Stadlober will gain a few spots with the two distance races, but she'll lose a good chunk of time in the sprint to better sprinters like Oestberg (although she didn't qualify in Lenzerheide), Nepryaeva, Jacobsen, Lampic, Diggins, etc. What's going to help her is that the sprint comes after the distance race, so the better sprinters will be a bit neutralized by the 10km. The top six figure to be fighting for the podium. What could be very interesting is that if the individual times from yesterday are a good indicator for tomorrow, then we may see the top 6 15-20 seconds apart. Then in the sprint, if Johaug somehow doesn't get into the top 30, and the other 5 women get into the final, then Johaug will be a bit pressured to win on the final climb. Now, even if she isn't at her best, you still figure she'll be the favorite for tomorrow and obviously for the Alpe Cermis, but for the sake of good competition and entertainment, I hope she loses the lead after the sprint and all 6 women are fighting for the 3 podium spots. Jacobsen and Nepryaeva are the 'weakest' climbers of the top 6, so I think they'll find it hard to get onto the podium, unless they both turn in excellent races tomorrow and Saturday and/or Andersson, Oestberg and Weng miss out on the heats and aren't feeling tomorrow. Weng really skied out of her skin yesterday to not only hang on to the chasing group but to get 3rd. She collapsed after the finish. I wonder how much of an effect that sort of effort will have come tomorrow and beyond. Who knows, maybe Johaug herself doesn't have a good day tomorrow and gains nothing.