Johannes Boe comes close to a grand slam in the individual events

There will be no grand slam for Johannes Boe. The Norwegian giant, already overtaken by the French team on Saturday in the relay, failed in his quest for gold in the last individual events of the Oberhof Worlds (Germany), Sunday February 19. On the mass start, the Norwegian was dethroned by two Swedes, Sebastian Samuelsson (20/20 shooting) and Martin Ponsiluoma (18/20, best skiing time). Weighed down by a final fault on the last shot, Johannes Boe, hitherto undefeated in the individual events of the season, was unable to regain the lead of his opponents and had to settle for bronze.

Like his compatriot Ole Einar Bjoerndalen (in 2009) or Martin Fourcade (2016), the Norwegian failed to achieve the individual grand slam, but leaves Oberhof with seven medals, including five gold.

Read also: Biathlon Worlds: Johannes Boe comes close to a grand slam in individual events

Starting at the head of the mass start, by virtue of his status as leader of the World Cup, Johannes Boe had nevertheless immediately imposed his formidable pace on skis. Left for five laps of 3 kilometers, interspersed with four shooting sequences (two lying down then two standing up), the Norwegian received a penalty round, 150 meters, from the first shot. A Norwegian who could hide another, it was Sturla Laegreid, reigning world champion, who took the lead in the race, the French Claude Fabien and Quentin Fillon Maillet on his heels.

Johannes Boe, chaining a second shooting fault (8/10), worked to recover from his 23-second delay with his skis. Going from sixth place to second place on the climb, then formidable on the first standing lap – dispatched in 19 seconds – the Norwegian took the lead in the race and posed a serious option for a title that seemed to be on his way. arms.

Johannes Boe crosses the finish line of the mass start, Sunday February 19, 2023, after the Swedes Martin Ponsiluoma (on the left, 2nd) and Sebastian Samuelsson (on the right, the winner), in Oberhof, Germany.

However, that would be to misunderstand biathlon. Neck and neck with Ponsiluoma, Laegreid and Samuelsson, the title was decided in a grand final between Scandinavians. On the last shot, the youngest of the Boe brothers obliterated his targets in a daunting rhythm, before failing on the last target. Coming out of his penalty lap 6 seconds behind Ponsiluoma, Johannes Boe, blunted by his repeated efforts, no longer managed to come back to the Swedish duo. On the last lap, it was Sebastian Samuelsson who got the better of his compatriot Martin Ponsiluoma (2eat 9”6) and on Johannes Boe (3e, at 38”8) and took the title. Smiling a bit closed, the Norwegian can harbor regrets, after having failed on the wire in his quest for a grand slam.

No individual medal for the tricolors

On the other hand, the French return with a meager individual loot from these Worlds. Crowned yesterday as a team, the Blues missed out on their individual race. Out in front of the second lying shot (10/10), Fabien Claude has long been in contact with the leading group, in the same rhythm as Sebastian Samuelson. But a round of penalties after the first standing shot and difficulties on skis dashed his medal hopes: “It was still too hard on the skis, even with zero faults, I told myself that I couldn’t do it. I’m disappointed in myself”regretted Fabien Claude at the microphone of La Chaîne L’Equipe.

Read also: Biathlon: the French relay world champions

Same observation for Emilien Jacquelin, who saw his hopes of a podium vanish after having chained two penalty laps (+ 54 seconds) on the third shot. “We played in front, but we made too many mistakes to hope for anything. Maybe we lacked freshness, but in front, it was a high level race. Samuelsson was formidable in shooting, Ponsiluoma and Boe very good on skis, recognized the tricolor. The French biathlon has known great hours and we are used to better. We are disappointed and we have to question ourselves individually and collectively so that 2023 is not a year without an individual podium. »

Best Frenchman in this race, Quentin Fillon-Maillet finished in sixth place, more than a minute behind the winner of the day (18/20). An individual record far from tricolor hopes. Since 2009, the French had always returned with individual medals in their suitcases.

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