Alpine Ski World Cup 1986/87

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Alpine skiing

Alpine Ski World Cup 1986/87

Fédération Internationale de Ski Logo.svg

Men's Ladies
winner
total SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
Departure SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini
Super G SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
Giant slalom SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider Maria Walliser
SwitzerlandSwitzerland 
slalom Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj SwitzerlandSwitzerland C. Schmidhauser
combination SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli
Nations Cup SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland
Nations Cup SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland
Competitions
Venues 19th 17th
Individual competitions 34 31
1985/86
1987/88

The 1986/87 season of the Alpine Ski World Cup organized by the FIS began on November 29, 1986 in Park City (women). On 15./16. In August 1986, two men's races took place in Las Leñas , Argentina , followed by an almost three-month break until the end of November. The season ended on March 22, 1987 in Sarajevo . 32 races were held for the men (11  downhill runs , 5  super-G , 8  giant slaloms , 8  slaloms ). There were 30 races for women (7 downhill runs, 5 Super-G, 8 giant slaloms, 10 slaloms). There were also two combined scores for men and one for women.

The highlight of the season was the 1987 World Cup in Crans-Montana .

World Cup ratings

total

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen 339
2 LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli 190
3 Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier 174
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz 153
5 ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton 139
6th SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark 134
7th AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock 97
8th ItalyItaly Robert Erlacher 94
9 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj 90
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller
11 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Karl Alpiger 87
12 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer 84
13 AustriaAustria Günther Mader 83
14th AustriaAustria Hubert Strolz 81
15th ItalyItaly Alberto Tomba 76
16 ItalyItaly Michael Mair 74
17th Germany BRBR Germany Armin Bittner 69
18th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Daniel Mahrer 66
19th AustriaAustria Rudolf Nierlich 63
LiechtensteinLiechtenstein Andreas Wenzel
21st CanadaCanada Rob Boyd 57
AustriaAustria Peter Wirnsberger
23 ItalyItaly Oswald Tötsch 55
24 Germany BRBR Germany Michael Eder 53
Germany BRBR Germany Frank Wörndl
26th Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Grega Benedik 49
AustriaAustria Mathias Berthold
28 AustriaAustria Erwin Resch 48
29 AustriaAustria Dietmar Köhlbichler 47
30th Germany BRBR Germany Hans Stuffer 45
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser 269
2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider 262
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli 206
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess 169
5 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini 162
6th United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney 127
7th Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet 126
8th SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa 121
9 AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf 119
10 Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl 118
FranceFrance Catherine quits
12 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser 112
13 Germany BRBR Germany Michaela Gerg 109
14th AustriaAustria Anita Wachter 107
15th CanadaCanada Laurie Graham 76
16 AustriaAustria Elisabeth Kirchler 74
17th Germany BRBR Germany Regine Mösenlechner 69
18th SwedenSweden Camilla Nilsson 67
19th AustriaAustria Sylvia Eder 63
20th AustriaAustria Roswitha Steiner 62
21st AustriaAustria Monika Maierhofer 57
22nd United StatesUnited States Debbie Armstrong 51
23 CanadaCanada Karen Percy 49
24 AustriaAustria Karin Buder 48
25th FranceFrance Małgorzata Mogore-Tlałka 47
26th AustriaAustria Ida Ladstätter 40
27 ItalyItaly Paoletta Magoni 38
28 AustriaAustria Zoë Haas 35
Germany BRBR Germany Traudl Hächer
30th AustriaAustria Claudia Strobl 33

Departure

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen 125
2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller 105
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer 90
4th Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier 83
5 ItalyItaly Michael Mair 82
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Karl Alpiger 79
7th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Daniel Mahrer 68
8th CanadaCanada Rob Boyd 62
9 AustriaAustria Peter Wirnsberger 57
10 LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli 56
AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini 93
2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser 90
3 CanadaCanada Laurie Graham 86
4th Germany BRBR Germany Regine Mösenlechner 71
5 AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf 61
6th Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl 35
7th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli 33
8th AustriaAustria Elisabeth Kirchler 32
9 FranceFrance Catherine quits 31
10 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Beatrice Gafner 30th

Super G

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen 85
2 LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli 65
3 Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier 50
4th ItalyItaly Robert Erlacher 44
5 AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock 42
6th Germany BRBR Germany Herbert Renoth 32
7th AustriaAustria Günther Mader 29
8th ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton 28
9 Germany BRBR Germany Michael Eder 26th
10 AustriaAustria Guido Hinterseer 24
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser 82
2 FranceFrance Catherine quits 57
3 Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl 52
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli 49
5 AustriaAustria Anita Wachter 47
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider 44
7th Germany BRBR Germany Michaela Gerg 43
8th AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf 35
9 SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa 31
Germany BRBR Germany Traudl Hächer

Giant slalom

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen 102
2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz 102
3 ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton 95
4th AustriaAustria Hubert Strolz 66
5 LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli 65
6th Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier 59
7th SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark 58
8th ItalyItaly Robert Erlacher 57
9 ItalyItaly Alberto Tomba 52
10 AustriaAustria Helmut Mayer 39
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider 120
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
3 SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa 78
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess 62
5 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini 55
6th Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet 51
7th Germany BRBR Germany Michaela Gerg 48
8th Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl 42
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli
10 United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney 30th
FranceFrance Catherine quits

slalom

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj 105
2 SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark 96
3 Germany BRBR Germany Armin Bittner 78
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz 71
5 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Grega Benedik 55
6th AustriaAustria Mathias Berthold 54
7th AustriaAustria Dietmar Köhlbichler 52
8th AustriaAustria Günther Mader 42
9 FranceFrance Didier Bouvet 41
10 SwedenSweden Jonas Nilsson 35
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser 110
2 United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney 99
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess 96
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider 84
5 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli 77
6th AustriaAustria Roswitha Steiner 74
7th AustriaAustria Monika Maierhofer 67
8th SwedenSweden Camilla Nilsson 66
9 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet 55
10 AustriaAustria Karin Buder 53

combination

Men's
rank athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen 50
2 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein Andreas Wenzel 20th
Ladies
rank Athlete Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli 25th
2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider 20th
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess 15th
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser 12
5 CanadaCanada Karen Percy 11
6th AustriaAustria Sylvia Eder 10

