1924-1964: not scheduled
1968 Grenoble
1. URSS 2h13’02”4
(Vladimir Gundartsev, Viktor Mamatov, Nikolay Puzanov, Aleksandr Tikhonov)
2. Norway 2h14’50”2
(Jon Istad, Magnar Solberg, Olav Jordet, Ola Waerhaug)
3. Sweden 2h17’26”3
(Holmfrid Olsson, Olle Petrusson, Tore Eriksson, Lars-Göran Arwidson)
4. Poland 2h20’19”6
(Stanislaw Szczepaniak, Stanislaw Lukaszczyk, Andrzej Fiedor, Józef Rózak)
5. Finland 2h20’41”8
(Arve Kinnari, Kalevi Vänäkylä, Heikki Flöjt, Juhani Suutarinen)
6. German Democratic Republic 2h21’54”5
(Dieter Speer, Horst Koschka, Hans-Gert Jahn, Heinz Kluge)
7. Romania 2h25’39”8
(Vilmoş Gheorghe, Nicolae Bărbăşescu, Constantin Carabela, Gheorghe Cimpoia)
8. USA 2h28’35”5
(John Ehrensbeck, William Allen Spencer, Edward Williams, Ralph Wakely)
1972 Sapporo
1. URSS 1h51’44”92
(Aleksandr Tikhonov, Rinnat Safin, Ivan Biakov, Viktor Mamatov)
2. Finland 1h54’37”25
(Esko Saira, Juhani Suutarinen, Heikki lkola, Mauri Röppänen)
3. German Democratic Republic 1h54’57”67
(H-Joerg Knauthe, Joachim Meischner, Dieter Speer, Horst Koschka)
4. Norway 1h56’24”41
(Tor Svendsberget, Kaare Hovda, Ivar Nordkild, Magnar Solberg)
5. Sweden 1h56’57”40
(Lars-Goran Arwidson, Olle Petrusson, Torsten Wadman, Holmfrid Olsson)
6. USA 1h57’24”32
(Peter Karns, Dexter Morse, Dennis Donahue, William Bowerman)
7. Poland 1h58’09”92
(Józef Rózak, Józef Stopka, Andrzej Rapacz, Alexander Klima)
8. Japan 1h59’09”48
(Isao Ohno, Shozo Sasaki, Miki Shibuya, Kazuo Sasakubo)
10. Italy 1h59’47”62
(Willy Bertin, Giovanni Astegiano, Corrado Varesco, Lino Jordan)
1976 Innsbruck
1. URSS 1h57’55”64
(Aleksandr Yelizarov, Ivan Biakov, Nikolay Kruglov, Aleksandr Tikhonov)
2. Finland 2h01’45”58
(Henrik Flöjt, Esko Saira, Juhani Suutarinen, Heikki lkola)
3. German Democratic Republic 2h04’08”61
(Karl-Heinz Menz, Frank Ullrich, Manfred Beer, Manfred Geyer)
4. German Federal Republic 2h04’11”86
(Heinrich Mehringer, Gerhard Winkler, Josef Keck, Claus Gehrke)
5. Norway 2h05’10”28
(Kjell Hovda, Terje Hanssen, Svein Engen, Tor Svendsberget)
6. Italy 2h06’16”55
(Lino Jordan, Pierantonio Clementi, Luigi Weiss, Willy Bertin)
7. France 2h07’34”42
(René Arpin, Yvon Mougel, Marius Falquy, Jean-Claude Viry)
8. Sweden 2h08’46”90
(Mats-Ǻke Lantz, Torsten Wadman, Sune Adolfsson, Lars-Goran Arwidson)
1980 Lake Placid
1. URSS 1h34’03”27
(Vladimir Alikin, Aleksandr Tikhonov, Vladimir Barnachov, Anatoly Alyabyev)
2. German Democratic Republic 1h34’56”99
(Mathias Jung, Klaus Siebert, Frank Ullrich, Eberhard Rösch)
3. German Federal Republic 1h37’30”26
(Franz Bernreiter, Hansi Estner, Peter Angerer, Gerhard Winkler)
4. Norway 1h38’11”76
(Svein Engen, Kjell Søbak, Odd Lirhus, Sigleif Johansen)
5. France 1h38’23”36
(Yvon Mougel, Denis Sandona, André Geourjon, Chrìstian Poirot)
6. Austria 1h38’32”02
(Rudolf Horn, Franz-Josef Weber, Josef Koll, Alfred Eder)
7. Finland 1h38’50”84
(Keijo Kuntola, Erkki Antila, Kari Saarela, Raimo Seppänen)
8. USA 1h39’24”29
