Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (born 12 May 1992) is a Norwegian
biathlete
The biathlon is a winter sport that combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting. It is treated as a race, with contestants skiing through a cross-country trail whose distance is divided into shooting rounds. The shooting rounds are not time ...
.
Early life
Christiansen was born in
Geilo
is a centre in the municipality of Hol in Viken county, Norway. Geilo is primarily a ski resort town, with around 2,500 inhabitants. It is situated in the valley of Hallingdal, 250 km from Oslo and 260 km from Bergen. The Bergen Line ...
, a centre in the municipality of
Hol, to Randi Sjåstad and her husband Georg William Christiansen. His younger sister,
Tiril Sjåstad Christiansen
Tiril Sjåstad Christiansen (born 7 April 1995) is a Norwegian freestyle skier. She hails from Geilo and represents Geilo IL. She won her first Winter X Games medal in the Women's Slopestyle at the Winter X Games XVII in Aspen, Colorado. She won ...
, is a successful freestyle skier.
Christiansen began his career by racing in biathlon and cross-country skiing as a junior on the national level. In his youth, his greatest idol was
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
Ole Einar Bjørndalen () (born 27 January 1974) is a retired Norwegian professional biathlete and coach, often referred to by the nickname, the "King of Biathlon". With 13 Winter Olympic Games medals, he is second on the list of multiple medali ...
. Christiansen learned much about how to train from literature of and about Bjørndalen, and was inspired by Bjørndalen's training mentality, and started training a lot and hard, from a very early age. On the last day of the
2004 World Championships, Christiansen set a long-term goal of qualifying for the
2014 Winter Olympics. In 2008, Christiansen entered the Norwegian College of Elite Sport in
Geilo
is a centre in the municipality of Hol in Viken county, Norway. Geilo is primarily a ski resort town, with around 2,500 inhabitants. It is situated in the valley of Hallingdal, 250 km from Oslo and 260 km from Bergen. The Bergen Line ...
.
Career
Early career and World Cup debut
Before turning 17, Christiansen had made a clean sweep at the Junior Norwegian Championships in his age group, winning four gold medals, and he won the Norwegian Biathlon Cup (Norgescupen) in his age category, called the Statkraft Junior Cup, overall. He had also won two golds in the Junior Norwegian Summer Biathlon Championships in September 2008, in the 17-year-olds age group. At the end of the 2008–09 season, Christiansen participated in the
2009 Norwegian Biathlon Championships. He did not participate in the 20 km individual, but finished 17th in the sprint and 8th in the pursuit. This caused Christiansen to be selected for the first team of Buskerud alongside
Christian Georg Bache,
Frode Andresen
Frode Andresen (born 9 September 1973) is a former Norwegian biathlete and cross-country skier.
Early life
Andresen was born in the Netherlands, and lived one year each in Cape Town, South Africa; Lagos, Nigeria; and Nairobi, Kenya, because o ...
and Ole Einar Bjørndalen. Though he incurred a penalty loop, he made up two places over his leg, and good work by Andresen and Bjørndalen secured the gold.
During the off-season, Christiansen participated in the Junior Norwegian Summer Championships, in the age group for 18-year-olds. He won silver in the sprint and gold in the pursuit. When the winter came, Christiansen debuted at the
Junior/Youth World Championships in
2010 in
Torsby
Torsby () is a locality and the seat of Torsby Municipality in Värmland County, Sweden with 4,049 inhabitants in 2010.
Fortum Ski Tunnel Torsby, the world's longest ski tunnel, is located in Torsby.
Notable people
* Football manager Sven- ...
, competing in the youth class. The first event was the 12.5 km individual on 27 January in which he received three penalty minutes, but still won bronze. Three days later, Christiansen won another bronze, this time in the 7.5 km sprint. The next day, Christiansen fell two places and finished fifth. Two days later, Christiansen raced in the 3 × 7.5 km relay, taking the anchor leg. Christiansen started his leg in third position, and kept that position until the end, and the team thus won bronze. Later in February, Christiansen participated in the Junior Norwegian Championships. He won gold in the individual, came fourth in the sprint, and won silver in the relay. At the end of the season, Christiansen participated in the
Norwegian Championships at Simostranda. He did not race in the individual, but came 11th in the sprint and 13th in the mass start. In the relay, Christiansen took the first leg for the first team of Buskerud. He changed in third, but a total of five penalty loops by his teammates,
Anders Brun Hennum, Bache and Andresen, meant they finished in fifth.
