The World Orienteering Championships starts on Friday July 31st at 19:00 CET with sprint qualification in Forres – a small town on the coast northeast of Inverness. The first medals are fought for in the sprint relay in neighbour town Nairn the day after – with start from 19:05 CET.
The championships continues with sprint final in Forres on Sunday (17:51 CET), Middle distance in Darnaway on Tuesday (12:54 CET), Relay in Darnaway on Wednesday (15:00 CET) and finally the long distance on Friday in Glen Affric (11:00 CET). Note that there are again no qualification races in long and middle.
The first medals are fought for in the sprint relay in Nairn on Saturday
Live services: How to follow the competitions
For spectators – either in the arena or at home through the Internet – the World Championships in Scotland should be excellent. Live TV and live GPS tracking is provided from all races through the IOF live center portal – you should buy a week pass for Euro 18 if you plan to watch more than a few races (buy the WOC week pass or single passes here). There will also be live results and live speaker sound. Because Glen Affric is such a remote wilderness area, it has very poor mobile phone coverage, and so there will be very limited live GPS tracking available for the Long race. In addition to the live TV being available through the IOF live portal, WOC will also be broadcast live in Sweden, Norway and Finland – and party in the UK. The organizers will also provide a live text commentary. WorldofO.com will follow the championships on the Twitter accounts WorldofOLive and WorldofO.
Useful links:
- IOF Livecenter – go here to buy access
- Live pages for each event at the organizers’ webpage (note that the organizer has very informative webpages this year):
- Sprint Qual – Sprint Relay – Sprint Final – Middle – Relay – Long
- WorldofOLive at Twitter
WOC 2015 Detailed program
All times are given in CET.
- Friday July 31st 19:00 (Women), 20:00 (Men): Sprint qualification – decided at 21:00
- Saturday August 1st 19:05: Mixed Sprint Relay (decided at 20:00)
- Sunday August 2nd 17:51 (Women), 18:55 (Men): Sprint final (decided 20:00)
- Tuesday August 4th 12:54 (Women), 15:13 (Men): Middle (decided 16:55)
- Wednesday August 5th 15:00 (Women), 17:00 (Men): Relay (decided 18:40)
- Friday August 6th 10:00 (Men and Women): Long (until 16:00)
Startlists are typically available after the teamleader meeting the evening before the event – expect to see them around 20:00 CET. From the sprint qualification, 15 runners go on to the finals in each heat.
In addition to the WOC competitions, IOF will also be having several meetings which are important for the future of the sport (full list of meeting schedule) – one of them is the extraordinary General Assembly Thursday morning.
Useful links
- Team overview WOC 2015 – with updated profile data.
- WOC 2015 webpage
- WOC 2015 Bulletin 4 – all updated information about the competition
- Results from earlier WOCs and WOC history by country
- Spectator information on the WOC 2015 page
- All embargoed areas and old maps
WOC Teams – sorted by country
Note that all teams have received login information to update the athlete data / profile miniature picture. If you are a competitor and have not received a link, please contact your team leader.
Terrain
Two different terrain types will be featured in forest parts of WOC 2015. The relay and middle distance will feature quite fast terrain at Darnaway with many contour details – described as complex glacial terrain. The forest has numerous small hills and depressions making for tricky navigation. There is a mixture of woodland types: open pine wood with ground cover of heather and dwarf shrub, denser pine and areas of broadleaves, especially beech. Both runnability and visibility will vary throughout the courses.
The long distance terrain is a lot more hilly, with a mix of pine, birch and oak, with steep slopes, complex contour detail, and few paths – real Scottish wilderness. Although the terrain is hilly, it is generally runnable, with localised deep heather and very little bracken.
The sprint parts of the championships will be in small Scottish towns – the terrain varying from the narrow lanes of the old town and complex housing estates to areas of parkland. The competitions will include a range of types of terrain from housing estate with extensive path networks to complex old town with many vennels (small lanes and minor roads). There are also several areas of parkland with an extensive path network. For the sprint relay, sand dunes are also mentioned in the terrain description.
WOC Long
Reigning champions are Thierry Gueorgiou and Svetlana Mironova (full results 2014 and article at WorldofO about WOC Long 2014).
WOC Sprint
Reigning champions are SøBobach and Judith Wyder (full results 2014 and article about WOC 2014 sprint on World of O).
WOC Middle
Reigning champions are Olav Lundanes and Annika Billstam (full results 2014 and article with maps and results from 2014).
WOC Relay
Reigning champions are Sweden and Switzerland (full results 2014 and article about WOC 2014 relay at WorldofO).
The terrain for the relay is the same as for the middle distance.
Sprint Relay (Mixed)
Reigning champion is Switzerland (full results 2014 and article about WOC 2014 Sprint Relay at World of O).
Jan! Update your information about courses, please. There is new info in bulletin 4 already.
@Mike: Yes, there are some small changes in course lengths, I just did a quick check and saw a few houndred meters change. The Bulletin unfortunately came too late – 15 minutes after the promised time was too late for my tight schedule, I took the course information available at 11:00 CET (and reloaded every second minute until I was finished with that part of the article at 11:15 CET). On the way to Scotland now. If there are major important changes, please add a comment here.
Is anyone hosting a WOC chatbox?