Podium placements men

Departure

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
08/15/1986 Las Leñas ( ARG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller SwitzerlandSwitzerland Karl Alpiger SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer
08/16/1986 Las Leñas ( ARG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer Peter Müller
SwitzerlandSwitzerland 
05.12.1986 Val d'Isère ( FRA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier ItalyItaly Michael Mair
12/13/1986 Val Gardena ( ITA ) CanadaCanada Rob Boyd ItalyItaly Michael Mair Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier
01/04/1987 Laax ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer AustriaAustria Peter Wirnsberger AustriaAustria Erwin Resch
01/10/1987 Garmisch-Partenkirchen ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen ItalyItaly Michael Mair SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller
01/17/1987 Wengen ( SUI ) Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier SwitzerlandSwitzerland Karl Alpiger SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer
01/25/1987 Kitzbühel ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen AustriaAustria Erwin Resch SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller
02/28/1987 Furano ( JPN ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli ItalyItaly Michael Mair
07.03.1987 Aspen ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Daniel Mahrer SwitzerlandSwitzerland Karl Alpiger
03/14/1987 Nakiska ( CAN ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Peter Müller SwitzerlandSwitzerland Franz Heinzer SwitzerlandSwitzerland Daniel Mahrer

Super G

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
December 6, 1986 Val d'Isère ( FRA ) Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier ItalyItaly Robert Erlacher LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli
01/11/1987 Garmisch-Partenkirchen ( FRG ) Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen ItalyItaly Alberto Ghidoni
03/01/1987 Furano ( JPN ) LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock
03/08/1987 Aspen ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton Germany BRBR Germany Peter Roth
03/15/1987 Nakiska ( CAN ) LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen AustriaAustria Leonhard Stock

Giant slalom

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
11/30/1986 Sestriere ( ITA ) ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton AustriaAustria Hubert Strolz SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen
12/14/1986 Alta Badia ( ITA ) ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton ItalyItaly Alberto Tomba ItalyItaly Oswald Tötsch
December 15, 1986 Alta Badia ( ITA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier
December 19, 1986 Kranjska Gora ( YUG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz ItalyItaly Robert Erlacher ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton
01/13/1987 Adelboden ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli AustriaAustria Hubert Strolz
01/20/1987 Adelboden ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark
02/15/1987 Todtnau ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli Germany BRBR Germany Markus Wasmeier
March 22, 1987 Sarajevo ( YUG ) LuxembourgLuxembourg Marc Girardelli SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz AustriaAustria Rudolf Nierlich

slalom

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
11/29/1986 Sestriere ( ITA ) SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark SwedenSweden Jonas Nilsson ItalyItaly Richard Pramotton
December 16, 1986 Madonna di Campiglio ( ITA ) ItalyItaly Ivano Edalini SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz
December 20, 1986 Kranjska Gora ( YUG ) Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Rok Petrovič SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark
December 21, 1986 Hinterstoder ( AUT ) Germany BRBR Germany Armin Bittner Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj ItalyItaly Oswald Tötsch
01/18/1987 Wengen ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Joël Gaspoz AustriaAustria Dietmar Köhlbichler Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj
01/25/1987 Kitzbühel ( AUT ) Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj AustriaAustria Mathias Berthold Germany BRBR Germany Armin Bittner
02/14/1987 Le Markstein ( FRA ) SwedenSweden Ingemar Stenmark Germany BRBR Germany Armin Bittner AustriaAustria Günther Mader
03/21/1987 Sarajevo ( YUG ) Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Grega Benedik Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Bojan Križaj FranceFrance Didier Bouvet

combination

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
17./18.01.1987 Wengen ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen only one runner classified
01/25/1987 Kitzbühel ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Pirmin Zurbriggen LiechtensteinLiechtenstein Andreas Wenzel only two runners classified

Podium placements women

Departure

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
12/12/1986 Val d'Isère ( FRA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser SwitzerlandSwitzerland Heidi Zurbriggen
12/13/1986 Val d'Isère ( FRA ) CanadaCanada Laurie Graham SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser FranceFrance Catherine quits
01/10/1987 Schwarzenberg ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Beatrice Gafner SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser AustriaAustria Sieglinde Winkler
01/16/1987 Pfronten ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini Germany BRBR Germany Regine Mösenlechner SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
03/08/1987 Nakiska ( CAN ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini CanadaCanada Laurie Graham Germany BRBR Germany Regine Mösenlechner
03/13/1987 Vail ( USA ) AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf AustriaAustria Elisabeth Kirchler United StatesUnited States Pam Fletcher
03/14/1987 Vail ( USA ) AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf CanadaCanada Laurie Graham SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser

Super G

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
12/14/1986 Val d'Isère ( FRA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser FranceFrance Catherine quits SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider
01/06/1987 Saalbach-Hinterglemm ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet
01/17/1987 Pfronten ( FRG ) FranceFrance Catherine quits Germany BRBR Germany Traudl Hächer Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl
03/15/1987 Vail ( USA ) Germany BRBR Germany Marina Kiehl AustriaAustria Anita Wachter AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf
03/15/1987 Vail ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser AustriaAustria Sigrid Wolf AustriaAustria Anita Wachter