In September 2010, Christiansen competed in the Junior Norwegian Summer Championships, in the age group for 19-year-olds. He came second in both the sprint and pursuit. In January 2011, Christiansen again competed in the
Junior/Youth World Championships, this time in
Nové Město, competing in the youth class. The first event was the 7.5 km sprint on 29 January in which he received two penalties and won silver. The following day, Christiansen started eighteen seconds behind
Maxim Tsvetkov. He missed four times, but still won silver, thirty seconds behind Tsvetkov. Two days later, Christiansen raced in the 12.5 km individual in which he incurred three penalty minutes, and yet won bronze. Norway did not participate in the relay in the youth category, but Christiansen was selected for team that raced in the junior category. Christiansen took the anchor leg. At the exchange, the Norwegians was in third position, Christiansen defended that position and the Norwegians won bronze. In March, Christiansen participated Junior Norwegian Championships. He won gold in the individual, came sixth in the sprint, but returned to the top of the podium in the relay. At the end of the season, Christiansen participated in the
2011 Norwegian Championships. He again skipped the individual, but came 13th in the sprint and 8th in the pursuit. In the relay, he again took the first leg, and changed in fourth place. Fast skiing and good shooting by his teammates, Andresen, Hennum and the returning Bjørndalen, meant that the team from Buskerud again won gold, more than two minutes ahead of second place.
In September 2011, Christiansen once again competed in the Junior Norwegian Summer Championships, in the age group for 20- and 21-year-olds. He came eighth in the sprint, but climbed to claim gold in the pursuit. In January 2012, Christiansen debuted in the
Junior European Championships in
Brezno-Osrblie. In the first event, the 10 km sprint on 27 January, he missed once, but still won gold, just one second ahead of
Alexandr Loginov. Two days later, Christiansen won silver in the 12.5 km pursuit, 23.5 seconds behind Loginov, despite both having missed twice. The next event was the mixed relay in which Christiansen took the anchor leg. The Norwegians led at the last exchange and as Christiansen needed only two spare rounds to clear the targets, they won gold. He also participated in the last event, the 15 km individual. He missed twice, but still won bronze, thanks to quick ski speed. Christiansen competed in the
Junior/Youth World Championships in 2012 as well, this time in
Kontiolahti
Kontiolahti ( sv, Kontiolax; literally meaning "bear bay") is a municipalities of Finland, municipality of Finland. It is located in the North Karelia regions of Finland, region, about north of Joensuu. The municipality has a population of () and ...
, competing in the junior category. The first event was the 15 km individual on 21 February. He skied quickly, but missed six times and finished 16th. Two days later, Christiansen raced in the relay, once again taking the anchor leg. The Norwegian team led the race at the last exchange and Christiansen defended their lead, and the Norwegians won gold. The next race, two days later, was the 10 km sprint. Christiansen missed twice and finished 13th. Christiansen skied better in the pursuit the following day, where he missed twice, but climbed eleven places to win silver just ahead of
Alexandr Loginov, and over one minute and forty seconds behind the sprint winner Tsvetkov. In March, Christiansen raced in the Junior Norwegian Championships, winning silver in the individual and gold in the sprint, and finishing fourth in the relay. At the season's end, Christiansen participated in the
Norwegian Championships in Trondheim. He came 13th in the 20 km individual and 9th in the 10 km sprint, but skipped the mass start. He then took the anchor leg in the relay. Andresen, Tommi Luchsinger and
Erlend Bjøntegaard had pulled Buskerud I into fourth position, and Christiansen was the fastest in his leg, pulling them into second, winning silver.
In September 2012, Christiansen competed at the Norwegian Summer Biathlon Championships in
Holmenkollen
Holmenkollen () is a mountain and a neighbourhood in the Vestre Aker borough of Oslo, Norway. It goes up to above sea level and is well-known for its international skiing competitions.