(Martin Hagen, Lyle Nelson, Donald Nielsen, Peter Hoag)
9. Italy 1h40’20”79
(Arduino Tiraboschi, Adriano Darioli, Celestino Midali, Luigi Weiss)
1984 Sarajevo
1. USA 1h38’51”7
(Dmitry Vasilyev, Yuri Kashkarov, Algimantas Šalna, Sergey Bulygin)
2. Norway 1h39’03”9
(Odd Lirhus, Eirik Kvalfoss, Rolf Storsveen, Kjell Søbak)
3. German Federal Republic 1h39’05”1
(Ernst Reiter, Walter Pichler, Peter Angerer, Fritz Fischer)
4. German Democratic Republic 1h40’04”7
(Holger Wick, Frank-Peter Roetsch, Matthias Jacob, Frank Ullrich)
5. Italy 1h42’32”8
(Adriano Darioli, Gottlieb Taschler, Johann Passler, Andreas Zingerle)
6. Czechoslovakia 1h42’40”5
(Jaromír Šimůnek, Zdeněk Hák, Peter Zelinka, Jan Matouš)
7. Finland 1h43’16”00
(Keijo Tiitola, Toivo Mäkikyrö, Arto Jääskeläinen, Tapio Piipponen)
8. Austria 1h43’28”10
(Rudolf Horn, Walter Hörl, Franz Schuler, Alfred Eder)
1988 Calgary
1. URSS 1h22’30”0
(Dmitry Vasilyev, Sergey Chepikov, Aleksandr Popov, Valery Medvedtsev)
2. German Federal Republic 1h23’37”4
(Ernst Reiter, Stefan Höck, Peter Angerer, Fritz Fischer)
3. Italy 1h23’51”5
(Werner Kiem, Gottlieb Taschler, Johann Passler, Andreas Zingerle)
4. Austria 1h24’17”6
(Anton Lengauer, Bruno Hofstätter, Franz Schuler, Alfred Eder)
5. German Democratic Republic 1h24’28”4
(Jürgen Wirth, Frank-Peter Roetsch, Matthias Jacob, André Sehmisch)
6. Norway 1h25’57”0
(Geir Einang, Frode Løberg, Gisle Fenne, Eirik Kvalfoss)
7. Sweden 1h29’11”9
(Peter Sjödén, Mikael Löfgren, Roger Westling, Leif Andersson)
8. Bulgary 1h29’24”9
(Vasil Bozhilov, Vladimir Velitchkov, Krassimir Videnov, Hristo Vodenicharov)
1992 Albertville
1. Germany 1h24’43”5
(Ricco Gross, Jens Steinigen, Mark Kirchner, Fritz Fischer)
2. Unified Team 1h25’06”3
(Valery Medvedtsev, Aleksandr Popov, Valery Kiriyenko, Sergey Chepikov)
3. Sweden 1h25’38”2
(Ulf Johansson, Leif Andersson, Tord Wiksten, Mikael Löfgren)
4. Italy 1h26’18”1
(Hubert Leitgeb, Johann Passler, Pieralberto Carrara, Andreas Zingerle)
5. Norway 1h26’32”4
(Geir Einang, Frode Løberg, Gisle Fenne, Eirik Kvalfoss)
6. France 1h27’13”3
(Xavier Blond, Thierry Gerbier, Christian Dumont, Hervé Flandin)
7. Czechoslovakia 1h27’15”7
(Martin Rypl, Tomáš Kos, Jiří Holubec, Ivan Masařík)
8. Finland 1h27’39”5
(Vesa Hietalahti, Jaakko Niemi, Harri Eloranta, Kari Kataja)
1994 Lillehammer
1. Germany 1h30’22”1
(Ricco Gross, Frank Luck, Mark Kirchner, Sven Fischer)
2. Russia 1h31’23”6
(Valery Kiriyenko, Vladimir Drachev, Sergei Tarasov, Sergey Chepikov)
3. France 1h32’31”3
(Thierry Dusserre, Patrice Bailly-Salins, Lionel Laurent, Hervé Flandin)
4. Belarus 1h32’57”2
(Viktor Maygurov, Igor Khokhriakov, Oleg Ryzhenkov, Aleksandr Popov)
5. Finland 1h33’11”9
(Erkki Latvala, Harri Eloranta, Timo Seppaelae, Vesa Hietalahti)
6. Italy 1h33’17”3
(Patrick Favre, Johann Passler, Pieralberto Carrara, Andreas Zingerle)
7. Norway 1h33’32”8
(Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Ivar Michal Ulekleiv, Halvard Hanevold, Jon Ǻge Tyldum)