Giant slalom

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
11/29/1986 Park City ( USA ) Germany BRBR Germany Michaela Gerg Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider
December 6, 1986 Waterville Valley ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser CanadaCanada Josée Lacasse
December 20, 1986 Valzoldana ( ITA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini
01/05/1987 Saalbach-Hinterglemm ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
01/18/1987 Bischofswiesen ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli
02/13/1987 Megève ( FRA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser
02/27/1987 Zwiesel ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Maria Walliser SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa
March 22, 1987 Sarajevo ( YUG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider Maria Walliser
SwitzerlandSwitzerland 
SwitzerlandSwitzerland Michela Figini

slalom

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
11/30/1986 Park City ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney AustriaAustria Roswitha Steiner
05.12.1986 Waterville Valley ( USA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli AustriaAustria Karin Buder
12/17/1986 Courmayeur ( ITA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli
12/18/1986 Courmayeur ( ITA ) United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney AustriaAustria Roswitha Steiner AustriaAustria Monika Maierhofer
December 21, 1986 Valzoldana ( ITA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli AustriaAustria Claudia Strobl
01/04/1987 Maribor ( YUG ) SwedenSweden Camilla Nilsson SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser
01/11/1987 Mellau ( AUT ) United StatesUnited States Tamara McKinney Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Mateja Svet FranceFrance Małgorzata Mogore-Tlałka
02/14/1987 Saint-Gervais-les-Bains ( FRA ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser SpainSpain Blanca Fernández Ochoa
02/15/1987 Flühli ( SUI ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser AustriaAustria Monika Maierhofer SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess
02/28/1987 Zwiesel ( FRG ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Corinne Schmidhauser SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess AustriaAustria Roswitha Steiner

combination

date place 1st place 2nd place 3rd place
January 10/11, 1987 Schwarzenberg / Mellau ( AUT ) SwitzerlandSwitzerland Brigitte Oertli SwitzerlandSwitzerland Vreni Schneider SwitzerlandSwitzerland Erika Hess

Nations Cup

Overall rating
rank country Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 2293
2 AustriaAustria Austria 1539
3 Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 964
4th ItalyItaly Italy 719
5 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Yugoslavia 331
6th FranceFrance France 309
7th CanadaCanada Canada 298
SwedenSweden Sweden
9 United StatesUnited States United States 273
10 LuxembourgLuxembourg Luxembourg 190
11 SpainSpain Spain 121
12 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein Liechtenstein 91
13 NorwayNorway Norway 36
14th JapanJapan Japan 19th
15th CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 16
16 United KingdomUnited Kingdom United Kingdom 10
17th Bulgaria 1971Bulgaria Bulgaria 2
Men's
rank country Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 931
2 AustriaAustria Austria 818
3 ItalyItaly Italy 605
4th Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 505
5 SwedenSweden Sweden 198
6th Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Yugoslavia 191
7th LuxembourgLuxembourg Luxembourg 190
8th CanadaCanada Canada 115
9 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein Liechtenstein 91
10 FranceFrance France 82
11 NorwayNorway Norway 36
12 United StatesUnited States United States 35
13 JapanJapan Japan 19th
14th United KingdomUnited Kingdom United Kingdom 10
15th Bulgaria 1971Bulgaria Bulgaria 2
Ladies
rank country Points
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 1362
2 AustriaAustria Austria 721
3 Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 459
4th United StatesUnited States United States 238
5 FranceFrance France 227
6th CanadaCanada Canada 183
7th Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Yugoslavia 140
8th SpainSpain Spain 121
9 ItalyItaly Italy 114
10 SwedenSweden Sweden 100
11 CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 16

statistics

Men:
Downhill (11):
Rank 1: SUI 9, CAN 1, GER 1
Rank 2: SUI 4, AUT 3, ITA 2, GER 1, LUX 1
Rank 3 (plus one ex aequo): SUI 8, ITA 2, AUT 1, GER 1
Super-G (5):
Rank 1: GER 2, LUX 2, SUI 1
Rank 2: SUI 3, ITA 2
Rank 3: AUT 2, GER 1, ITA 1, LUX 1
giant slalom (8):
Rank 1: SUI 5, ITA 2, LUX 1
Rank 2: ITA 3, LUX 2, SUI 2, AUT 1
Rank 3: AUT 2, GER 2, ITA 2, SWE 1, SUI 1
Slalom (8):
Rank 1: YUG 3, SWE 2, GER 1, ITA 1, SUI 1
Rank 2: YUG 3, SWE 2, AUT 2, GER 1
Rank 3: ITA 2, AUT 1, FRA 1, GER 1, SWE 1, SUI 1, YUG 1
combination (2):
Rank 1: SUI 2
Rank 2 (minus one, as a combination without Rank 2 and 3): LIE 1
Rank 3 (not assigned)

Overall (34):
Rank 1: SUI 18, GER 4, LUX 3, ITA 3, YUG 3, SWE 2, CAN 1
Rank 2 (minus one rank due to the specialty of the combination): SUI 9, ITA 7, AUT 6, LUX 3, YUG 3, GER 2, SWE 2, LIE 1
Rank 3 (plus one ex aequo, minus two ranks due to the special features of the combination): SUI 10, ITA 7, AUT 6, GER 5, SWE 2, FRA 1, LUX 1, YUG 1

Overview:
SUI 18 | 9 | 10
GER 4 | 2 | 5
LUX 3 | 3 | 1
YUG 3 | 3 | 1
SWE 2 | 2 | 2
AUT - | 6 | 6
LIE - | 1 | -
FRA - | - | 1

Women:
Downhill (7):
Rank 1: SUI 4, AUT 2, CAN 1
Rank 2: SUI 3, CAN 2, AUT 1, GER 1
Rank 3: SUI 3, AUT 1, FRA 1, GER 1, USA 1
Super -G (5):
Rank 1: SUI 3, FRA 1, GER 1
Rank 2: AUT 2, FRA 1, GER 1, SUI 1
Rank 3: AUT 2, GER 1, SUI 1, YUG 1
giant slalom (8):
Rank 1 (plus an ex aequo): SUI 8, GER 1
Rank 2 (minus an ex aequo of Rank 1): SUI 3, SPA 2, YUG 2
Rank 3: SUI 6, CAN 1, SPA 1
Slalom (10 ):
Rank 1: SUI 7, USA 2, SWE 1
Rank 2: SUI 5, AUT 2, USA 2, YUG 1
Rank 3: AUT 5, SUI 3, FRA 1, SPA 1
Combination (1):
Rank 1: SUI 1
Rank 2: SUI 1
Rank 3: SUI 1

Total (31):
Rank 1 (plus an ex aequo): SUI 23, AUT 2, GER 2, USA 2, CAN 1, FRA 1, SWE 1
Rank 2 (less an ex aequo from Rank 1): SUI 13, AUT 5, YUG 3, CAN 2, GER 2, SPA 2, USA 2, FRA 1
Rank 3: SUI 14, AUT 8, FRA 2, GER 2, SPA 2, CAN 1, USA 1, YUG 1