Overview
In addition to being a residential area, the are ...
, for the first time in the senior group. He impressed by winning bronze, just 6.8 seconds behind
Lars Berger who won silver and one minute and ten seconds behind Bjørndalen. Christiansen won another bronze the next day, though the gap to Berger and Bjørndalen had grown to 18 seconds, and two minutes and 49 seconds, respectively. In the first round of the
2012–13 World Cup, on 1 December 2012, Christiansen made his
World Cup
A world cup is a global sporting competition in which the participant entities – usually international teams or individuals representing their countries – compete for the title of world champion. The event most associated with the concept i ...
debut.
The race was the 10 km sprint and he missed twice and finished 27th, 1 minute and 18 seconds behind the winner, the Canadian
Jean-Philippe Leguellec
Jean-Philippe Le Guellec (born 31 July 1985) is a former Canadian biathlete.
Le Guellec began competing in the biathlon in 1999, and joined the national team in 2003. He had significant success at the Junior World Championships, winning two med ...
, qualifying for the pursuit the following day. Over the rest of the season he would race in ten more races breaking three more barriers. First, in
Hochfilzen
Hochfilzen is a town and municipality in the Kitzbühel district of the Austrian state of Tyrol. It is located in the Pillersee valley 5 km east of Fieberbrunn. Population was 1,147 in 2016.
It is a popular winter sports resort, especially f ...
in his fifth World Cup race and first relay, Christiansen also won his first relay. He raced alongside fellow newcomers
Lars Helge Birkeland and
Henrik L'Abée-Lund, both having clocked in less than twenty World Cup races, and the veteran
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
Ole Einar Bjørndalen () (born 27 January 1974) is a retired Norwegian professional biathlete and coach, often referred to by the nickname, the "King of Biathlon". With 13 Winter Olympic Games medals, he is second on the list of multiple medali ...
, who had raced more than 460 World Cup races. Birkeland shot fast and cleanly in the first leg to hand over to Bjørndalen just 9.8 seconds behind, in fourth place. Bjørndalen would require only one spare round, which, combined with his swift shooting and skiing, brought the Norwegians the lead. At the second exchange, Bjørndalen handed over to Christiansen, 6.0 seconds ahead of the Czech Republic. Christiansen skied fast and shot cleanly and this, combined with mistakes by other teams, increased the lead to 47.0 seconds. L'Abée-Lund took the anchor leg. Also he shot fast and cleanly, compensating in large part for his skiing speed. The Norwegians won 34.5 seconds ahead of France in second and 46.6 seconds ahead of Russia in third.
Christiansen participated only briefly in the
Junior/Youth World Championships in 2013 in
Obertilliach. The championships started for Christiansen with the 10 km sprint event. He shot cleanly, but he finished outside the podium in fourth position. He did not start in the pursuit, nor did he enter any more events in the championships. Christiansen participated in the
European Championships the following month. In the first race, Christiansen and his fellow Norwegians were not acclimatized. Thus, Christiansen finished 18th in the 20 km individual, despite missing only once. The next race, the 10 km sprint, was postponed twice due to heavy fog, giving the Norwegians two extra days to acclimatize. This allowed Christiansen to pick up his pace and win the gold in the sprint, shooting clear. The pursuit competition crashed with the men's relay, with the result being that the relay was cancelled. Christiansen won silver in the pursuit, having missed three times, the same amount as the winner,
Benedikt Doll.
The second barrier Christiansen broke in the World Cup was finishing in the top ten in an individual race. That race was the season's last sprint, in
Khanty-Mansiysk
Khanty-Mansiysk ( rus, Ха́нты-Манси́йск, Khánty-Mansíysk, lit. ''Khanty-Mansi Town''; Khanty: , ''Jomvoćś''; Mansi: , ''Abga'') is a city and the administrative center of Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug–Yugra, Russia. It stan ...
. Christiansen shot cleanly and finished tenth, one minute and four seconds behind the winner,
Martin Fourcade
Martin Fourcade (; born 14 September 1988) is a French biathlete and sous-lieutenant. He is a five-time Olympic champion, a thirteen-time World Champion and a seven-time winner of the Overall World Cup. As of February 2018, he is the most succes ...
