Austrian championships in grass skiing 2010

The Austrian Grass Skiing Championships 2010 took place on June 12th and 13th in Rettenbach in Burgenland as part of international FIS races . A giant slalom , a super-G , a slalom and a combination made up of the results of the first slalom run and the super-G were held. In addition to the Austrian state champions in the general class (born in 1995 and older), the Austrian junior champions (born in 1990 to 1995) were also determined. At the Austrian championships, nine men and four women took part in the general class, of which five men and three women also started in the junior class. A total of 15 women and 33 men took part in the FIS races.
The grande dame of grass ski sport, Ingrid Hirschhofer , became Austrian national champion in all four disciplines, increasing her number of national titles to a total of 90. Austrian national champion in the disciplines of slalom, giant slalom and combination was Michael Stocker , who had won all four competitions in the past five years. The state championship in Super-G went to Marcus Peschek . The only 14-year-old Daniela Krückel was Austrian junior champion in slalom and giant slalom , while 19-year-old Jacqueline Gerlach won the Super-G and combined . Austrian junior champion in slalom and super-G was 15-year-old Hannes Angerer , and 19-year-old Daniel Gschwandtner won the giant slalom and combination disciplines .
Overview of the Austrian state and junior champions in grass skiing 2010
slalom | Giant slalom | Super G | combination | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Austrian national champion 2010 | Michael Stocker | Michael Stocker | Marcus Peschek | Michael Stocker |
Austrian State Champion 2010 | Ingrid Hirschhofer | Ingrid Hirschhofer | Ingrid Hirschhofer | Ingrid Hirschhofer |
Austrian junior champion 2010 | Hannes Angerer | Daniel Gschwandtner | Hannes Angerer | Daniel Gschwandtner |
Austrian Junior Champion 2010 | Daniela Krückel | Daniela Krückel | Jacqueline Gerlach | Jacqueline Gerlach |
Race mode and track data
The Austrian State and Junior Championships were held as part of international FIS races , that is, the placement of the Austrian runners in these FIS races was used to rank in the championship rankings. The combined scoring was only created for the Austrian championships and not counted as an FIS competition. In addition to the Austrians, athletes from Germany , Italy , Japan , Switzerland , Slovakia and the Czech Republic took part in the FIS races.
All competitions were held on the Rettenbachschale grass ski slope (coordinates: 47 ° 24 ′ 36 ″ north, 16 ° 14 ′ 34 ″ east ) of the Rettenbach ski center . The slope has an average gradient of 23.2%, the minimum gradient is 12.5% and the maximum gradient in the upper start area is 31.4%. As usual in grass skiing, men and women drove the same course one after the other. The race director of all competitions was the Austrian Gabriele Horvath, technical delegate of the FIS to the Czech Jiří Černý.
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Results men general class
Nine Austrians each started in the general class.
(FIS = placement in the FIS race)
slalom
Eliminated in the 1st round: Philipp Gschwandtner Michael Stocker opened the race with starting number 21. His time of 26.31 seconds remained the best of an Austrian in the first round and was only beaten in the FIS race by the Czech Jan Němec and the Italian Fausto Cerentin , who started penultimate due to his missing FIS points . Daniel Gschwandtner started the race as the second Austrian with start number 28. With 27.42 seconds he was third-best Austrian in the first run behind Stocker and Marcus Peschek, who started with number 34 and achieved the fifth fastest time of all runners in the first run. Philipp Gschwandtner started with number 36 and was eliminated in the first round like in the giant slalom. The next Austrians, Nico Balek and Hannes Angerer, were in 20th and 19th place at the end of the first round, Roland Zorzi was in 23rd and Christoph Schranz in 26th. Andreas Guttmann, who started as the last Austrian with number 48, was immediately ahead of him a. Schranz was the first Austrian to start the second run, but did not finish. Guttmann was able to finish the race, but fell far behind in the second run and was last. Roland Zorzi was able to improve from rank 23 to rank 16 and thus achieved third place in the state championship. Nico Balek, who was in 20th place after the first