Overview:
SUI 23 | 13 | 14
AUT 2 | 5 | 3
GER 2 | 2 | 2
USA 2 | 2 | 2
CAN 1 | 2 | 1
FRA 1 | 1 | 2
SWE 1 | - | -
YUG - | 3 | 1
SPA - | 2 | 2

Overall overview after 602 races for men (604 wins) and 555 for women (557 wins):

Men:
Downhill (177):
Rank 1 (plus one ex aequo): AUT 74, SUI 59, CAN 18, FRA 10, ITA 7, GER 4, USA 3, AUS 1, NOR 1, URS 1
Rank 2 (plus three ex aequo; less one ex aequo of rank 1): AUT 65, SUI 51, ITA 19, FRA 14, CAN 13, GER 7, NOR 4, LUX 3, USA 2, GBR 1
rank 3 (less 3 ex aequo from rank 2; plus 4 ex aequo): AUT 62, SUI 51, CAN 18, ITA 13, GER 11, FRA 7, NOR 7, USA 3, AUS 2, LUX 1, URS 1
Super-G (22 ):
Rank 1 (plus an ex aequo): SUI 10, LUX 5, GER 4, AUS 1, AUT 1, ITA 1, LIE 1
Rank 2 (minus an ex aequo from Rank 1): SUI 11, LUX 3 , GER 2, ITA 3, AUT 1, LIE 1
Rank 3: AUT 7, SUI 6, GER 4, YUG 2, CAN 1, ITA 1, LUX 1
Giant Slalom (165):
Rank 1: SWE 45, SUI 29, AUT 24, ITA 23, FRA 18, USA 11, NOR 4, LIE 3, LUX 3, URS 3, GER 1, YUG 1
Rank 2 (plus 2 ex aequo): SUI 44, AUT 31, ITA 22, FRA 16, USA 16, SWE 12, LUX 8, GER 5, YUG 4, LIE 3, URS 3, NOR 2, POL 1
rank 3 (minus 2 ex aequo from rank 2): SUI 42, AUT 34, ITA 27, FRA 17 , SWE 14, USA 7, YUG 5, GER 4, LIE 4, LUX 4, NOR 3, TCH 2
Sla lom (186 + 1):
Rank 1: SWE 44, FRA 36, USA 20, ITA 19 + 1, AUT 14, YUG 14, LUX 13, SUI 8, GER 7, LIE 7, BUL 1, POL 1, SPA 1 , URS 1
rank 2: SWE 40 + 1, ITA 32, AUT 27, FRA 20, USA 15, LIE 12, YUG 12, GER 9, SUI 7, BUL 6, URS 3, LUX 2, NOR 1
rank 3 (plus . five ex aequo): ITA 34, AUT 31, USA 24, FRA 21, SWE 17, LIE 16, SUI 15 + 1, GER 11, YUG 9, BUL 4, POL 4, NOR 2, LUX 1, SPA 1, URS 1
combination (51):
Rank 1: SUI 19, USA 12, LIE 6, AUT 5, ITA 4, GER 2, LUX 2, FRA 1
Rank 2 (minus one rank due to the particularity): LIE 13, AUT 10, SUI 10, ITA 5, USA 3, GER 2, SPA 2, CAN 1, FRA 1, LUX 1, SWE 1, TCH 1
Rank 3 (minus two ranks due to the special feature): SUI 16, AUT 8, ITA 5, LIE 5, USA 5, GER 4, FRA 2, NOR 2, LUX 1, SWE 1

Total (602):
1st place (plus two ex aequo): SUI 125, AUT 118, SWE 89, FRA 65, ITA 55, USA 46, LUX 23, CAN 18, GER 18, LIE 17, YUG 15, NOR 5 , URS 5, AUS 2, BUL 1, POL 1, SPA 1
rank 2 (plus five ex aequo; minus two ex aequo from rank 1 and minus one rank due to the special features of the combination): AUT 134, SUI 123 , ITA 81, SWE 54, FRA 51, USA 36, LIE 29, GER 25, LUX 17, YUG 16, CAN 14, NOR 7, BUL 6, URS 6, SPA 2, GBR 1, POL 1, TCH 1
rank 3 (minus 5 ex aequo from rank 2 and minus two ranks due to the special feature of the combination; plus 8 ex aequo): AUT 142, SUI 131, ITA 82, FRA 47, USA 39, GER 34, SWE 32, LIE 25, CAN 19, YUG 16, NOR 14, LUX 8, BUL 4, POL 4, AUS 2, TCH 2, URS 2, SPA 1

Overview:
SUI 125 | 123 | 131
AUT 118 | 134 | 142
SWE 89 | 54 | 32
FRA 65 | 51 | 47
ITA 55 | 81 | 82
USA 46 | 36 | 39
LUX 23 | 17 | 8
GER 18 | 25 | 34
CAN 18 | 14 | 19
LIE 17 | 29 | 25
YUG 15 | 16 | 16
NOR 5 | 7 | 14
URS 5 | 6 | 2
AUS 2 | - | 2
BUL 1 | 6 | 4-
SPA 1 | 2 | 1
POL 1 | 1 | 4
TCH - | 1 | 2
GBR - | 1 | -

