France is going to make the women's biathlon races as boring as Norway makes the men's XC skiing races, besides dominating the Olympics and having Jeanmonnot likely winning the World Cup overall, they currently have 6 out the top7 spots in the IBU Cup overall.
To be fair, being at the top in the IBU Cup in the circumstances is more a product of the World Cup depth, because any athletes who are performing up at the same level as the French IBU Cup squad for other teams are getting promoted. The French
have been dominating the level, but it probably isn't 6 out of 7 spots if the likes of Skar, Fichtner, Heijdenberg, Schneider, Skottheim, Carrara and pre-suspension Passler don't split some time at the World Cup.
This was Norway a few years ago, back when Johan-Olav Botn was winning 5 out of 6 IBU Cup races and not being able to get promoted because the only spots available at the World Cup were on rotation, and Tarjei Bø and Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen had perfected the art of pulling out a race win whenever their place in the team started to come under threat. Johannes Dale-Skjevdal has been on at least 3 occasions that I'm aware of relegated to the IBU Cup just because there wasn't room for him at the World Cup. In 2022-23, Norway had 5 of the top 6 on the IBU Cup (the exception being Lucas Fratzscher, a journeyman IBU Cup competitor who the Germans didn't tend to look at all too often for promotion at the time. He's got his Olympic start in the Individual here and is past 30, so I don't suspect we'll see too much more of him after this year) and in 2023-24 they bogarted the top 5. Of those, two are in the Olympic team (Botn in 2nd and Uldal in 4th), one is in the World Cup rotation (Frey in 5th), and two are still stuck at the IBU Cup (Øverby winning overall and Nevland in 3rd). They repeated the feat in 2024-25, with Frey winning overall, Botn in 3rd, and Dale in 5th, plus Bakken in 2nd and Sverre Dahle Aspenes in 4th. Of those, probably only Aspenes is somebody the team will perceive as topping out at this level (and even then, he got a podium albeit in a weakened field when he got rotated in at Nové Město).
Most fascinatingly, though, that domination has evaporated into thin air this season. Of course, the Bø brothers retiring opens up two spots, but they now have Vetle Rype Paulsen in 4th, Kalkenberg in 7th and Nevland down in 10th, while the French - who only had one man in the top 10 last year, Gaëtan Paturel in 8th - suddenly have four of the top 5. Yes, Levet, Lombardot and Paturel are all the correct side of 25, and Antonin Guigonnat is essentially a French equivalent to Roman Rees or Johannes Kühn in the German team. But this season France have just kicked into another gear on
both sides of the gender divide - it's just that they were already deep in talent and at the highest level on the women's side. But looking at the women who are part of that domination on the IBU Cup, Gilonne Guigonnat and Sophie Chauveau are both probably permanently stuck as rotational names, Paula Botet may be headed that way. The other ones are juniors or around that age though, and some are probably a bit too raw for the World Cup in a team as strong as the French one at this point in time, if Amandine Mengin's workouts at the start of the season are anything to go by.