run, was eliminated in the second round, while Hannes Angerer improved from 19th to 13th place with the twelfth run in the second round and thus became vice state champion. Daniel Gschwandtner, on the other hand, fell back from 15th intermediate place to 21st and penultimate place. Marcus Peschek, who was the second best Austrian in fifth place after the first run, was disqualified in the second run after a goal error. Michael Stocker lost his third place to Jan Gardavský in the second round, was fourth in the FIS race and thus Austrian state champion in slalom for the sixth time in a row. The FIS race was won by Jan Němec in front of the half-time leader Fausto Cerentin. |
Giant slalom
Eliminated in the 1st round: Philipp Gschwandtner As the first of the nine Austrians, Michael Stocker started the first run with start number 26 - the sixth starter. He sat behind Jan Němec and Martin Štěpánek in third position for the time being and remained the best Austrian during the first round. The veteran Marcus Peschek competed with starting number 29, who initially took fourth place behind Stocker. The brothers Philipp and Daniel Gschwandtner started with the numbers 32 and 37. While Philipp Gschwandtner did not finish, Daniel Gschwandtner achieved the third best time for the Austrians. Nico Balek - he started the race with start number 39 - lost many seconds after a mistake and only finished last in the first run. The other Austrians, Roland Zorzi (starting number 43), Andreas Guttmann (44), Christoph Schranz (47) and Hannes Angerer (48) reached positions 18, 20, 21 and 23 in the first round. Nico Balek, the This time it didn't make any major mistakes, but still couldn't get away from last place. The next Austrians were Angerer, Schranz, Guttmann and Zorzi, who consecutively finished 17th to 20th in the final ranking of the FIS race and thus fourth to seventh in the national championship. Daniel Gschwandtner, who was the third best Austrian in 15th place after the first run, took over the intermediate lead for a short time after his second run, but was pushed back into second by the Czech Jan Gardavský, who started after him . In the final ranking, Gschwandtner remained third-best Austrian in twelfth place. Marcus Peschek, who was national champion in giant slalom nine times between 1987 and 2004, and Michael Stocker, who had won the title in the past five years, fought for the national championship title. After the first round, Peschek was eighth in the FIS race and took over the intermediate lead with a total time of 1: 02.17 minutes until the Czech Daniel Mrna , who competed in his first international race in six years and was sixth in the first round , overtaken. He was followed by Michael Stocker, who took the lead in the FIS race with a margin of 24 hundredths of a second over Mrna and thus secured the state championship in giant slalom for the sixth time in a row. After the half-time leader Jan Němec lost a ski and failed and the second placed Martin Štěpánek fell back to fifth, the third after the first round, the Italian Edoardo Frau , won the FIS race ahead of Stocker. |
Super G
Eliminated: Christoph Schranz , Andreas Guttmann Philipp Gschwandtner was the first to open the race with start number 21. While the next three runners lagged behind him, the Czech Jan Němec , who started fifth, set a new best time of 31.97 seconds that nobody could match. Gschwandtner's time was finally enough for tenth place in the FIS race and third place in the state championship. After Němec, the Austrians Michael Stocker and Marcus Peschek started the race. Stocker placed second, 71 hundredths of a second behind Němec, but was then beaten by Peschek by a tenth of a second. Peschek finished second in the FIS race, won his 30th national championship title and his first since 2004. Stocker, who has been national champion in Super-G for the last five years, was third in the FIS race and thus vice national champion. The other Austrians had nothing more to do with the decision. Daniel Gschwandtner (start number 34) was 18th, Nico Balek (no.36) was 20th, Hannes Angerer (no.43) was the youngest Austrian and was 15th in the FIS race and Roland Zorzi (no.45) was not 21st Christoph Schranz (car number 39) and Andreas Guttmann (car number 41) crossed the finish line. |
combination
The combined rating was calculated from the times of the Super-G and the first slalom run. |
Results women general class
Four Austrians each started in the general class.