Women:
Downhill (148):
Rank 1 (plus one ex aequo): AUT 62, SUI 44, FRA 16, CAN 12, USA 7, GER 4, LIE 2, ITA 1, TCH 1
Rank 2 (plus three ex aequo; minus one ex aequo of rank 1): AUT 49, SUI 36, FRA 27, GER 18, USA 11, CAN 6, IRA 1, NOR 1, TCH 1
rank 3 (minus three ex aequo of rank 2): SUI 39, AUT 35, FRA 32, GER 16, CAN 8, USA 6, LIE 3, GBR 2, NOR 2, TCH 2
Super-G (18):
Rank 1: GER 9, SUI 4, CAN 2, FRA 1 , ITA 1, USA 1
rank 2: AUT 6, SUI 6, GER 3, FRA 1, LIE 1, USA 1
rank 3: SUI 5, GER 4, USA 4, AUT 2, YUG 2, CAN 1
giant slalom (159) :
Rank 1 (plus one ex aequo): SUI 45, AUT 29, FRA 24, GER 20, USA 16, LIE 12, CAN 10, YUG 2, ITA 1, SPA 1
Rank 2 (plus two ex aequo, minus . an ex aequo of rank 1): FRA 32, AUT 30, SUI 29, GER 26, USA 23, LIE 9, YUG 4, SPA 3, CAN 2, ITA 2, TCH 1
rank 3 (plus one ex aequo; minus two ex aequo of rank 2): SUI 33, FRA 31, GER 24, AUT 23, USA 22, LIE 9, CAN 6, ITA 3, SPA 3, TCH 3, YUG 1
Slalom (183 + 1):
rank 1: FRA 51, SUI 38, AUT 25 + 1, USA 22, GER 17, LI E 13, ITA 9, CAN 5, POL 1, SWE 1, TCH 1
rank 2 (plus. an ex aequo): FRA 55, SUI 24, AUT 22, USA 21, GER 20, ITA 16 + 1, LIE 12, CAN 5, POL 3, TCH 2, URS 2, GBR 1, YUG 1
rank 3 (plus. an ex aequo, minus an ex aequo of rank 2): FRA 44 + 1, AUT 32, USA 27, SUI 20, ITA 18, LIE 13, GER 12, POL 7, CAN 5, SPA 2, NOR 1, TCH 1, YUG 1
combination (46):
Rank 1: SUI 20, AUT 8, LIE 8, GER 5, USA 3, CAN 1, TCH 1
Rank 2: SUI 15, AUT 10, GER 9, LIE 4, TCH 3, USA 3, FRA 2
Rank 3: SUI 11, LIE 9, AUT 7, GER 7, USA 7, CAN 2, FRA 2, TCH 1

Women overall (555):
1st place (plus two ex aequo): SUI 151, AUT 125, FRA 92, GER 55, USA 49, LIE 35, CAN 30, ITA 12, TCH 3, YUG 2, POL 1, SPA 1, SWE 1
rank 2 (minus two ex aequo from rank 1; plus 6 ex aequo): AUT 117, FRA 117, SUI 109, GER 76, USA 59, LIE 26, ITA 19, CAN 13, TCH 7 , YUG 5, POL 3, SPA 3, URS 2, GBR 1, IRA 1, NOR 1
rank 3 (plus two ex aequo; minus 6 ex aequo from rank 2): FRA 110, SUI 108, AUT 99, USA 66, GER 63, LIE 34, CAN 22, ITA 21, POL 7, TCH 7, SPA 5, YUG 4, NOR 3, GBR 2

Overview:
SUI 151 | 109 | 108
AUT 125 | 117 | 99
FRA 92 | 117 | 110
GER 55 | 76 | 63
USA 49 | 59 | 66
LIE 35 | 26 | 34
CAN 30 | 13 | 22
ITA 12 | 19 | 21
TCH 3 | 7 | 7
YUG 2 | 5 | 4
POL 1 | 3 | 7
SPA 1 | 3 | 5
SWE 1 | - | -
URS - | 2 | -
NOR - | 1 | 3
GBR - | 1 | 2
IRA - | 1 | -

Season course

Program and ratings

On October 2nd, Ebnat-Kappel canceled the giant slalom scheduled for January 6th due to financial difficulties - “there is a gap of CHF 30,000 because Swiss television does not want to broadcast on a weekday (Tuesday), which is why the sponsors withdrew their commitments had". (Accordingly, in the World Cup calendar published in November 1986 with regard to the men's competitions, the Las Leñas races were only included "pro forma" with the actual dates and Davos instead of Ebnat-Kappel for January 6th.)

Including the combinations, 36 competitions were planned for the men and 34 for the women, of which 18 were valid for the overall ranking (a maximum of 450 points would have been possible, but since combinations were canceled for both women and men, reduced this maximum accordingly). A total of 11 downhill runs, 8 slaloms and giant slaloms, 5 super-Gs and 2 combinations and parallel slaloms each, and 7 downhill runs, 10 slaloms, 8 giant slaloms, 5 super-Gs and 2 combinations and parallel slaloms each, were on the competition calendar for men .

For the overall men's World Cup, the four best results from all individual disciplines and both combined results counted. In the individual disciplines, the five best results counted (in the Super-G there were only five races, which all counted, but out of a total of 38 runners who made it into the points there was none who could score in all races - and Pirmin Zurbriggen was ultimately enough " only "one win for the total profit"). In the combination only two runners (Pirmin Zurbriggen and Andreas Wenzel) got points, there was no own "little ball".

For the women, too, only the four best results in the individual disciplines and a single combination decision counted for the overall World Cup. For the discipline World Cup, it was (as with the men) the five best results, there is no discussion about the combination anyway (and there was no "small ball").

Premier victories

Men's:

Women:

  • Beatrice Gafner , who had never won World Cup points before, surprised on January 10th on the downhill in Schwarzenberg when she started with start no. 35 defeated her compatriot Walliser by 0.43 seconds.
  • A surprise also provided Camilla Nilsson who also with higher starting number (24) with two Laufbestzeiten their only victory on January 4 in the slalom in Maribor celebrated. It was not only the first victory, but also the first podium for the Swedish women in the World Cup.
  • The French Catherine Quittet made her debut victory at the Super-G in Pfronten on January 17th .
  • At the end of the season, Sigrid Wolf turned with her first win, which she followed up with another one the very next day, on 13/14. March the downhill run in Vail from the ÖSV victoryless for the entire season. She wore starting number 16 both times.

World Cup decisions

A curious situation arose in the women's giant slalom at the final in Sarajevo : Here Maria Walliser and Vreni Schneider entered the race tied for the discipline and landed an "ex-aequo" victory, so that both of them, up to this point, had three The little crystal ball won (after the first run Schneider had an advantage of 0.34 seconds, but this was compensated by Walliser in the second run). In contrast, despite the tie in points in the men's giant slalom discipline classification, there was no ex-aequo evaluation because Pirmin Zurbriggen had the higher number of wins (three compared to two) compared to Joël Gaspoz .

