1999 World Orienteering Championships
1999 edition of the World Orienteering Championships
Host city | Inverness |
---|---|
Country | Scotland |
Events | 6 |
← 1997 Grimstad 2001 Tampere → |
The 1999 World Orienteering Championships, the 18th World Orienteering Championships, were held in Inverness, Scotland, 1–8 August 1999.[1]
The championships had six events; the classic distance (formerly called individual) for men and women, the short distance for men and women, and relays for men and women.
Medalists
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men's classic distance [1] | Bjørnar Valstad (NOR) | 1.37.25 | Carl Henrik Bjørseth (NOR) | Alain Berger (SUI) | ||
Women's classic distance [1] | Kirsi Boström (FIN) | 1.17.56 | Hanne Staff (NOR) | Johanna Asklöf (FIN) | ||
Men's short distance [1] | Jørgen Rostrup (NOR) | 25.48 | Juha Peltola (FIN) | Janne Salmi (FIN) | ||
Women's short distance [1] | Yvette Baker (GBR) | 25.55 | Lucie Böhm (AUT) | Frauke Schmitt Gran (GER) | ||
Men's relay[1] | Norway (NOR)
| 3.21.50 | Sweden (SWE)
| |||
Women's relay[1] | 2.55.56 |
Results
Women's classic distance
Rank | Competitor | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Kirsi Boström | Finland | 1:17:56 | |
Hanne Staff | Norway | 1:18:30 | |
Johanna Asklöf | Finland | 1:18:33 | |
4 | Yvette Baker | Great Britain | 1:19:10 |
5 | Hanne Sandstad | Norway | 1:19:37 |
6 | Reeta-Mari Kolkkala | Finland | 1:19:46 |
7 | Kylli Kaljus | Estonia | 1:19:58 |
Women's short distance
Rank | Competitor | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Yvette Baker | Great Britain | 25:55 | |
Lucie Böhm | Austria | 26:57 | |
Frauke Schmitt Gran | Germany | 27:48 | |
4 | Sanna Nymalm | Finland | 27:50 |
5 | Marlena Jansson | Sweden | 27:50 |
6 | Hanne Sandstad | Norway | 27:55 |
7 | Vroni König-Salmi | Switzerland | 28:24 |
Men's classic distance
Rank | Competitor | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Bjørnar Valstad | Norway | 1:37:25 | |
Carl Henrik Bjørseth | Norway | 1:40:20 | |
Alain Berger | Switzerland | 1:40:26 | |
4 | Jimmy Birklin | Sweden | 1:42:30 |
5 | Johan Ivarsson | Sweden | 1:42:51 |
6 | Petter Thoresen | Norway | 1:42:58 |
7 | Bernt Bjørnsgaard | Norway | 1:43:15 |
Men's short distance
Rank | Competitor | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Jørgen Rostrup | Norway | 25:48 | |
Juha Peltola | Finland | 26:11 | |
Janne Salmi | Finland | 26:14 | |
4 | Jani Lakanen | Finland | 26:15 |
5 | Håkan Eriksson | Sweden | 26:24 |
6 | Johan Ivarsson | Sweden | 26:44 |
7 | Petter Thoresen | Norway | 26:59 |
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "World Orienteering Championships 1999". International Orienteering Federation. Archived from the original on 6 July 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
- v
- t
- e
- Fiskars 1966
- Linköping 1968
- Friedrichroda 1970
- Staré Splavy 1972
- Viborg 1974
- Aviemore 1976
- Kongsberg 1978
- Tampere 1979
- Thun 1981
- Zalaegerszeg 1983
- Bendigo 1985
- Gérardmer 1987
- Skövde 1989
- Mariánské Lázně 1991
- West Point 1993
- Detmold 1995
- Grimstad 1997
- Inverness 1999
- Tampere 2001
- Rapperswil/Jona 2003
- Västerås 2004
- Aichi 2005
- Århus 2006
- Kyiv 2007
- Olomouc 2008
- Miskolc 2009
- Trondheim 2010
- Savoie 2011
- Lausanne 2012
- Vuokatti 2013
- Trentino–Veneto 2014
- Inverness 2015
- Strömstad–Tanum 2016
- Tartu 2017
- Riga 2018
- Østfold 2019
Triangle Region 2020- Doksy 2021
- Triangle Region 2022
- Graubünden 2023
- Edinburgh 2024
- Kuopio 2025
- Hyvinkää 1975
- Velingrad 1977
- Avesta 1980
- Aigen 1982
- Lavarone 1984
- Batak 1986
- Kuopio 1988
- Skellefteå 1990
- Pontarlier 1992
- Val di Non 1994
- Lillehammer 1996
- Windischgarsten 1998
- Krasnoyarsk 2000
- Borovetz 2002
- Åsarna 2004
- Levi 2005
- Moscow Oblast 2007
- Rusutsu 2009
- Tänndalen 2011
- Ridder 2013
- Hamar 2015
- Krasnoyarsk 2017
- Piteå 2019
- Fontainebleau 2002
- Ballarat 2004
- Banska Bystrica 2005
- Joensuu 2006
- Nove Mesto na Morave 2007
- Ostróda 2008
- Ben Shemen 2009
- Montalegre 2010
- Vicenza 2011
- Veszprém 2012
- Rakvere 2013
- Białystok 2014
- Liberec 2015
- Águeda 2016
- Vilnius 2017
- Zwettl 2018
- Viborg 2019
- Jeseník 2020
- Västerås 2004
- Aichi 2005
- Joensuu 2006
- Kiev 2007
- Olomouc 2008
- Miskolc 2009
- Trondheim 2010
- Savoie 2011
- Scotland 2012
- Vuokatti 2013
- Trentino-Veneto 2014
- Zagreb 2015
- Strömstad-Tanum 2016
- Birstonas 2017
- Daugavpils 2018
- Idanha-a-Nova 2019
- Hong Kong 2020