Biathlon World Championships 2011


The 44th Biathlon World Championships was held in Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia from March 3–13, 2011.
There was a total of 11 competitions: sprint, pursuit, individual, mass start, and relay races for men and women, and mixed relay. All the events during this championships also counted for the 2010–11 Biathlon World Cup season.

Championship highlights

The Championships kicked off with the Mixed relay event which is seeking to make its way onto the Olympic programme for the 2014 games in Sochi. As the first event of the programme, it was finally given importance by the different teams, with all nations fielding their best teams, in difference to earlier world cup events. The Norwegians won it, overtaking Germany on the last leg. The veteran Ole Einar Bjørndalen won his fifteenth world championship gold medal in the process and his first in the mixed relay, giving him a full set of gold medals in the six events that are currently contested.
Tarjei Bø, Martin Fourcade, Kaisa Mäkäräinen and Arnd Peiffer won their first champion titles in career. Martin Fourcade also won a full scope of medals, gold, silver and bronze at these championships.
The surprise medalists included Maxim Maximov of Russia, Tina Bachmann of Germany and Vita Semerenko of Ukraine.
Helena Ekholm literally swept the field in the individual with zero shooting and fast skiing, winning more than 2 minutes over the runner-up Bachmann and making one of the greatest 1–2 place margins in biathlon history.

Doping violations

After a lengthy investigation, Evgeny Ustyugov of Russia was found guilty of doping violations, resulting in the annulment of his results, including those from the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics and the 2011 World Championships. So, on 7 December 2025, Sweden was awarded the relay bronze medals, and on 13 December 2025, Ukraine was awarded the silver medals.

Schedule of events

The provisional schedule of the event is below. All times in UTC+5.
DateTimeEvent
3 March16:302 × 6 km + 2 × 7.5 km mixed relay
5 March14:00Men's 10 km sprint
5 March18:00Women's 7.5 km sprint
6 March14:00Men's 12.5 km pursuit
6 March16:30Women's 10 km pursuit
8 March17:15Men's 20 km individual
9 March17:15Women's 15 km individual
11 March18:00Men's 4 × 7.5 km relay
12 March16:30Women's 12.5 km mass start
12 March18:30Men's 15 km mass start
13 March15:00Women's 4 × 6 km relay

Medal winners

Men

Women

Mixed

Medal table

Top nations

Top athletes

All athletes with two or more medals.

Participating countries

40 nations competed.
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