The Swiss women won 22 of 30 races (taking into account the ex-aequo victory in the final giant slalom, they had 23 victories), they also came in 13 second and 14 third places. Italy remained without podium positions, the Austrian women’s failure to win was prevented by Sigrid Wolf’s double victory in the two downhill runs in Vail . However, the giant slalom weakness persisted (no victory since and including the 1978/79 season), and no podium place - a fifth place for Anita Wachter in the last race of the season, plus a sixth (Sigrid Wolf in Zwiesel ) were still the best. The Swiss men weren't much inferior, they had 18 wins, nine second and ten third places. Above all, the ÖSV men did not win, of the other (usually also victorious) nations, France and the USA were left empty-handed, with the latter not being able to take a podium place either.

This "trend reversal" in the victories also meant that the Swiss women, who had already taken the lead with 128 to 123 in the previous year, now showed 151 to 125 against Austria. In the previous year, the lead of the ÖSV men (118: 107) was enough for a lead of 241 to 235, so the SSV men were now also ahead with 125 to 118, so that Switzerland has 33 wins more than Austria would have.

The race for the world cup balls

There was a parallel slalom for both men and women. On December 28th, Leonhard Stock won a men's parallel slalom in front of Bojan Križaj in front of 14,800 visitors on the Teufelsberg outside Berlin . That of the women was ridden on January 18th on the “Munich Olympic Mountain”. The victory went to McKinney, who prevailed in the final against the Pole Małgorzata Tlałka , who has been driving for France since this season . In the “small final” Corinne Schmidhauser was victorious against Camilla Nilsson.

New FIS initiatives

After the German Heinz Krecek had already been working full-time in the women's sector for two years, the World Ski Association installed another professional manager, the former director of the Swiss Ski Association, Sepp Schweingruber. He took over the agendas as "director for the men's area" of the native Alsatian Serge Lang , the co-initiator of the World Cup at the time, who had fallen out of favor (apparently because of some arbitrariness and also because he had lost track of race dates). On November 18, a “racing team” was also founded in Zurich to counter the declining popularity of the World Cup.

A new set of rules set new deadlines for the acceptance and cancellation of races (10 days for speed, 6 days for technical disciplines). It was also reacted to the fact that the women's races were also generally postponed to the weekend. In addition, there were parallel and summer races (for the time being - the latter were run again in August 1989 and 1990; parallel slalom and similar formats followed many years later, between October and November 1997 and e.g. as team competitions at the end of the season from 2005/06 and as "City Events" from 2010/11) off the table.

Race postponements

  • The very first races (the downhill runs in Las Leñas ) were at risk: At first there was more than a meter of fresh snow, so there was also a risk of avalanches, so that the first training sessions were canceled. The first downhill run, scheduled for August 9th, had to be postponed to August 10th due to the extreme cold (minus 25 degrees) (the rain and the gusts of wind made training impossible), then again, this time to August 11th, because it was now blowing strong wind. But also on August 11th the conditions were catastrophic, despite several postponements there was no race. Subsequently, however, it was said that you could have started on August 11th, there had been blue skies and only a little wind, and only the ÖSV runners were against it. The certain confusion continued, because now it was announced that there would only be a race on August 15th (which would no longer take place on the designated “Jupiter”, but “Mercurio” route). But then financier Ernesto Lowenstein and World Cup boss Serge Lang pushed for the second descent. The victory of Pirmin Zurbriggen in this second descent was his first victory after the world championship title in 1985 in Bormio, which he won with an impressive run in the final section and Leonhard Stock , the 1980 Olympic champion, had to be 0.23 seconds behind Meanwhile, 0.12 seconds before Zurbriggen) continue to wait for his first World Cup success.
  • The snow-poor Maribor was able to hold the women's slalom on January 4th, but the Slovenes had to pass the giant slalom on January 5th to Saalbach-Hinterglemm . Thus, the Pinzgauer, who held the programmed Super-G the next day, came to two racing events.
  • Adelboden held another giant slalom for the men on January 20th, one week after the original competition ; it was the one designed for Ebnat-Kappel and delivered from there to Davos . (Please also see the introduction to "Racing Calendar 1986/87".)
  • Both races in Kitzbühel had to be run on January 25th, with the downhill run first (it had to be canceled the day before due to fog).
  • Both women's super Gs in Vail were ridden on March 15th. It was therefore the case that the women's Super-G on Mount Allan , which was canceled on March 8th due to incorrect slope preparation, was added exactly one week later in Vail, so that on that Sunday there were two Super-Gs in one day. Actually there should have been a programmed premiere in Nakiska on March 8th, namely Downhill and Super-G on one day (that had only happened when the race was postponed so far), but the circumstances mentioned at the beginning meant that the downhill started so delayed that this Super-G could not take place.
  • The men's giant slalom in Sarajevo was scheduled for March 19, but had to be canceled in the first run after number 22 due to wind and snow. At this point in time Nierlich was leading in 1.21.90 ahead of Gaspoz (+ 0.08) and Hangl (+ 0.19); Tomba was in 8th place (+ 0.56), Stenmark was 1.8 seconds behind, Zurbriggen was eliminated. Initially, it was planned to hold both this race (from 9 a.m.) and the women's giant slalom (from 10.30 a.m.) on March 20, ultimately the weather conditions did not allow this, so that both competitions were only run on March 22 (and the parallel slaloms, which are only part of the Nations Cup for this day, were waived).

