DSV Ski Inline Cup

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DSV Ski Inline Cup
Ski inline in action

The DSV Ski-Inline Cup is a ski competition series organized annually by the German Ski Association (DSV) since 1998 . In the period from May to September, five events, each with a cup final, will be held across the whole of Germany. The individual competitions are carried out according to the provisions of the regulations and the ski inline competition rules.

The Ski Inline Cup has been held together with the German Ski Inline Championships since 2003 . For children there is the competition "On your marks, get set ... Ski!" ("Skitty Race"), a skill run as part of the DSV junior project.

Host

The organizers are the clubs of the DSV, which have to apply to host the competitions in the autumn of the previous season. In the past 16 years, a total of 46 locations hosted the DSV Ski-Inline Cup.

history

In the summer of 1998, the DSV organized a series of ski inline events for the first time. The aim was to give the trend sport "ski inline" an additional direction to support skiing in Germany. The target number of participants was initially 300 to 400 people. In the first season, six events and a final were held across the whole of Germany. The venues were Weißenstadt im Fichtelgebirge, Blankenburg am Harz, Senden, Degmarn, Schweitenkirchen, Stetten am kalten Markt and the final in Munich. It began with the disciplines "Kids Cup" (today "Skitty Race"), slalom and a team competition. Pupils aged eight and over could participate. The oldest rating class was seniors from 61 years and older.

The DSV was the first German top-class sports association to include inline skiing in its sports regulations and thus responded to the wishes of its members. It should offer skiers a reasonable compensation to winter in the snowless time.

After the number of participants grew annually, changes and innovations were made to the competition regulations in order to further professionalize the cup and make it attractive for the athletes.

In 2003, "German Inline Ski Championships" were held for the first time in addition to the events of the Cup. Since then, qualification has been based on points at all DSV Ski-Inline Cup events. Since 2003 the disciplines of the Ski Inline Cup have been slalom, giant slalom, Nordic blading and parallel slalom.

participation

According to the current regulations, athletes of various rating classes from all state ski associations in the German Ski Association and athletes from the German Roller Sport and Inline Association (DRIV) are entitled to participate in the events of the DSV Ski Inline Cup . For the alpine competitions, the participant must have a valid start pass and a DSV code number. Participation in the competitions requires complete protective equipment customary in ski inline according to DWO 2.608.2 to 2.608.4. The current cup regulations apply. The point list counts for both associations and is the basis for all championships. For items that are not regulated there, the valid ski inline DWO applies.

The organizing and racing committees of the respective organizers are responsible for the proper implementation of the events in cooperation with the national technical delegate (TD) appointed by the organizer. In principle, the general conditions laid down in the Ski-Inline-DWO apply to all competitions carried out, "On your marks, get set ... Ski!" is excluded from this.

Disciplines

In the course of the history of this series of competitions, some of the starting disciplines were changed, adapted and expanded. As of the 15th DSV Ski-Inline Cup 2012, races were held in the following disciplines:

slalom

In the slalom, the athletes have to pass up to 40 red and blue gates flawlessly on a gradient of eight to 14 percent.

Scoring start classes according to the Ski-Inline DWO (2.609.3) are:

  • Children's race (no more than 30 goals)
  • DSV points race
  • School, youth, active and senior races (are held in separate competitions with two rounds each)

The rating is based on classes:

  • Student points race
  • Youth, active points race

Giant slalom

Alternating red and blue double poles with gate flags have to be avoided. A gate consists of two poles with a flag. A maximum gradient of at least six to ten percent is required.

Children's competition

The skill run for children ("On your marks, get set ... Ski!") Is open to all schools and clubs. A school or club evaluation is carried out. The association, school or kindergarten that has the most participants will be honored. The eventing competition is open to children in classes S6 to S11. There is no evaluation in the DSV Ski-Inline Cup.

  • Tasks of the versatility course: There are various obstacles and bars to drive around, climb over or jump over.
  • Predefined stations on the skill course are: A), change of direction, B) jump, C) seesaw, D) transfer station, E) slip gate, F) five other stations freely chosen by the organizer.
  • The aim of this type of event is: Test of coordinative skills (balance, ability to connect, adaptability, ability to orientate, ability to adapt)
  • Scoring: according to time, in one round

Nordic blading

Nordic Blading is the variant of cross-country skiing (skating technique) in summer and only a voluntary competition in the Ski Inline Cup. This discipline was compulsory until 2011 and was evaluated separately with the slalom as a combination.

Circuit

A round course with a length of 1000 and 2000 meters and a height difference of about 30 meters per lap, as described in the DWO, or alternatively a sprint competition serves as the route . 30 meters must be measured from the lowest to the highest point; there is no overall difference in height. The length of the route on circular courses should not exceed 3000 meters. A route length of 2000 meters with which a stadium character is achieved is ideal.

Mountain run

The mountain run is an event in which the finish line is more than 200 meters above the start, the running time should be around 15 to 30 minutes.

Sprint run

The individual sprint competition consists of a qualification competition with an interval start and finals. After qualifying, the athletes start in two heats in the finals. The course must be at least 4.00 m wide. The length should be between 150 and 500 m for all classes / groups.

Rating

The overall winner in the ages is determined by a point system, a scratch result does not exist. If there is a tie, the higher number counts. There is a division into female and male when awarding DSV points for places one to 30.

Cup winners will be determined in the following categories:

Rating class Age
student 12-14
youth 16-18
Active 21 - 31
Seniors 41 - 51 and 51 +

winner

Cup winners are driven out in the slalom. The winner of the cup is the runner who has the highest number of points. These will be honored at the cup final. The award ceremony for the overall cup winners will take place in Munich.

Prices

All participants receive certificates. From youth 16 onwards, the certificates are issued in teams from fifth place. There are trophies and medals as well as prizes for the winner and places two and three in the respective rating classes.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Regulations
  2. Ski-Inline competition rules (Ski-Inline WO, as of 2013)
  3. http://www.deutscherskiverband.de/breitensport_schule_projekte_schulsportkonzept_de.html
  4. table DSV Ski-Inline Cup ; (PDF; 147 kB)
  5. Ski Inline Regulations 2012