. This result, alongside the 11th-place finish in the pursuit, qualified Christiansen for his first mass start in the World Cup, breaking another barrier. The season was thus a remarkable success, with Christiansen mostly finishing in the top 30 individually, and finished 43rd overall in the World Cup.
The season ended with the
Norwegian Championships in Dombås. Christiansen came tenth in the individual, having missed five times, and fifth in the sprint despite having missed four times. Christiansen then came fourth in the pursuit, having lost the bronze in a sprint finish with
Lars Berger. In the relay, he took the anchor leg, lifting the team from Buskerud from sixth to third, winning bronze.
Olympic season (2013–14 World Cup season)
On 3 April 2013, Christiansen was selected to the elite team for the first time, being selected alongside
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
Ole Einar Bjørndalen () (born 27 January 1974) is a retired Norwegian professional biathlete and coach, often referred to by the nickname, the "King of Biathlon". With 13 Winter Olympic Games medals, he is second on the list of multiple medali ...
,
Johannes Thingnes Bø
Johannes Thingnes Bø (born 16 May 1993) is a Norwegian biathlete. He is the younger brother of biathlete Tarjei Bø. At the Olympic Games in Beijing 2022, they became the first siblings to have individual medals in the same biathlon event. Th ...
,
Tarjei Bø
Tarjei Bø (born 29 July 1988) is a Norwegian professional biathlete. Awarded Olympic gold medals, World Championship gold medals and World Cup victories from 2010 to 2022. Bø debuted in the Biathlon World Cup on 26 March 2009 in Khanty-Mansiy ...
, fellow newcomer
Henrik L'Abée-Lund, and
Emil Hegle Svendsen
Emil Hegle Svendsen (born 12 July 1985) is a retired Norwegian biathlete. He has won eight medals at Winter Olympics (four gold) and five individual gold medals and seven relay gold medals at World Championships.
He skis with Trondhjems Skiskytte ...
. At the Norwegian Summer Championships in Mo i Rana, Christiansen won silver in both the sprint and pursuit, behind Svendsen in the sprint and Bjørndalen in the pursuit. In November, Christiansen participated in the traditional qualifying races at
Sjusjøen. Christiansen finished a disappointing 32nd in the 10 km sprint, but secured World Cup participation by coming second in the 15 km mass start, just 4.9 seconds behind Bjørndalen. Christiansen helped the Norwegians finish in second place in the opening mixed relay of the season in
Östersund
Östersund (; sma, Staare) is an urban area (city) in Jämtland in the middle of Sweden. It is the seat of Östersund Municipality and the capital of Jämtland County. Östersund is located at the shores of Sweden's fifth-largest lake, Storsjön, ...
. In the individual and sprint, he came 16th and 29th, being the best Norwegian in the individual. In Hochfilzen, he performed badly in the sprint, missing three times, and finishing 53rd. He was nevertheless given the first leg in the relay the next day. He skied fast, but needed four spare rounds and changed 31.4 seconds behind the leader. However, Bjørndalen claimed the lead on the second leg, and Tarjei Bø and Svendsen defended that lead, meaning that Christiansen got his second relay victory. The following day, Christiansen climbed more than twenty places, finishing 31st. He skipped the third round of the World Cup, but competed in the fourth round, finishing 15th in the sprint, his best individual finish of the season. He faltered in the pursuit, however, and finished 35th. He was not qualified for the mass start, and his next competition was the relay in
Ruhpolding
Ruhpolding is the municipality with the biggest area of the Traunstein district in southeastern Bavaria, Germany. It is situated in the south of the Chiemgau region in the Alps and next to the Austrian border.
Ruhpolding has a biathlon track. ...
. However, Johannes Thingnes Bø incurred three penalty loops on the first leg and changed to his brother in 22nd place. Tarjei Bø climbed to 14th, and Christiansen raced a decent leg, climbing to 10th. Svendsen then secured the Norwegians a ninth place. In the following 20 km individual, Christiansen shot well, but skied rather slowly and finished 56th, and decided to not start in the pursuit. He was nevertheless selected for the Olympic squad, albeit as a reserve for the relay, fulfilling his long-term goal. He did not race in
Antholz-Anterselva
Rasen-Antholz (; it, Rasun-Anterselva ) is a municipality in South Tyrol in northern Italy.
