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4 × 5 kilometres Relay, Women

Date17 February 2018 — 18:30
StatusOlympic
LocationAlpensia Cross-Country Centre, Alpensia Resort, Mountain Cluster, Daegwallyeong
Participants56 from 14 countries
DetailsCourse Length: 5,064 m
Height Differential: 27 m
Maximum Climb: 25 m
Total Climbing: 198 m

Norway withIngvild Flugstad Østberg,Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen,Ragnhild Haga andMarit Bjørgen , secured the gold medal in the 4x5 km relay ahead of Sweden. These teams, the last two Olympic gold medal winners, were expected to finish on the top of the podium. The impressive showing of the young Olympic Athletes from RussiaNataliya Nepryayeva,Yuliya Belorukova, the only individual female medal winner from Russia at these Games,Anastasiya Sedova andAnna Nechayevskaya took them to the bronze medal.

Right from the start, the Russian youngsters set the pace, with Norway’s Østberg having a hard time to be close on Nepryayeva’s heels. At the first exchange, surprisingly,Anamarija Lampič kept Slovenia in second place. For Sweden, one of the two favorites,Anna Haag, had a slow start and was in fifth place. On the second leg, it wasCharlotte Kalla, who ran the fastest time, and made up 24 seconds on Belorukova. On the other hand, Jacobsen was Norway’s weakest link on the second position. She had an illness at the beginning of the Games and at the end of the leg exchanged in fourth place, some 30 seconds behind the Olympic Athletes from Russia, who held the lead from Sweden, Finland’sKerttu Niskanen holdng third, 20 seconds ahead of Jacobsen, when the freestyle skiers took over.

Now it was Ragnhild Haga’s turn to close the gap on the O.A.R. and Sweden. She clocked the fastest time, and finished on third place, just three seconds behind the leading duo of Sedova and Sweden’sEbba Andersson. The chasing “group” of Switzerland withNathalie von Siebenthal and Finland withRiitta-Liisa Roponen had already lost the chances of a medal with a 40-second gap between them and the top three teams. On the last leg, the race boiled down to a duel between distance skier Bjørgen, and sprint gold medalistStina Nilsson. The Norwegian kept up a high pace, but could not shake off Nilsson. However, Nechayevskaya succumbed to Bjørgen’s pace, and in the end was desperately trying to hold Finland’s top skierKrista LPärmäkoski at bay for the bronze medal position. In the lead, Bjørgen further increased the pace leaving Nilsson no chance to attack on the last kilometre. At the finish line, Sweden was just two seconds behind.

The teams from Finland and the United States were not strong enough to do better than fourth and fifth eventually. On the home stretch, Germany passed Switzerland for an honorable sixth place.

PosNumberCompetitorsNOCTimeExchange
11NorwayNOR51:24.3– (–)Gold
1-1Ingvild Flugstad Østberg13:28.913:28.9 (3)
1-2Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen14:15.927:44.8 (4)
1-3Ragnhild Haga11:46.739:31.5 (3)
1-4Marit Bjørgen11:52.851:24.3 (1)
22SwedenSWE51:26.3– (–)Silver
2-1Anna Haag13:50.313:50.3 (5)
2-2Charlotte Kalla13:26.427:16.7 (2)
2-3Ebba Andersson12:11.439:28.1 (1)
2-4Stina Nilsson11:58.251:26.3 (2)
35Olympic Athletes from RussiaROC52:07.6– (–)Bronze
5-1Nataliya Nepryayeva13:24.513:24.5 (1)
5-2Yuliya Belorukova-Stupak13:50.527:15.0 (1)
5-3Anastasiya Sedova12:13.439:28.4 (2)
5-4Anna Nechayevskaya12:39.252:07.6 (3)
43FinlandFIN52:26.9– (–)
3-1Aino-Kaisa Saarinen13:44.413:44.4 (4)
3-2Kerttu Niskanen13:40.727:25.1 (3)
3-3Riitta-Liisa Lassila-Roponen12:45.240:10.3 (5)
3-4Krista Lähteenmäki-Pärmäkoski12:16.652:26.9 (4)
54United StatesUSA52:44.8– (–)
4-1Sophie Caldwell-Hamilton14:26.014:26.0 (11)
4-2Sadie Bjornsen13:54.228:20.2 (8)
4-3Kikkan Randall12:12.940:33.1 (6)
4-4Jessie Diggins12:11.752:44.8 (5)
66GermanyGER53:13.7– (–)
6-1Stefanie Böhler14:16.414:16.4 (8)
6-2Katharina Hennig13:53.928:10.3 (6)
6-3Victoria Carl12:37.940:48.2 (8)
6-4Sandra Ringwald12:25.553:13.7 (6)
77SwitzerlandSUI53:15.8– (–)
7-1Laurien van der Graaff13:59.913:59.9 (6)
7-2Nadine Fähndrich13:46.827:46.7 (5)
7-3Nathalie von Siebenthal12:22.440:09.1 (4)
7-4Lydia Hiernickel13:06.753:15.8 (7)
812SloveniaSLO53:55.7– (–)
12-1Anamarija Lampič13:28.413:28.4 (2)
12-2Katja Višnar14:47.728:16.1 (7)
12-3Alenka Čebašek12:22.140:38.2 (7)
12-4Vesna Fabjan13:17.553:55.7 (8)
99ItalyITA54:22.0– (–)
9-1Anna Comarella14:25.214:25.2 (10)
9-2Lucia Scardoni14:19.928:45.1 (10)
9-3Elisa Brocard12:29.241:14.3 (9)
9-4Ilaria Debertolis13:07.754:22.0 (9)
108PolandPOL54:30.9– (–)
8-1Ewelina Marcisz14:23.114:23.1 (9)
8-2Justyna Kowalczyk14:13.028:36.1 (9)
8-3Martyna Galewicz13:14.841:50.9 (11)
8-4Sylwia Jaśkowiec12:40.054:30.9 (10)
1111Czech RepublicCZE55:17.1– (–)
11-1Kateřina Beroušková14:06.214:06.2 (7)
11-2Karolína Grohová14:49.428:55.6 (11)
11-3Petra Nováková12:45.341:40.9 (10)
11-4Barbora Havlíčková13:36.255:17.1 (11)
1213FranceFRA55:50.2– (–)
13-1Aurore Cuinet-Jéan14:37.714:37.7 (12)
13-2Anouk Faivre Picon14:43.729:21.4 (12)
13-3Coraline Thomas Hugue12:52.242:13.6 (12)
13-4Delphine Claudel13:36.655:50.2 (12)
1310CanadaCAN56:14.6– (–)
10-1Dahria Beatty15:00.215:00.2 (13)
10-2Emily Nishikawa14:35.029:35.2 (13)
10-3Cendrine Browne12:53.742:28.9 (13)
10-4Anne-Marie Comeau13:45.756:14.6 (13)
1414BelarusBLR57:56.1– (–)
14-1Anastasiya Kirylava15:46.715:46.7 (14)
14-2Yuliya Tsikhanava14:47.330:34.0 (14)
14-3Palina Seranosava13:16.443:50.4 (14)
14-4Valiantsina Kaminskaya14:05.757:56.1 (14)

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