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| Russia's Albina Akhatova waved her national
flag after winning the gold in women's 4X6km biathlon relay in 1:16:12.5
at the Turin Olympic Winter Games in Italy on February 23, 2006. (Xinhua
photo) | CESANA SAN SICARIO, Italy, Feb. 23 (Xinhuanet) -- The
Russian biathletes demonstrated their superb shooting skills here
Thursday,snatching the gold medal of the women's 4X6km biathlon relay at the
Turin Olympic Games.
The Russian team, led by 15km
individual winner Svetlana Ishmouratova, recorded the highest
shooting accuracy of the race with only two missed shots out of 40. They won the
race by a comfortable margin of 50.7 seconds.
Russia raced without Olga Pyleva, who was expelled
from the Turin Games after a positive result in a doping test. Pyleva had raced
in four of the past five World Cup relays for Russia.
But the absence of Pyleva didn't affect Russia's
performance. The Russians team, who started with Annan Bogaliy and finished with
Albina Akhatova, dominated the race ever since they started.
Bogaliy and Ishmouratova each lost one shot in
shooting, but made it up with spare bullets. The other two Russians Olga
Zaitseva and Akhatova shot clean.
Ishmouratova was excited with her second biathlon
gold. "Beforewe came here, we knew we could get gold in the relay, but I
couldn't have imagined that I could get gold in the individual as well. Having
two gold medals in this Olympics makes this the best day ofmy life," she said.
Ishmouratova said she did not expect the Russian team
to take the lead from the beginning. "I couldn't have hoped to have started the
race in this way, thanks to Anna (Bogaliy) we had sucha big advantage over the
German team."
The Germans had been following the Russians closely
during the first two legs. But their chance for the gold slipped away when its
third skier Katrin Apel missed three shots and failed to save it with spare
rounds.
Apel had to run a 150m loop penalty, which widened
the time difference with Russia to 1:10 minutes and made it impossible for the
last skier Kati Wilhelm to catch up.
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| Germany's Kati Wilhelm (R) embraced her
teammate after winning the silver in the women's 4X6km biathlon relay in
1:17:3.2 at the Turin Olympic Winter Games in Italy, on February 23, 2006.
(Xinhua photo) | Germany, with World Cup overall leader Kati Wilhelm
and two-time Turin Games silver medalist Martina Glagow, settled for the silver
in 1:17:03.2.
"I wanted to attack but there was no chance. The
Russians made a perfect race. We couldn't get close to them," Apel Katrin said
after the race.
France surpassed Belarus at the last leg and took the
bronze with surprise.
After three legs, the French team lagged 16.6 seconds
behind Belarus, and Sandrine Bailly fought the medal back by overtaking
Belarussian Olena Zubrilova and winning the bronze medal by 40.9 seconds.
"I believed in my teammates. I knew it wasn't over. I
started really fast to try to catch the Belarussian. At the first shootingI was
very nervous and at the second I said to myself, 'Sandrine slow down and shot
like in training," she said.
"This is a team medal. We are four women but with a
whole team behind them. It's a shared medal."
In the biathlon women's relay, four competitors ski
6km each with two shooting bouts -- standing and prone. Each athlete carries six
spare rounds, three for each shooting out.
If all five targets are not knocked down in the first
five rounds, the competitor will use a maximum of three rounds attempting to hit
the remaining targets. For each target left standing the competitor must ski a
150m penalty loop. Enditem (By Chang Ailing ) |