Other events

  • The Austrian men's head coach Dieter Bartsch intervened with the FIS to repeal § 108.5.1, according to which a ski association was only allowed to name 15 runners for a venue with three races.
  • The venue Saalbach-Hinterglemm had already planned to set up a screen in the format 20 × 8 m in the finish area. This also happened with a view to applying for one of the upcoming world championships. Kitzbühel also had similar plans with a screen; it said there that these were 80% secured. Fixed was a very much improved sound system (cost 500,000 schillings) and the enlargement of the grandstands; these should be further expanded in the next few years.
  • Before the "actual start of the season" there was still slalom races in Sestriere as part of the so-called World Series of Skiing , namely on November 22nd, the women's race with winner Brigitte Gadient ahead of Vreni Schneider and Monika Maierhofer , and on November 28th the men with winner Bojan Križaj ahead of Ingemar Stenmark and Joël Gaspoz ; there was also a women's FIS slalom in Sestriere on November 23, with Mateja Svet as the winner. However, several Austrian runners who were already on their way to the World Cup races in Val d'Isère were missing from the two women's races.
  • There was a “pseudo suspension” from a race against Pirmin Zurbriggen after he continued to drive in the slalom in Sestriere and in the Super-G in Val d'Isère despite pitting errors, thereby violating the new FIS rules. Since the Swiss had called for the European Cup Super-G in Obereggen , he paid the penalty.
  • The Briton Graham Bell provided a small sensation when he finished 6th (0.82 seconds behind the winner Zurbriggen) on the first descent of the season, the “criterion of the first snow” on December 5th in Val d'Isère.
  • The men's slalom in Madonna di Campiglio on December 16 turned out to be a real knockout race, because of the 84 runners who started, only 19 were classified (including Günther Mader, who was third in the first run, and only one ÖSV starter in 5th place; from the DSV Armin Bittner came 7th); With 29 drivers, there was not even the permitted number of 30 starters for the second run.
  • The combination of Schwarzenberg / Mellau (January 10th / 11th) brought Switzerland a four-fold victory (4th place Maria Walliser ), on the other hand only six runners came into the ranking (the other two were Karen Percy and Sylvia Eder ).
  • The FIS women's director Heinz Krecek, mentioned in the article “New initiatives of the FIS”, was threatened with a one-year ban because he should have pronounced a disqualification against Regine Mösenlechner in Val d'Isère (had pulled her skis up in front of the ominous red line ). On the other hand, on January 6th, he saved the Super-G in Saalbach. (Apparently the ban on Krecek was not pronounced, because he is mentioned in newspaper reports a little later - see.)
  • For the first time in 27 years ( Willi Bogner on January 9, 1960), Markus Wasmeier, a German skier, won the Lauberhorn run on January 16. On the other hand, the ÖSV men with 7th place from Peter Wirnsberger had not brought a runner onto the podium for the first time since January 19, 1980 and the second time since January 14, 1967.
  • On January 18, Joël Gaspoz achieved the first domestic slalom victory on the Lauberhorn since Dumeng Giovanoli on January 14, 1968.
  • Above all, the poor performances of the Austrian speed drivers were the focus of the discussions published by the media throughout the season. At a press conference held in Kitzbühel on January 23rd (as part of the Hahnenkamm races ), ÖSV President Arnold Koller suspected that “the Austrian ski industry is pursuing a dual strategy and that local skiers are not being given the same quality as foreign skiers”.
  • There was another World Cup break with the national championships in the week from Monday, February 16, when the German Ski Association in Pfronten began with an "open slalom championship". The Swiss association had its event in Lenk in the Simmental. - Schladming and the surrounding ski areas Haus im Ennstal and Ramsau am Dachstein were the venues for the Austrians from February 19th. Christa Kinshofer , who started for the Netherlands, finished second in Super G.
  • When he won the downhill in Furano on February 28th, it was his 100th World Cup downhill run (and his 15th race win) for Peter Müller.

Curiosities

  • These resulted in the two combinations, in which in the one on the Lauberhorn, where Pirmin Zurbriggen was the only one in the starting field to start both in the downhill and in the slalom, there were at least two starters a week later on the Hahnenkamm. As far as Wengen and the general situation regarding the combinations were concerned, the new regulations also contributed, according to which only those runners who came in the "Top 30" in the downhill (or speed discipline) and in the first slalom run were evaluated; Wasmeier struggled over the Ganslernhang in Wengen, but he only came in 47th, which was also the last place.
  • While the two men's races were still being held in Kitzbühel on January 25, the opening of the world championships was already taking place in Crans-Montana.
  • Both Pirmin Zurbriggen and Maria Walliser broke the upper limits of the Swiss ski pool with their successes, which paid out a maximum of 120,000 Swiss francs per year for men and women. A list by “Sport Zürich” stated that the two were already above the races in Nakiska with 213,000 and 143,000 respectively. But since a general sponsor raised 75 francs for each World Cup point won (which were distributed proportionally to the runners), there was still another amount.

Injuries

  • Marc Girardelli was plagued by injuries. He fell in the slalom on November 29th in Sestriere and suffered a shoulder dislocation; Despite the doctors' recommended break from racing, he contested the giant slalom the next day, but did not make it to the final of the top thirty. and was also there in the other races (at the giant slalom on December 14th in Alta Badia he only came in 28th). After his fall on December 19 at the giant slalom in Kranjska Gora, in which he had dislocated his shoulder for the third time in his racing career, he still came (pained) to the slalom start number draw on the same evening; He got No. 2, after the 1st round he was 2.29 seconds behind in 22nd place - and in the end it was also 22nd, only his deficit had increased to 4.41 seconds.
  • Michael Mair dropped out for the downhill classics on the Lauberhorn and Hahnenkamm after his fall at the Super-G in Garmisch-Partenkirchen (January 11), in which he sustained a ligament injury in his knee.
  • For Hans Enn , his fall in the giant slalom in Adelboden (January 20) lost the chance of participating in the World Championships, he was used in the World Cup. He fell while exiting the steep slope and was brought to the clinic in Innsbruck with an internal ligament injury. He only came back to the team at the final in Sarajevo
  • At the French championships in February 1987, Catherine Quittet suffered a severe ligament injury in her left knee (please see article on Quittet).
  • In the fall on February 28 on the descent in Furano, Markus Wasmeier suffered a fracture of the fifth thoracic vertebra and a broken edge on the seventh thoracic vertebra and also bruises and strains; he was flown to a hospital in Munich on the same day . As a result, the Upper Bavarian was a serious pursuer of World Cup and Downhill Leader Zurbriggen from the race for the big and also the small ones in Downhill and Super-G. For the source, please see the article "Other events" in the last post (100th World Cup run for Peter Müller) ("Sieger Müller had baby track under control" in AZ of March 2, 1987, page 24)
  • The discharged on March 12, the first training on the women's downhill in Vail is pulled Liisa Savijarvi a broken right tibia, a torn ligament in his knee and spinal surgery to the second training run in a fall; after initial treatment at Vail Hospital, where no paralysis was found, she was transported to St. Anthony Hospital in Denver .