slalom
Eliminated in the 2nd round: Jacqueline Gerlach Jacqueline Gerlach - the Austrian slalom champion of the last two years - was the first of the four Austrians to go into the first run with start number 3 and took over the intermediate lead with a time of 29.81 seconds. Nicole Gerlach started after her, but remained behind for over 2.5 seconds. Ingrid Hirschhofer started the first race with start number six. She achieved the same time as Jacqueline Gerlach and briefly took the lead with her, but both were defeated by the next Japanese Yukiyo Shintani . Daniela Krückel achieved the eleventh time in the first run with starting number 13. She was the first of the Austrians to start in the second race, losing a lot of time after a mistake, but was able to overtake Nicole Gerlach, who lost even more time after a serious mistake. Jacqueline Gerlach, who was in second place at halftime with Ingrid Hirschhofer, retired after a fall in the lower section of the track, but Ingrid Hirschhofer, who started after her, crossed the finish line without a mistake and took the lead. After the half-time leader Shintani also fell and failed, Hirschhofer won both the FIS race and the state championship. |
Giant slalom
Eliminated in the 1st round: Jacqueline Gerlach , Nicole Gerlach Jacqueline Gerlach, who started the race with starting number 1, retired just like her sister Nicole Gerlach (starting number 9) in the first round in the lower part of the track. Ingrid Hirschhofer started fifth, took over the intermediate lead with a running time of 33.05 seconds and took third place in the FIS race at half time, behind the German Anna-Lena Büdenbender and the Japanese Yukiyo Shintani . The young Daniela Krückel reached tenth place with starting number 12. Thanks to the failure of Italian Antonella Manzoni , Krückel improved by one place in the second run and finished ninth in the FIS race, which meant second place in the national championship. Ingrid Hirschhofer achieved the second fastest time in the second run, finally finished the FIS race five hundredths of a second behind Shintani and 1.17 seconds behind Büdenbender in third place and became Austrian national champion. |
Super G
Nicole Gerlach was the first Austrian to start the race with starting number 2, who crossed the finish line first after the failure of Antonella Manzoni , who started before her , but was already overtaken by the next starter, the Czech Eva Fabiánová . Jacqueline Gerlach started fourth. She was nine hundredths of a second faster than Fabiánová and took over the intermediate lead. After her, Ingrid Hirschhofer started the race, who improved Jacqueline Gerlach's time by more than nine tenths of a second and was only overtaken by the Japanese Yukiyo Shintani . Second place in the FIS race brought Hirschhofer the state championship in Super-G. Daniela Krückel started the race as the last of the four Austrians with start number 12. With a time of 39.90 seconds, she achieved 13th and penultimate place. |
combination
The combined rating was calculated from the times of the Super-G and the first slalom run. |
Results Juniors
Five Austrians each started in the junior class.
slalom
Eliminated in the 2nd round: Nico Balek , Christoph Schranz 15-year-old Hannes Angerer was the youngest participant to become Austrian junior slalom champion. Daniel Gschwandtner (19 years) and Andreas Guttmann (16 years) placed behind him. Nico Balek and Christoph Schranz did not finish. |
Giant slalom
The best Austrian in the junior class was 19-year-old Daniel Gschwandtner, who won by 1.14 seconds over 17-year-old Christoph Schranz. Third place went to 16 year old Andreas Guttmann and fourth to 15 year old Hannes Angerer. After a mistake in the first run, Nico Balek only crossed the finish line last. |
Super G
Eliminated: Christoph Schranz , Andreas Guttmann The youngest participant, 15-year-old Hannes Angerer from Tyrol , was the Austrian junior champion in Super-G . Second place went to 19-year-old Daniel Gschwandtner and third place to 17-year-old Nico Balek. Christoph Schranz and Andreas Guttmann didn't finish anything. |
combination
The combined rating was calculated from the times of the Super-G and the first slalom run. |
Results juniors
Three Austrians each started in the junior class.
slalom
space | FIS | Surname | society | vintage | Time 1. | Time 2. | total time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 8th | Daniela Krückel | BSV Voith St. Pölten | 1995 | 34.11 s | 47.76 s | 1: 21.87 min |
2 | 9 | Nicole Gerlach | USC Faistenau | 1994 | 32.44 s | 53.70 s | 1: 26.14 min |
Eliminated in the 2nd round: Jacqueline Gerlach
Jacqueline Gerlach was the fastest junior after the first run, but fell in the second run and was eliminated. Daniela Krückel and Nicole Gerlach did not make mistakes in the second run either, but they did reach the finish. Krückel was junior champion, Gerlach second.
Giant slalom
space | FIS | Surname | society | vintage | Time 1. | Time 2. | total time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 | Daniela Krückel | BSV Voith St. Pölten | 1995 | 36.17 s | 35.31 s | 1: 11.48 min |
Eliminated in the 1st round: Jacqueline Gerlach , Nicole Gerlach
After the Gerlach sisters had failed in the first run in the lower third of the route, only Daniela Krückel crossed the finish line and thus secured the Austrian junior championship.
Super G
Nicole Gerlach started the race with start number 2 as the first of the three juniors. Jacqueline Gerlach, who started fourth, undercut her time of 37.06 seconds by almost 1.1 seconds, while Daniela Krückel - she started the race with start number 12 - with a running time of 39.90 seconds did not match the times of the Gerlach sisters came up. |
combination
The combined rating was calculated from the times of the Super-G and the first slalom run. |
See also
Web links
- Official results list FIS Slalom Men (PDF, 75 kB)
- Official results list FIS Slalom Women (PDF, 73 kB)
- Official results list FIS Giant Slalom Men (PDF, 75 kB)
- Official results list FIS Giant Slalom Women (PDF, 73 kB)
- Official results list FIS Super-G Men (PDF, 74 kB)
- Official results list FIS Super-G women (PDF, 71 kB)
- Rettenbach ski center