Biathlon at the 2026 Winter Olympics – Men's mass start

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The men's mass start competition of the 2026 Winter Olympics was held on 20 February, at the Anterselva Biathlon Arena in Rasen-Antholz.[1] Johannes Dale-Skjevdal of Norway won the event, thus getting his first Olympic medal. His teammate Sturla Holm Lægreid won the silver medal, and Quentin Fillon Maillet of France bronze.[2][3] Holm Lægreid thereby won a medal in all five men's biathlon events at the 2026 Winter Olympics, none of them gold though.

Date20 February 2026
Competitors30 from 11 nations
Winning time39:17.1
Quick facts Men's mass start at the XXV Olympic Winter Games, Venue ...
Men's mass start
at the XXV Olympic Winter Games
VenueAnterselva Biathlon Arena
Date20 February 2026
Competitors30 from 11 nations
Winning time39:17.1
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Johannes Dale-Skjevdal  Norway
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sturla Holm Lægreid  Norway
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Quentin Fillon Maillet  France
 2022
2030 
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Background

The defending champion, Johannes Thingnes Bø, retired from competitions. The silver medalist, Martin Ponsiluoma, qualified for the Olympics, as did the bronze medalist, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen. Prior to the Olympics, Éric Perrot was leading the total as well as mass start standings of the 2025–26 Biathlon World Cup. Endre Strømsheim was the 2025 World champion.

Qualification

Race description

The whole pack got off the line well, with Quentin Fillon Maillet arriving at the shooting range for shooting 1 first. Fellow Frenchman Émilien Jacquelin shot extremely quickly, hitting all five targets. This meant a small gap of 5 seconds to Otto Invenius and Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, who were leading the group of athletes who also went through shooting 1 without a mistake. Jacquelin extended his lead to 20 seconds going in to shooting 2, with Invenius dropping back. Behind Jacquelin a group of 4 athletes formed, including Christiansen, Sturla Holm Lægreid, Johannes Dale-Skjevdal and Tommaso Giacomel.

Jacquelin made one mistake in his second shooting session, with the group of four all making no mistakes. After his penalty lap, Jacquelin entered the group going up to the third shooting session. Midway through the cross-country section, Giacomel suddenly dropped back, retiring from the race.

Shooting 3 started with Fillon Maillet having caught up to the group of four, thus again consisting of five athletes. The wind had picked up speed, which caused many athletes to miss multiple shots in this shooting round. Jacquelin made 4 mistakes in shooting 3, which ruled him out for the medal places. Lægreid missed one target, with Christiansen and Fillon Maillet missing two. Dale-Skjevdal remained without mistake and led the field out of shooting 3. The Norwegian was followed by Philipp Horn, who had not made any mistake up until that point, but had dropped behind due to slower cross-country sections.

Horn was caught by Lægreid before the shooting stadium and entered third, behind both Norwegians. Dale-Skjevdal remained without mistake in shooting 4, making him the first flawless athlete in this discipline since Emil Hegle Svendsen and Ondřej Moravec, gold and bronze medalists at the 2014 Olympics. Lægreid was also flawless through shooting 4, but had to settle for silver, following 20 seconds behind his fellow countrymen Dale-Skjevdal. Horn and Fillon Maillet both made one mistake, which set up an exciting battle for bronze.

Horn led Fillon Maillet by 5 seconds coming out of the shooting stadium, but the Frenchman caught up to the German very quickly, passing him on the hill leading up to the 13.8 km mark. Horn was not able to follow the pace of Fillon Maillet, which meant the bronze medal went to France. Dale-Skjevdal received a standing ovation from the crowd in the stadium section, finishing 10.5 seconds ahead of Lægreid and 25.6 seconds ahead of Fillon Maillet.

Éric Perrot, who was leading the total as well as mass start standings of the 2025–26 Biathlon World Cup prior to the Olympics, and Martin Ponsiluoma, silver medalist in Beijing, both had a disappointing race. Finishing in 20th and 21st respectively, the gap to Dale-Skjevdal was almost 4 minutes.

Results

The race was started at 14:15.[1][4]

More information Rank, Bib ...
RankBibNameCountryTimePenalties (P+P+S+S)Deficit
1st place, gold medalist(s)10Johannes Dale-Skjevdal Norway39:17.10 (0+0+0+0)
2nd place, silver medalist(s)6Sturla Holm Lægreid Norway39:27.61 (0+0+1+0)+10.5
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)2Quentin Fillon Maillet France39:42.74 (1+0+2+1)+25.6
416Philipp Horn Germany39:52.61 (0+0+0+1)+35.5
55Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen Norway41:05.23 (0+0+2+1)+1:48.1
627Michal Krčmář Czech Republic41:20.75 (0+0+1+4)+2:03.6
712Philipp Nawrath Germany41:22.45 (0+1+1+3)+2:05.3
81Johan-Olav Botn Norway41:24.55 (1+2+0+2)+2:07.4
921Otto Invenius Finland41:41.85 (0+0+3+2)+2:24.7
1020Vitalii Mandzyn Ukraine41:47.85 (0+0+2+3)+2:30.7
1126Joscha Burkhalter Switzerland41:49.12 (1+0+1+0)+2:32.0
127Émilien Jacquelin France41:56.76 (0+1+4+1)+2:39.6
1324Sebastian Stalder Switzerland42:07.01 (0+0+1+0)+2:49.9
1414Olli Hiidensalo Finland42:09.04 (0+1+2+1)+2:51.9
1515Tuomas Harjula Finland42:16.03 (0+0+2+1)+2:58.9
1619Jakov Fak Slovenia42:23.21 (0+0+1+0)+3:06.1
1717Dmytro Pidruchnyi Ukraine42:31.75 (2+0+2+1)+3:14.6
189Sebastian Samuelsson Sweden42:52.14 (0+2+1+1)+3:35.0
1918Vítězslav Hornig Czech Republic42:56.05 (2+0+1+2)+3:38.9
204Éric Perrot France43:01.57 (1+2+3+1)+3:44.4
213Martin Ponsiluoma Sweden43:03.87 (2+3+1+1)+3:46.7
2222Tero Seppälä Finland43:10.17 (0+3+2+2)+3:53.0
2323David Zobel Germany43:49.57 (0+2+4+1)+4:32.4
2429Niklas Hartweg Switzerland44:07.56 (1+1+3+1)+4:50.4
2513Lukas Hofer Italy44:09.58 (1+1+4+2)+4:52.4
2630Jesper Nelin Sweden44:17.37 (0+1+3+3)+5:00.2
2725Fabien Claude France45:13.79 (3+1+4+1)+5:56.6
2828Nicola Romanin Italy45:14.08 (2+2+2+2)+5:56.9
2911Campbell Wright United States45:14.07 (0+1+5+1)+5:56.9
8Tommaso Giacomel ItalyDNF (0+0+ + )
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References

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