Resignations

Web links

World Cup men
World Cup women

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.schwarzenberg.at/news/30-jahre-ist-es-her/
  2. ^ "First rejection in the Ski World Cup" in "Tiroler Tageszeitung" No. 229 of October 3, 1986, page 17; POS .: column 5, below; penultimate title
  3. Box “In Brief”; penultimate post; POS. bottom right . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna October 3, 1986, p. 26 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  4. below: "Gafner and Winkler surprised" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 12, 1987, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  5. "Camilla Nilsson's triumph with two fastest times" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 5, 1987, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  6. ^ "Light into the dark through stick" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 29, 1986, p. 17 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  7. "Weather: When the Cold War raged on the ski slopes in Berlin - DIE WELT"
  8. top right: "McKinney was the fastest" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 20, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  9. ^ "Schweingruber follows Lang" in "Kleine Zeitung" of November 12, 1986, page 40
  10. «FIS woke up. Replacement of Lang » . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 12, 1986, p. 22 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  11. «Stick was stopped. Zurbriggen victorious » . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 18, 1986, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  12. "Pirmin's first success since the World Cup gold" in "Kronenzeitung" on August 17, 1986
  13. "Müller is the first winner" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 16, 1986, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  14. third block above: «Circus in the World Cup circus. Just one more descent » . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 14, 1986, p. 16 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  15. " Are Austrians to blame for World Cup cancellation?" In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 13, 1986, p. 24 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  16. "Storm prevents the start of the Ski World Cup" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 12, 1986, p. 22 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  17. top left: «No downhill run again» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 11, 1986, p. 22 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  18. "World Cup Chaos in Las Lenas" in "Tiroler Tageszeitung" No. 184 of August 11, 1986, page 14; POS .: columns 1 and 2, above
  19. below, second block: «Down drivers continue to wait» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 8, 1986, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  20. «Fresh snow before first descent» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna August 6, 1986, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  21. ^ "Las Lenas suffocates in the snow - no training" in "Tiroler Tageszeitung" No. 179 of August 5, 1986, page 11; POS .: middle box
  22. Box below in column 2: “Austria's ski women now have home advantage twice” . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 5, 1987, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  23. ^ "Second attempt by Strolz in Adelboden" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 20, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  24. «At Zurbriggen they all broke up» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 26, 1987, p. 20 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  25. «Only Sarajevo gives us hope» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna March 10, 1987, p. 21 ( arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  26. ^ "Figini - ÖSV-Girls with no chance of victory" in "Kärntner Tageszeitung" from March 10, 1987, page 25, POS. second big heading
  27. ^ "Marina Kiehl wins Super-G" in "Süddeutsche Zeitung" of March 16, 1987, page 37; last paragraph of the article
  28. «Storm prevented Nierlich's success» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna March 20, 1987, p. 27 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  29. ^ «Everything thrown overboard» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna March 21, 1987, p. 24 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  30. “Bartsch clears out dusty FIS paragraphs. After a protest telex, Ski Association! ”In“ Kronenzeitung ”of November 20, 1986, page 7 from the back; POS .: bottom left
  31. "Giant screens in the finish area of ​​Saalbach and the Kitzbühel 'Streif' descent planned" in "Kronenzeitung" of November 26, 1986, page 7 from the back
  32. «Gadient and Svet lay the trail» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 24, 1986, p. 28 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  33. Middle: "Haas and Huber to Val" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 29, 1986, p. 40 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  34. top left: «Zurbriggen closed for a race» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 9, 1986, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  35. ^ "Austrians: best time kings halfway through" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 17, 1986, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  36. Center: "Before Kreceks conspiracy to Triumph of the Valais" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna 7 January 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  37. ^ «Swiss victory, what else?»; last column . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 28, 1987, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  38. "Clarification is due now" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 19, 1987, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  39. «Koller is against monopoly. Material as the pivot » . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 24, 1987, p. 20 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  40. «Mader, Gstrein depart» and box at the bottom right: «In Brief»; first contribution in column 2 . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 17, 1987, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  41. "Title for Stock and Eder ab" and box in the middle right: "In Brief"; penultimate post . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 20, 1987, p. 28 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  42. Column 4, middle: “Mahrer and Walliser are Swiss downhill champions” and below: “Title fights are stock festivals. Got the Super-G after departure » . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 21, 1987, p. 21 ( arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  43. "nervous crucial: slalom title at Mader" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 23, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  44. below: “Sieger Müller had baby route under control” . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna March 2, 1987, p. 24 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  45. Gloss below: "Under the magnifying glass" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 19, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  46. «On the heels of the winners» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 26, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  47. "Walliser and Co. blow pool premiums" in "Kleine Zeitung", Carinthia edition, from March 12, 1987, page 37
  48. ^ "Stenmark's 39th victory in slalom" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 1, 1986, p. 20 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized version).
  49. ^ «Second for the seventh time»; last paragraph . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 1, 1986, p. 21 ( arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  50. "Girardelli is a thick head" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 3, 1986, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  51. "We have a strong team"; last paragraph . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 15, 1986, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  52. «Girardelli suddenly reappeared» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 22, 1986, p. 18 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  53. ^ Box on the right, center: "Mair has to pause" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 13, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  54. ^ "Pirmin's double strike before World Cup" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna January 21, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  55. ^ Columns 2 and 3, below: «Last chances in Sarajevo» . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna March 18, 1987, p. 24 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  56. "Canadian Savijarvi er.itt spinal injury in capital collapse" in "Kurier" Vienna of March 13, 1987, page 27, POS. right
  57. "Liisa's bad fall" in "Carinthian newspaper" of 13 March 1987, page 60, pos. bottom right
  58. ^ "Olympic champion Julen declared resignation" . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna February 23, 1987, p. 19 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  59. ^ «Professional Robert and Roswitha. Zoller debut in Park City », center right . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna November 24, 1987, p. 21 ( arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  60. ^ "Weirather plans to resign"; POS .: box in column 4 center . In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 12, 1986, p. 23 ( Arbeiter-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).