17:54.
Onlyseventeenth in the mass start of the biathlon world cup in Kontiolahti (Finland) on Sunday, her first career start, Océane Michelon (16/20) had to give up her blue bib as best U23.

Thirteenth on the finishing line, Sweden’s Sara Andersson (18/20) will wear it next Friday at the sprint in Hochfilzen (Austria). The new leader of the U23 rankings, she now has a 2-length lead over the Savoyard and a 3-length lead over Julia Tannheimer (19/20), fifth on the day. Jeanne Richard (18/20) is fourth at 10 points.
Live data from the mass-starts
The overall World Cup standings
- The full programme for the Kontiolahti World Cup, the first stage of the 2024/2025 season
- Corinne Niogret: my best memory of… Kontiolahti
- Top 3 nations cup target for France: the hunt for Olympic quotas for Milan/Cortina 2026, the other key issue of the 2024/2025 season
- World Cup overall leaders celebrated: this season, the IBU is introducing a yellow bib award ceremony
- After the opening relays, what is the programme for the second week of the Kontiolahti World Cup?
- Kontiolahti: where does Emilien Jacquelin’s “Night Night” celebration at the relay finish line come from?
- “I can’t wait to see how he performs”, “He’s progressed, he deserves it”: Emilien Claude’s return to the World Cup is a source of great joy to those close to him, Anna Gandler and Fabien Claude.
- “It’s time for me to come into my own and become the biathlete I was a few years ago”: Fabien Claude, the winter of affirmation at last?
- Kontiolahti: Endre Stroemsheim, at 20/20, beats Johannes Thingnes Boe in the individual short, Quentin Fillon-Maillet and Eric Perrot with the flowers
- Kontiolahti: for the first time in his career, Endre Stroemsheim will don the yellow World Cup leader’s bib
- “My best race ever”: Endre Stroemsheim and the Norwegians put everyone in agreement at Kontiolahti
- “With a full house, we could have been ahead…”: satisfaction, but also frustration for Quentin Fillon-Maillet and Eric Perrot, in the top 6 of the individual short in Kontiolahti.
- Ukraine’s Vitalii Mandzyn, sensation of the individual short with his fourth place: “I hope this is just the beginning”.
- “A dream come true”: ninth in the individual short in Kontiolahti, Thierry Langer scored his first World Cup top 10 finish
- “It’s the performances and results that count”: in Kontiolahti and Hochfilzen, the seven girls in the French team are fighting to take part in the Grand-Bornand World Cup.
- Lou Jeanmonnot is about to embark on the season of all things possible: “Playing the globe honestly, trying to keep a jersey and manage the pressure”.
- Kontiolahti: Julia Simon undergoes an MRI scan early this afternoon
- Kontiolahti: still uncertain about Julia Simon’s state of health on the eve of the individual short event
- Kontiolahti: despite injuring her left calf on the relay last Sunday, Julia Simon is taking part in the individual short race.
- Kontiolahti: on cloud nine with a 20/20, Lou Jeanmonnot dominates the individual short and gets her season off to an ideal start
- Kontiolahti: after wearing it for the first time in Hochfilzen in December 2023, Lou Jeanmonnot takes the yellow bib once again
- Kontiolahti: in Saturday’s sprint, Océane Michelon will become the first Frenchwoman to wear the blue number
- Lou Jeanmonnot’s satisfaction after her success in the Kontiolahti individual short: “I’m relieved to see that I’m not out of my depth”.
- “I didn’t feel any pain”: despite a modest 31st place in the Kontiolahti individual short, Julia Simon was reassuring about her left calf.
- “Beyond anything I could have imagined”: Ella Halvarsson, tears over her first World Cup podium in the individual short in Kontiolahti
- “I still can’t believe it”: the joy of Poland’s Natalia Sidorowicz, fourth in the individual short at Kontiolahti
- Frozen fingers, rifle problem, 92nd at the finish: Anamarija Lampic had one problem after another in the individual short at Kontiolahti.
- “It’s good for my head”: Anna Gandler explains why she does juggling sessions before her World Cup races
- Kontiolahti: Emilien Jacquelin, with a 10/10, takes the sprint and wins the World Cup for the first time in almost three years
- Kontiolahti: Emilien Jacquelin takes the red sprint bib, Johannes Thingnes Boe in yellow
- “There’s nothing exceptional about it”: after his magnificent success in the Kontiolahti sprint, Emilien Jacquelin is not getting carried away.
- Emilien Jacquelin tells Nordic Magazine after his resounding victory in the Kontiolahti sprint: “On the podium, I saw myself again three years ago in Le Grand-Bornand…”.
- “A private joke with a friend”: after the relay’s “Night Night”, Emilien Jacquelin celebrated his success in the Kontiolahti sprint with a finger on his mouth.
- “I had tears in my eyes”: Ole Einar Bjoerndalen was marked by Emilien Jacquelin’s return to favour
- “It did me good to get away from group A”: Antonin Guigonnat returned to the World Cup top 10 in the Kontiolahti sprint
- Kontiolahti: fourth in the sprint, New Zealand-born American Campbell Wright came close to pulling off a huge coup
- “Make it my strength, not my weakness”: Lou Jeanmonnot’s state of mind as he tackles the Kontiolahti sprint with the yellow bib on his shoulders.
- Kontiolahti: Czech Marketa Davidova makes a comeback to win the sprint, Océane Michelon tops the French rankings
- Kontiolahti: Lou Jeanmonnot loses her yellow bib (already), Elvira Oeberg takes it over
- “I was already off the mat mentally while I was still on it physically”: how Lou Jeanmonnot came out of her standing shot in the Kontiolahti sprint.
- Kontiolahti: tenth in the sprint, Océane Michelon keeps her blue bib as best U23 rider
- “The desire is there, but I’m trying to find my way, I can’t seem to put things together”: 47th in the Kontiolahti sprint, her worst result since December 2021, Julia Simon is worried.
- On the eve of his 30th birthday, Suvi Minkkinen takes his first World Cup podium finish
- 52 seconds 6 on the mat, 20 seconds between the fourth and fifth ball: a look back at Justine Braisaz-Bouchet’s interminable recumbent shot during the Kontiolahti sprint.
- Kontiolahti: first World Cup mass-start day for Jeanne Richard and Océane Michelon
- “There’s nothing dangerous”: once again hampered by a heart rhythm problem during the Kontiolahti sprint, Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold isn’t panicking
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In this article:Biathlon, blue bib, Jeanne Richard, Julia Tannheimer, Kontiolahti, mass-start, Océane Michelon, World Cup

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