Geography
The municipal area stretches along the Antholz valley, a northern side valley of the larger Puster Valley. In the northeast, the Staller Saddl ...
, and did not get to race in any races at the Olympics.
In Pokljuka, in the first World Cup round after the Olympics, Christiansen finished 64th in the 10 km sprint and thus did not qualify for the pursuit. He was not qualified for the mass start either. He did not race in the next round of the World Cup, but returned for the last round of races at Holmenkollen.
There, he finished 41st in both the sprint and the pursuit. To end the season Christiansen participated in the
2014 Norwegian Championships. In the 20 km individual and the 10 km sprint, Christiansen came 7th, whilst he won silver in the 15 km mass start. In the relay, the Buskerud team suffered in the absence of the ill Bjørndalen and the retired Andresen, and finished sixth.
Stagnation and illness (2014–15 World Cup season)
Christiansen was reselected ahead of the
2014–15 season, the whole team being reselected. In September, Christiansen competed at the Norwegian Summer Championships in Steinkjer. There, he came sixth in both the sprint and the pursuit. At the season start races at
Sjusjøen, Vetle came third in the sprint, but came 17th in the mass start. He was selected for the mixed relay and individual in Östersund, with a chance of getting the last place in the sprint. In the mixed relay, Christiansen again helped the Norwegians to a second-place finish. In the individual, he finished a disappointing 53rd, but was still given the last spot in the sprint due to
Lars Helge Birkeland finishing 84th. In the sprint, Christiansen finished 45th despite missing only once, but he climbed thirty places in the pursuit by being the only one to hit all twenty targets, and finished 15th. Christiansen's results in Östersund were below expectations and he was not selected for the second round of the World Cup. He returned in the last round before the Christmas break, and delivered better results by finishing 30th in the sprint and 39th in the pursuit. However, he was not selected for the World Cups in Oberhof and Ruhpolding, but after both Tarjei Bø and Emil Hegle Svendsen fell ill, he was needed for the relay and sprint in Oberhof. He took the first leg in the relay, changing in fourth place. The rest of the team,
Alexander Os, Johannes Thingnes Bø and Ole Einar Bjørndalen, gained the lead, but victory was snatched in a sprint finish with
Anton Shipulin, and so the Norwegians finished second. Christiansen finished 67th in the sprint and decided to return to Norway for a medical examination, having been feeling tired for some time. It was revealed that he had been affected in some way by the
Rhinovirus
The rhinovirus (from the grc, ῥίς, rhis "nose", , romanized: "of the nose", and the la, vīrus) is the most common viral infectious agent in humans and is the predominant cause of the common cold. Rhinovirus infection proliferates in tem ...
, but he remained unable to compete and train properly for the next six months.
Leaving the national team (2015–16 World Cup season)
Due to his illness, he decided to leave the national biathlon team ahead of the
2015–16 season, and joined a private biathlon team called Team Norgesbakeriet. The team was composed of
Vetle Ravnsborg Gurigard,
Kristoffer Langøien Skjelvik,
Håkon Svaland,
Martin Eng,
Tore Leren and Christiansen, with
Knut Tore Berland as coach. He did not participate in the 2015 Norwegian Summer Championships.
[ ]
Biathlon results
All results are sourced from the
International Biathlon Union.
Olympic Games
''2 medal (1 gold, 1 bronze)''
World Championships
''4 medals (3 gold)''
:''*During Olympic seasons competitions are only held for those events not included in the Olympic program.''
Junior/Youth World Championships
''9 medals (1 gold, 3 silver, 5 bronze)''
Biathlon World Cup
Individual victories (3)
References
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Christiansen, Vetle Sjastad
1992 births
Living people
People from Hol
Norwegian male biathletes
Biathlon World Championships medalists
Biathletes at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic biathletes of Norway
Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic medalists in biathlon
Olympic gold medalists for Norway
Olympic bronze medalists for Norway
Sportspeople from Viken (county)