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- Q1347369 subject Q6316113.
- Q1347369 subject Q6349507.
- Q1347369 subject Q8413424.
- Q1347369 abstract "Mass start is a format of starting in some racing sports such as long-distance running in athletics (track and field), speed skating and long-distance cross-country skiing.There are usually a large number of competitors in such an event, and in order for all the competitors to have the same environmental conditions, which, among other things, include temperature, wind speed, rain or shine, etc., they need to start at the same time and same place and proceed along the same course. But the large number of competitors makes it impossible to fit all of them at the same starting line. So the athletes stand in a pack before they begin: some are behind others, sometimes by dozens of meters or more, depending on the number of competitors.The tradition is that all the athletes start at the same time, the gun time, and use the same starting line and same finishing line as those in the front of the pack. This means that those in the back of the pack have to run an extra distance. One's position in the pack at starting is determined either based on his previous records, or chosen by him based on his own expectation and etiquette. Usually, the best athletes take the front positions.Modern electronic technology has made it possible to get the time lapsed for each individual athlete from his crossing the starting line to his crossing the finishing line, the chip time. This is also called transponder timing. However, this has the disadvantage that the race finish is not simultaneous, so the race results do not match the finish line order. Other ways to avoid disadvantage towards those in the back of the pack are individual starts (where athletes start one at a time) and interval starts (where athletes are released in small batches). Chip time is normally not used to determine top positions. The first to reach the finish shall be the winner.In cross country skiing, on elite level, the tradition is individual start. Each athlete starts at his/her own predetermined time. Mass starts are used more often after 1990, partly because of TV influence. It creates better summaries for TV stations that do not want to show the entire race, and for viewers who do not want to see all.".
- Q1347369 thumbnail VCM-2004-start.jpg?width=300.
- Q1347369 wikiPageExternalLink fullpage.html?res=9A00E6DC1330F932A35752C1A9679C8B63.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q11466.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q11650.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q1464943.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q1807388.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q18544844.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q188907.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q192431.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q1962728.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q2066131.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q3312129.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q6316113.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q6349507.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q7925.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q82821.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q8413424.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q878123.
- Q1347369 wikiPageWikiLink Q917206.
- Q1347369 comment "Mass start is a format of starting in some racing sports such as long-distance running in athletics (track and field), speed skating and long-distance cross-country skiing.There are usually a large number of competitors in such an event, and in order for all the competitors to have the same environmental conditions, which, among other things, include temperature, wind speed, rain or shine, etc., they need to start at the same time and same place and proceed along the same course.".
- Q1347369 label "Mass start".
- Q1347369 depiction VCM-2004-start.jpg.