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World Junior/U23s are underway, of course, in the exotic locale of Turkey. Monday wasn’t a spectacular day for the North Americans in the WJC freestyle sprint. For some quick context, here’s a look at the historical results in each discipline for the US: I’m just using finishing place here, rather than FIS points, since I [...] Related posts:

  1. Post-WJC/U23 Development: Canada
  2. WJC/U23 Preview: USA and CAN
  3. WJC/U23 Preview: USA and Canada (con’t)

A commenter on Monday’s post noted that there are some folks fairly close behind Kershaw in the WC overall, so he has more to worry about than just catching Petter Northug. In particular, Marcus Hellner is only 57 points back, while Alexander Legkov is fully 168 points back. Hellner is obviously the more immediate concern, [...] Related posts:

  1. Canadian National Team Preview: Alex Harvey & Devon Kershaw
  2. Can Kikkan Randall Win The Sprint WC Title?
  3. World Cup Field Strength Follow-Up

That was the question in a comment I got the other day. So here’s the situation. Devon Kershaw currently has 953 WC points, Petter Northug has 1199. Northug is apparently going to skip the next two weekends of WC racing in order to prepare for the Vasaloppet. Could Kershaw catch and overtake Northug in that [...] Related posts:

  1. Did Petter Northug Have a Slight Edge On Marcus Hellner?
  2. Head-To-Head: Petter Northug vs. Marcus Hellner
  3. Canadian National Team Preview: Alex Harvey & Devon Kershaw

A couple quick notes about some sprinting results. Devon Kershaw Kershaw’s having a heck of a season. On of the things I’m been most impressed with is how much his sprinting has improved, which is something I feel like hasn’t been mentioned much in a lot of the coverage: The circled result in the most [...] Related posts:

  1. Canadian National Team Preview: Alex Harvey & Devon Kershaw
  2. Assessing The Weekend’s Races: Sprint
  3. Andrew Newell: Qualifying vs. Heats

Two topics today. Rybinsk Field Strength I’m including the Moscow sprints here, but generally these races are notorious for low attendance. They require some of the most travel for many of the Europeans and they are often scheduled very near the Scandinavian nation’s national championships. Did this year’s races attract a stronger or weaker field [...] Related posts:

  1. Rybinsk: Does Anyone Care?
  2. Race Snapshot: Rybinsk 10/20km Pursuit
  3. Rybinsk: Pursuit Recap

I know the Moscow city sprints were exciting and all, but I’ll have some posts on them and the Rybinsk races next week. For now, as promised we have the follow-up for sprinting from Wednesday’s post. These are the folks with the largest improvements in performance (within season). As before their results from this season [...] Related posts:

  1. Comparing Variability In Men’s & Women’s Sprinting
  2. Mid-Season Review: North American Sprint
  3. Sweden’s Men’s Sprinting

Since I feel bad picking on Vibeke Skofterud twice now, I thought I’d follow that up with a look at that kind of trend among all skiers. Today we’ll look at distance results, Friday we’ll consider sprinting. I hauled out my favorite statistical canon for this one, a mixed-effect model that compares each skiers results [...] Related posts:

  1. Putting WSC Sprint Results In Context
  2. How’d We Do? USA/CAN Season Review 4
  3. WC Split Times: Biggest Gains

First of all, I’ll echo Nat Herz’s big ups to Andrew Musgrave for finishing second at Norwegian Nationals the other day. I’ve always been a bit fascinated by Musgrave, probably because North Americans identify with any reasonably successful, promising skier not from Scandinavia or the usual European nations as fellow “outsiders”. So I’m always kind [...] Related posts:

  1. Is It Panic Time For The Norwegian Men’s Distance Skiers?
  2. Weekend FIS Races: Andrew Musgrave
  3. NOW Is It Panic Time For The Norwegian Men’s Distance Team?

I was interested (rather than offended) to read about Noah Hoffman’s pacing strategies in Sunday’s classic WC race. I have a limited supply of data on split times (what I do have is thanks to Jan over at worldofxc.com, though) so the following data is definitely incomplete. Hoffman seemed determined to not start too fast, [...] Related posts:

  1. Should You Start Fast Or Slow?
  2. US World Cup Split Times
  3. Canadian World Cup Splits

You’ll recall that recently this rivalry has been fairly one sided, no matter how much Justyna’s fans want to believe otherwise. The previous two season simply saw Marit winning far more of their head to head match-ups. At the start of the season, things looked even worse for the Justyna camp, as she struggled quite [...] Related posts:

  1. Victims & Nemeses: Marit and Justyna Edition
  2. Bjoern Daehlie vs Thomas Alsgaard
  3. Head-to-Head: Marit vs Justyna

As with most stage races these days, the Tour de Ski included some handicap start pursuits. Generally, the athletes will start in a staggered fashion based upon their time back in the overall standings, and the first person to the finish line wins the stage. This creates some very unusual incentives for the athletes, depending [...] Related posts:

  1. Kuusamo WC Recap: North Americans
  2. La Clusaz Recap: Distance Mass Start
  3. Race Snapshot: TdS Prologue

Once again, a bit after the fact…the heat times analysis for the freestyle sprint the other day. Men Starting with the finals: That was decidedly slow, tactical final. Interesting that David Hofer had such fast times in the quarters and semis. Semifinal 2 was slightly faster, but not by a ton. Women As for the [...] Related posts:

  1. TdS Classic Sprint Recap
  2. Tour de Ski Freestyle Sprint Recap
  3. Otepää Sprint Recap

I was skimming FasterSkier’s write-up of the Tour de Ski prologue yesterday and noted their comment about how Liz Stephen “… is generally stronger over longer distances, performing better in 10k’s than 5k’s and even better still in 15k’s.” That has been my informal impression as well, but I was suddenly skeptical about whether her actual [...] Related posts:

  1. How Well Prepared Are World Cup Rookies? (Part 1a: Distance)
  2. USST Preview: Liz Stephen & Morgan Arritola
  3. Technique Preferences: Italy