Cross-country skiing at the 1998 Winter Olympics – Men's 10 kilometre classical

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Men's 10 kilometre classical
at the XVIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueSnow Harp
Dates12 February
Competitors97 from 35 nations
Winning time27:24.5
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Bjørn Dæhlie  Norway
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Markus Gandler  Austria
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mika Myllylä  Finland
← 1994

The men's 10 kilometre classical cross-country skiing competition at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, was held on 12 February at Snow Harp in Nozawa Onsen.[1]

Each skier started at half a minute intervals, skiing the entire 10 kilometre course. Bjørn Dæhlie was the 1997 World champion. Dæhlie was also defending Olympic champion due to his win in 1994 Olympics in Lillehammer.

Bjørn Dæhlie won the race, and memorably insisted that the medals ceremony be delayed as he waited at the finish line to greet the final athlete to complete the race, Philip Boit of Kenya, who was the first Kenyan to compete in a Winter Olympics.

Results[edit]

Rank Bib Name Country Time Deficit
1st place, gold medalist(s) 45 Bjørn Dæhlie  Norway 27:24.5
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 53 Markus Gandler  Austria 27:32.5 +8.0
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 39 Mika Myllylä  Finland 27:40.1 +15.6
4 47 Vladimir Smirnov  Kazakhstan 27:45.1 +20.6
5 43 Thomas Alsgaard  Norway 27:48.1 +23.6
6 56 Jaak Mae  Estonia 27:56.0 +31.5
7 33 Erling Jevne  Norway 27:58.7 +34.2
8 57 Andrus Veerpalu  Estonia 28:00.7 +36.2
9 38 Sture Sivertsen  Norway 28:10.6 +46.1
10 46 Silvio Fauner  Italy 28:15.5 +51.0
11 37 Fulvio Valbusa  Italy 28:17.0 +52.5
12 41 Alois Stadlober  Austria 28:21.2 +56.7
13 67 Harri Kirvesniemi  Finland 28:22.5 +58.0
14 82 Gerhard Urain  Austria 28:25.2 +1:00.7
15 36 Jari Isometsä  Finland 28:36.7 +1:12.2
16 24 Andreas Schlütter  Germany 28:48.0 +1:23.5
17 59 Beat Koch  Switzerland 28:49.6 +1:25.1
18 92 Sami Repo  Finland 28:51.3 +1:26.8
19 85 Hiroyuki Imai  Japan 28:51.5 +1:51.5
20 55 Markus Hasler  Liechtenstein 28:55.2 +1:30.7
20 54 Patrick Remy  France 28:55.2 +1:30.7
22 66 Sergey Tchepikov  Russia 28:55.9 +1:31.4
23 30 Achim Walcher  Austria 28:58.6 +1:34.1
24 11 Vincent Vittoz  France 29:03.5 +1:39.0
25 31 Niklas Jonsson  Sweden 29:04.9 +1:40.4
26 20 Marco Albarello  Italy 29:10.1 +1:45.6
27 35 Johann Mühlegg  Germany 29:12.3 +1:47.8
28 44 Fabio Maj  Italy 29:13.8 +1:49.3
29 28 Masaaki Kozu  Japan 29:23.1 +1:58.6
30 15 Ricardas Panavas  Lithuania 29:24.1 +1:59.6
31 40 Alexey Prokourorov  Russia 29:27.3 +2:02.8
32 93 Petr Michl  Czech Republic 29:28.5 +2:04.0
33 61 Juan Jesús Gutiérrez  Spain 29:29.0 +2:04.5
34 71 Katsuhito Ebisawa  Japan 29:30.0 +2:05.5
35 64 Martin Koukal  Czech Republic 29:41.8 +2:17.3
36 49 Mitsuo Horigome  Japan 29:44.8 +2:20.3
37 76 Raul Olle  Estonia 29:52.3 +2:27.8
