Cross-country_skiing_at_the_2002_Winter_Olympics Cross-country_skiing_at_the_2002_Winter_Olympics

Cross-country skiing at the 2002 Winter Olympics - Definition

The cross-country skiing events at the 2002 Winter Olympics were marred by drug problems. The winners of three races were disqualified after blood tests showed that three skiers had overly high red blood cell counts indicating the use of darbepoetin, a drug used to treat anemia. At the time, the drug was not specifically listed in the IOC's list of banned substances, but the Olympic rules generally prohibit doping of any kind, in accordance to its charter. After two years and several lawsuits in Olympic and Swiss courts, the skiers in question (Johann Mühlegg of Spain, and Larissa Lazutina and Olga Danilova of Russia) were stripped of all their Olympic medals from the 2002 Salt Lake City Games.

See the external links below for the official IOC press releases containing detailed information of the doping cases and their resolution, including initial, intermediate, and final amended results. This article gives the final medalists as decided on by the IOC in early 2004. 10 km Freestyle Pursuit Men:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Thomas Alsgaard (NOR)49:48.9
Gold Frode Estil (NOR)49:48.9
Bronze Per Elofsson (SWE)49:52.9

Johann Mühlegg won his second gold of the Games, dominating both parts of the pursuit race. Alsgaard and Estil tied for the silver medal. However, Mühlegg was disqualified by the IOC in February 2004, and so the Norwegians got the gold and Elofsson the bronze. 15 km Classical Men:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Andrus Veerpalu (EST)37:07.4
Silver Frode Estil (NOR)37:43.4
Bronze Jaak Mae (EST)37:50.8

First Olympic medals at the Winter Games for Estonia. 50 km Classical Men:

Medals awarded Saturday, February 23
MedalAthleteTime
Gold Mikhail Ivanov (RUS)2:06:20.8
Silver Andrus Veerpalu (EST)2:06:44.5
Bronze Odd-Björn Hjelmeset (NOR)2:08:41.5

First-place finisher Mühlegg was disqualified after blood tests indicated the use of darbepoetin. 30 km Freestyle Mass Start Men:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Christian Hoffmann (AUT)1:11:31.0
Silver Mikhail Botvinov (AUT)1:11:32.3
Bronze Kristen Skjeldal (NOR)1:11:42.7

Johann Mühlegg won his first and Spain's second ever Olympic winter gold, but was disqualified by the IOC in February 2004. This gave a much delayed Austrian double victory, and a bronze for veteran Skjeldal. 1.5 km Sprint Men:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Tor Arne Hetland (NOR)2:56.9
Silver Peter Schlickenrieder (GER)2:57.0
Bronze Cristian Zorzi (ITA)2:57.2


4 × 10 km Relay Men:

MedalTeamTime
Gold Norway (Thomas Alsgaard, Kristen Skjeldal, Frode Estil, Anders Aukland)1:32:45.5
Silver Italy (Pietro Piller Cottrer, Cristian Zorzi, Giorgio di Centa, Fabio Maj)1:32:45.8
Bronze Germany (Tobias Angerer, Jens Filbrich, Andreas Schlütter, Rene Sommerfeldt)1:33:34.5

In the third-in-a-row close Italy-Norway finish, the Norwegians beat Italy, like in 1998. 5 km Freestyle Pursuit Women:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Beckie Scott (CAN)25:09.9
Silver Katerina Neumannová (CZE)25:10.0
Bronze Viola Bauer (GER)25:11.1

Danilova surprisingly beat Lazutina, and Scott won a close finish for the bronze; Canada's first cross-country skiing Olympic medal. After both Russians were later disqualified (in 2004, 2003, respectively) Scott and Canada ended up with their first Olympic gold instead. 10 km Classical Women:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Bente Skari (NOR)28:05.6
Silver Julija Tchepalova (RUS)28:09.9
Bronze Stefania Belmondo (ITA)28:45.8

Bente Skari came from behind to beat the favourite Russians Danilova and Tchepalova in the last kilometers. Then Danilova was disqualified in the IOC 2004 decision, and so the runners-up advanced one step on the result list. 30 km Classical Women:

Medals awarded Sunday, February 24
MedalAthleteTime
Gold Gabriella Paruzzi (ITA)1:30:57.1
Silver Stefania Belmondo (ITA)1:31:01.6
Bronze Bente Skari (NOR)1:31:36.3

Russian skiers Lazutina, who finished first, and Danilova, who finished eighth, were disqualified after blood tests indicated the use of darbepoetin. 15 km Freestyle Mass Start Women:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Stefania Belmondo (ITA)39:54.4
Silver Katerina Neumannová (CZE)40:01.3
Bronze Julija Tchepalova (RUS)40:02.7

After breaking a ski pole, the little Italian still managed to win the gold. Lazutina was disqualified in 2003, leading to Neumannova getting the silver and Tchepalova the bronze. 1.5 km Sprint Women:

MedalAthleteTime
Gold Julija Tchepalova (RUS)3:10.6
Silver Evi Sachenbacher (GER)3:12.2
Bronze Anita Moen (NOR)3:12.7


4 × 5 km Relay Women:

Medals awarded Thursday, February 21
MedalAthleteTime
Gold Germany (Evi Sachenbacher, Viola Bauer, Manuela Henkel, Claudia Künzel)49:30.6
Silver Norway (Bente Skari, Hilde G. Pedersen, Marit Bjørgen, Anita Moen)49:31.9
Bronze Switzerland (Andrea Huber, Laurence Rochat, Brigitte Albrecht Loretan, Natascia Leonardi Cortesi)50:03.6

The Russian team was disqualified and wasn't allowed to start, after Lazutina's blood tests indicated the use of darbepoetin.

External links

Example Usage of Cross-country

dougbarnette: Giants game on now (day later) here in Rome. Nice departure from normal TV of cross country skiing, table tennis, roller hockey & handball.
marijolamarche: @WritersRelief Working on a blog post on an ex Québec pro cyclist.But first, snowshoeing and Cross-country skiing. Body and mind are moving!
marijolamarche: Real feel -20F. Really? Going snowshoeing first and then, Cross-country skiing. Warm-up my soup please!
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