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Norwegian biathlete Johannes Boe won his fourth Olympic title by winning the mass start of the Beijing Olympics-2022, on the windy site of Zhangjiakou.

Johannes Boe, in gold in the men’s relay, the mixed relay, the sprint and therefore the mass-start, is the most successful athlete at the 2022 Olympics. He beat Sweden’s Martin Ponsiluoma and another Norwegian, Vetle Christiansen.

Christian Gow was the top Canadian with a 13th place finish.

Jules Burnotte took 18th place while Scott Gow took 25th position.

Irresistible on skis, Johannes Boe won without shaking despite two faults on his last standing shot (4 in total), while a strong wind disturbed all the participants.

A historic sixth medal held out to Frenchman Quentin Fillon Maillet as he attacked his last standing shot, alongside Sweden’s Ponsiluoma, behind Boe but far ahead of the other competitors. His first three missed balls (5 in total on the run) allowed Christiansen’s return.

Boe (28) and Fillon Maillet (29) therefore leave the Beijing Games with five medals each (four titles for the Norwegian, two for the Frenchman), a historic success.

“It was great Johannes, greeted his French coach Siegfried Mazet. We argued in Oberhof (Germany in January), he had done anything in shooting, I told him + if you want to get through your winter keep it up +. He worked, he went home for a week, he questioned himself, in his thing. We wanted to arrive here physically well. »

Braisaz-Bouchet tames the wind

French biathlete Justine Braisaz-Bouchet tamed the wind on Friday to become the 25-year-old Olympic mass start champion on Friday in Zhangjiakou.

Braisaz-Bouchet beat the Norwegians Tiril Eckhoff and Marte Olsbu Roeiseland.

The Frenchwoman started her race badly, with three penalty laps on her two lying shots. But while all the competitors, buffeted by the wind, had problems for the first standing shot, she blanked all her targets to go out on top tied with Roeiseland.

Faster on skis, she widened a gap of about fifteen seconds on her pursuers, and the only fault on her last shot was inconsequential, since her rivals also visited the penalty ring.

She was able to cross the finish line with the blue-white-red flag in hand, and afford her first gold medal in a major championship.

Braisaz-Bouchet had missed out on her first races, finishing only 40th in the individual (15 km) and 48th in the sprint.