38 77 René Sommerfeldt  Germany 29:52.5 +2:28.0
39 73 Alexander Sannikov  Belarus 29:54.7 +2:30.2
40 74 Jochen Behle  Germany 29:55.9 +2:31.4
41 69 John Bauer  United States 29:58.4 +2:33.9
42 78 Sergey Kriyanin  Russia 30:03.2 +2:38.7
43 81 Patrick Weaver  United States 30:04.4 +2:39.9
44 65 Vladislavas Zybailo  Lithuania 30:09.9 +2:45.4
45 25 Lukáš Bauer  Czech Republic 30:11.1 +2:46.6
46 7 Michael Binzer  Denmark 30:14.2 +2:49.7
47 1 Justin Wadsworth  United States 30:26.3 +3:01.8
48 50 Robin McKeever  Canada 30:32.2 +3:07.7
49 14 Jeremias Wigger  Switzerland 30:33.4 +3:08.9
50 68 Pavel Riabinine  Kazakhstan 30:37.0 +3:12.5
51 70 Chris Blanchard  Canada 30:37.1 +3:12.6
52 32 Lubos Buchta  Czech Republic 30:38.4 +3:13.9
53 13 Park Byung-chul  South Korea 30:42.1 +3:17.6
54 58 Jordi Ribo  Spain 30:45.0 +3:20.5
55 87 Nikolay Popovich  Ukraine 30:51.2 +3:26.7
56 34 Henrik Forsberg  Sweden 30:55.7 +3:31.2
57 12 Stephan Kunz  Liechtenstein 30:56.8 +3:32.3
58 9 Elmo Kassin  Estonia 30:57.8 +3:33.3
59 83 Philippe Sanchez  France 31:03.5 +3:39.0
60 22 Gennadiy Nikon  Ukraine 31:07.6 +3:43.1
60 48 Ivan Bátory  Slovakia 31:07.6 +3:43.1
62 17 Vladimir Legotine  Russia 31:10.3 +3:45.8
63 3 Wilhelm Aschwanden  Switzerland 31:10.5 +3:46.0
64 8 Stanislav Jezik  Slovakia 31:11.2 +3:46.7
65 51 Janis Hermanis  Latvia 31:12.1 +3:47.6
66 4 Anthony Evans  Australia 31:12.7 +3:48.2
67 60 Martin Bajcicak  Slovakia 31:29.0 +4:04.5
68 10 Andrei Nevzorov  Kazakhstan 31:30.4 +4:05.9
69 16 Zsolt Antal  Romania 31:41.0 +4:16.5
70 19 Aleksey Tregubov  Belarus 31:43.9 +4:19.4
71 18 Guido Visser  Canada 31:50.8 +4:26.3
72 29 Mikhailo Artyukhov  Ukraine 31:52.8 +4:28.3
73 89 Nikolay Semeniako  Belarus 31:54.5 +4:30.0
74 63 Ahn Jin-soo  South Korea 31:55.5 +4:31.0
75 75 Yves Bilodeau  Canada 31:56.9 +4:32.4
76 62 Janusz Krezolok  Poland 32:02.8 +4:38.3
77 90 Juris Germanis  Latvia 32:05.8 +4:41.3
78 2 Marcus Nash  United States 32:11.9 +4:47.4
79 88 Park Byeong-ju  South Korea 32:46.1 +5:21.6
80 91 Vitaly Lilichenko  Kazakhstan 32:54.5 +5:30.0
81 52 Wu Jintao  China 32:57.7 +5:33.2
82 79 Alvaro Gijon  Spain 33:02.7 +5:38.2
83 26 Roberts Raimo  Latvia 33:09.9 +5:45.4
84 5 Slavtscho Batinkov  Bulgaria 33:23.2 +5:58.7
85 86 Ivan Hudač  Slovakia 33:41.9 +6:17.4
86 95 Lefteris Fafalis  Greece 34:13.7 +6:49.2
87 21 Diego Ruiz  Spain 34:17.3 +6:52.8
88 80 Paul Gray  Australia 34:45.1 +7:20.6
89 96 Balazs Latrompette  Hungary 35:30.9 +8:06.4
90 98 Dashzevegiin Ochirsükh  Mongolia 39:38.6 +12:14.1
91 94 Gjoko Dineski  Macedonia 39:39.3 +12:14.8
92 97 Philip Boit  Kenya 47:25.5 +20:01.0
6 Antonio Racki  Croatia Did not finish
23 Qu Donghai  China
27 Sergei Dolidovich  Belarus
72 Oleksandr Zarovniy  Ukraine
84 Patrick Mächler  Switzerland
42 Torgny Mogren  Sweden Did not start

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Cross Country Skiing at the 1998 Nagano Winter Games: Men's 10 kilometres". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2019.

External links[edit]