8. Poland 1h33’49”3
(Tomasz Sikora, Jan Ziemianin, Wieslaw Ziemianin, Jan Wojtas)
1998 Nagano
1. Germany 1h21’36”2
(Ricco Gross, Peter Sendel, Sven Fischer, Frank Luck)
2. Norway 1h21’56”3
(Egil Gjelland, Halvard Hanevold, Dag Bjoerndalen, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
3. Russia 1h22’19”3
(Pavel Muslimov, Vladimir Drachev, Sergei Tarasov, Viktor Maygurov)
4. Belarus 1h23’14”0
(Aliaksei Aydarau, Oleg Ryzhenkov, Aleksandr Popov, Vadim Sashurin)
5. Poland 1h24’09”8
(Wieslaw Ziemianin, Tomasz Sikora, Jan Ziemianin, Wojciech Kozub)
6. Latvia 1h24’24”4
(Olegs Maluhins, Ilmārs Bricis, Gundars Upenieks, Jēkabs Nākums)
7. France 1h24’53”0
(Andreas Heymann, Raphaël Poirée, Thierry Dusserre, Patrice Bailly-Salins)
8. Finland 1h25’01”4
(Ville Räikkönen, Paavo Puurunen, Harri Eloranta, Olli-Pekka Peltola)
9. Italy 1h25’07”3
(Patrick Favre, Wilfried Pallhuber, René Cattarinussi, Pieralberto Carrara)
2002 Salt Lake City
1. Norway 1h23’42”3
(Halvard Hanevold, Frode Andresen, Egil Gjelland, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
2. Germany 1h24’27”6
(Ricco Gross, Peter Sendel, Sven Fischer, Frank Luck)
3. France 1h24’36”6
(Gilles Marguet, Vincent Defrasne, Julien Robert, Raphaël Poirée)
4. Russia 1h24’54“4
(Viktor Maygurov, Sergey Rozhkov, Sergey Chepikov, Pavel Rostovtsev)
5. Czech Republic 1h26’36”1
(Petr Garabík, Ivan Masařík, Roman Dostál, Zdeněk Vítek)
6. Austria 1h26’58”9
(Christoph Sumann, Wolfgang Perner, Wolfgang Rottmann, Ludwig Gredler)
7. Ukraine 1h27’02”2
(Vyacheslav Derkach, Oleksander Bilanenko, Roman Pryma, Ruslan Lysenko)
8. Belarus 1h27’12”0
(Aliaksai Aydarau, Aleksandr Syman, Oleg Ryzhenkov, Vadim Sashurin)
16. Italy 1h30’56”3
(Paolo Longo, René Cattarinussi, Devis Da Canal, Wilfried Pallhuber)
2006 Torino
1. Germany 1h21'51"5
(Ricco Gross, Michael Rösch, Sven Fischer, Michael Greis)
2. Russia 1h22'12"4
(Ivan Cherezov, Sergey Chepikov, Pavel Rostovtsev, Nikolay Kruglov)
3. France 1h22'35"1
(Julien Robert, Vincent Defrasne, Ferréol Cannard, Raphaël Poirée)
4. Sweden 1h22'35"1
(Jakob Börjesson, Björn Ferry, Mattias Jr. Nilsson, Carl Johan Bergman)
5. Norway 1h23'03"6
(Halvard Hanevold, Stian Eckhoff, Frode Andresen, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
6. Czech Republic 1h23'04"0
(Ondřej Moravec, Zdeněk Vítek, Roman Dostál, Michal Šlesingr)
7. Ukraine 1h23'40"4
(Oleksandr Bilanenko, Andriy Deryzemlya, Oleksiy Korobeinikov, Ruslan Lysenko)
8. Italy 1h23'40"9
(Christian De Lorenzi, René-Laurent Vuillermoz, Paolo Longo, Wilfried Pallhuber)
2010 Vancouver
1. Norway 1h21’38”1
(Halvard Hanevold, Tarjei Boe, Emil Hegle Svendsen, Ole Einar Bjørndalen)
2. Austria 1h22’16”7
(Simon Eder, Daniel Mesotitsch, Dominik Landertinger, Christoph Sumann)
3. Sweden 1h23’02”0
(Fredrik Lindstroem, Carl Johan Bergman, Mattias Jr. Nilsson, Björn Ferry)
4. Germany 1h23’16”0
(Simon Schempp, Andreas Birnbacher, Arnd Peiffer, Michael Greis)
