simple head to head competition. Since there are 30 targets on a World Cup biathlon range, there is only room for 30 biathletes to compete. This makes the Mass Start an exclusive elite competition which always proves exciting. The race covers 15 kilometers for the men and 12.5 kilometers for the women. There are four shooting stages, just like the pursuit, (prone, prone, standing, standing) and for every missed target the biathlete must ski a 150 meter penalty loop. In this race, the first one across the line wins, and deservedly so. It is a very demanding race, which makes it spectator friendly as well. 

Relay Competition 
The Relay Competition includes 4 biathletes (3 biathletes for Junior Competitions), each of whom must complete a 7.5 kilometer course for the men and 6 kilometers for the women, which includes a prone and a standing stage. In this race if a biathlete misses a target, he or she is allowed to hand load up to three extra rounds in order to hit the remaining missed targets. If the biathlete still has a missed target(s) after using the extra rounds, he or she must ski a 150 meter penalty loop for each missed target. The race begins as a mass start, and each racer completes their race and then tags off to the next person. The winner is the team whose fourth racer (or third for Juniors) crosses the finish line first. The short ski loops and extra shooting rounds makes the relay a very intense race where the athletes push their shooting and skiing speed to the limit. It is very exciting, and often very hard to predict the winner until the end of the race. 



text courtesy of Jay Hakkinen