5. France 1h23’16”2
(Vincent Jay, Vincent Defrasne, Simon Fourcade, Martin Fourcade)
6. Czech Republic 1h23’55”2
(Jaroslav Soukup, Zdeněk Vítek, Roman Dostál, Michal Šlesingr)
7. Ukraine 1h24’25”1
(Oleksander Bilanenko, Andriy Deryzemlya, Vyacheslav Derkach, Serguei Sednev)
8. Switzerland 1h24'36"8
(Thomas Frei, Matthias Simmen, Benjamin Weger, Simon Hallenbarter)
11. Italy 1h26’27”5
(Christian De Lorenzi, Markus Windisch, Lukas Hofer, Mattia Cola)
*Final ranking after the doping disqualification by the IOC of Russia (1h22'16"9)
2014 Sochi
1. Germany 1h12’19”4
(Simon Schempp, Arnd Peiffer, Erik Lesser, Daniel Boehm)
2. Austria 1h12’45”7
(Daniel Mesotitsch, Christoph Sumann, Simon Eder, Dominik Landertinger)
3. Norway 1h13’10”3
(Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Emil Hegle Svendsen, Johannes Thingnes Boe, Tarjei Boe)
4. Italy 1h13”15’5
(Markus Windisch, Christian De Lorenzi, Lukas Hofer, Dominik Windisch)
5. Slovenia 1h13’43”1
(Janez Marič, Klemen Bauer, Peter Dokl, Jakov Fak)
6. Canada 1h13’46”2
(Jean-Philippe Le Guellec, Brendan Green, Scott Perras, Nathan Smith)
7. France 1h13’46”4
(Jean Guillaume Beatrix, Alexis Boeuf, Martin Fourcade, Simon Desthieux)
8. Ukraine 1h14’21”
(Artem Pryma, Andriy Deryzemlya, Sergii Semenov, Dmytro Pidruchnyi)
*Final ranking after the doping disqualification by the IOC of Russia (1h12'15"9)
2018 Pyeongchang
1. Sweden 1h15’16”5
(Peppe Femling, Jesper Nelin, Sebastian Samuelsson, Fredrik Lindstroem)
2. Norway 1h16’12”0
(Lars Helge Birkeland, Tarjei Boe, Johannes Thingnes Boe, Emil Hegle Svendsen)
3. Germany 1h17’23”6
(Erik Lesser, Benedikt Doll, Arnd Peiffer, Simon Schempp)
4. Austria 1h18’09”0
(Tobias Eberhard, Simon Eder, Julian Eberhard, Dominik Landertinger)
5. France 1h18’43”1
(Simon Desthieux, Emilien Jacquelin, Martin Fourcade, Antonin Guigonnat)
6. USA 1h19’06”7
(Lowell Bailey, Sean Doherty, Tim Burke, Leif Nordgren)
7. Czech Republic 1h19’23”6
(Ondrej Moravec, Michal Slesingr, Jaroslav Soukup, Michal Krcmar)
8. Belarus 1h20’06”0
(Anton Smolski, Raman Yaliotnau, Sergey Bocharnikov, Vladimir Chepelin)
12. Italy 1h21’35”6
(Thomas Bormolini, Lukas Hofer, Giuseppe Montello, Dominik Windisch)
2022 Pechino
1. Norway 1h19’50”2
(Vetle Sjaastad Christiansen, Johannes Thingnes Boe, Tarjei Boe, Sturla Holm Laegreid)
2. France 1h20’17”6
(Simon Desthieux, Fabien Claude, Emilien Jacquelin, Quentin Fillon Maillet)
3. ROC 1h20’35”5
(Alexander Loginov, Said Karimulla Khalili, Eduard Latypov, Maxim Tsvetkov)
4. Germany 1h20’54”5
(Erik Lesser, Benedikt Doll, Roman Rees, Philipp Nawrath)
5. Sweden 1h21’39”6
(Peppe Femling, Martin Ponsiluoma, Jesper Nelin, Sebastian Samuelsson)
6. Canada 1h21’46”5
(Jules Burnotte, Christian Gow, Scott Gow, Adam Runnalls)
7. Italy 1h21’48”8
(Lukas Hofer, Thomas Bormolini, Dominik Windisch, Tommaso Giacomel)
8. Belarus 1h21’49”2
(Maksim Varabei, Anton Smolski, Mikita Labastau, Dzmitry Lazouski)