Olympic Winter Games 2010 / Alpine skiing

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Alpine skiing at the
2010 Olympic Winter Games
Olympic Winter Games 2010 logo.svg
Alpine skiing pictogram.svg
information
venue CanadaCanada Whistler
Competition venue Whistler-Blackcomb
Nations 71
Athletes 309 (176 Mars symbol (male), 133 Venus symbol (female))
date 15-25 February 2010
decisions 10
Turin 2006

At the XXI. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver ( Canada ), ten competitions (five each for men and women) were held in alpine skiing . The venue was Whistler-Blackcomb near Whistler , around 125 km north of Vancouver.

Balance sheet

Medal table

Women's Super G race on the "Franz's Downhill" piste
space country gold silver bronze total
1 GermanyGermany Germany 3 - - 3
2 United StatesUnited States United States 2 3 3 8th
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 2 - 1 3
4th NorwayNorway Norway 1 2 1 4th
5 AustriaAustria Austria 1 1 2 4th
6th ItalyItaly Italy 1 - - 1
7th CroatiaCroatia Croatia - 2 - 2
SloveniaSlovenia Slovenia - 2 - 2
9 SwedenSweden Sweden - - 2 2
10 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Czech Republic - - 1 1

Medalist

Men
competitor gold silver bronze
Departure SwitzerlandSwitzerland Didier Defago NorwayNorway Aksel Lund Svindal United StatesUnited States Bode Miller
Super G NorwayNorway Aksel Lund Svindal United StatesUnited States Bode Miller United StatesUnited States Andrew Weibrecht
Giant slalom SwitzerlandSwitzerland Carlo Janka NorwayNorway Kjetil Jansrud NorwayNorway Aksel Lund Svindal
slalom ItalyItaly Giuliano Razzoli CroatiaCroatia Ivica Kostelić SwedenSweden André Myhrer
combination United StatesUnited States Bode Miller CroatiaCroatia Ivica Kostelić SwitzerlandSwitzerland Silvan Zurbriggen
Women
competitor gold silver bronze
Departure United StatesUnited States Lindsey Vonn United StatesUnited States Julia Mancuso AustriaAustria Elisabeth Görgl
Super G AustriaAustria Andrea Fischbacher SloveniaSlovenia Tina Maze United StatesUnited States Lindsey Vonn
Giant slalom GermanyGermany Viktoria Rebensburg SloveniaSlovenia Tina Maze AustriaAustria Elisabeth Görgl
slalom GermanyGermany Maria Höfl-Riesch AustriaAustria Marlies shield Czech RepublicCzech Republic Šárka Strachová
combination GermanyGermany Maria Höfl-Riesch United StatesUnited States Julia Mancuso SwedenSweden Anja Pärson

Results men

Departure

space country athlete Time (min)
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Didier Defago 1: 54.31
2 NorwayNorway NOR Aksel Lund Svindal 1: 54.38
3 United StatesUnited States United States Bode Miller 1: 54.40
4th AustriaAustria AUT Mario Scheiber 1: 54.52
5 CanadaCanada CAN Erik Guay 1: 54.64
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Didier Cuche 1: 54.67
7th FranceFrance FRA David Poisson 1: 54.82
8th LiechtensteinLiechtenstein LIE Marco Büchel 1: 54.84
9 AustriaAustria AUT Klaus Kroell 1: 54.87
10 AustriaAustria AUT Michael Walchhofer 1: 54.88
11 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Carlo Janka 1: 55.02
12 ItalyItaly ITA Werner Heel 1: 55.19
15th ItalyItaly ITA Peter Fill 1: 55.29
18th ItalyItaly ITA Christof Innerhofer 1: 55.58
22nd AustriaAustria AUT Hans Grugger 1: 55.81
23 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Ambrosi Hoffmann 1: 56.04
24 GermanyGermany GER Stephan Keppler 1: 56.11

Date: February 15, 2010, 7:30 pm (10:30 am local time)
Course: “ Dave Murray
Start: 1678 m, Finish: 825 m
Difference in altitude: 853 m, distance: 3105 m
Average speed of the winner: 97.8 km / h
Course setter: Helmuth Schmalzl , 41 goals

64 participants from 26 countries, 59 in the rating.

The men's descent should originally have taken place on February 13th, but had to be postponed by two days due to warm temperatures and rain in the lower part of the route. The slope presented itself unevenly and was accordingly difficult to drive on. In contrast to the days before, it was sunshine and all drivers benefited from the same conditions.

The first serious target time set up Bode Miller , who took the lead with starting number 8. Aksel Lund Svindal (No. 16) was able to undercut Miller's time by two hundredths of a second and took the lead. Didier Défago , winner of the Lauberhorn and Streif the previous season , was seven hundredths faster with starting number 18 and achieved a best time that no one could beat. Only in 1992 and 1994 was there a closer decision in an Olympic Downhill. Didier Cuche (No. 22), one of the most popular favorites due to his training performance, was on the medal course until the lowest intermediate time, but chose the wrong line in the last left turn and fell back to sixth place. Other favorites such as No. 17 Michael Walchhofer , No. 20 Carlo Janka or No. 19 Manuel Osborne-Paradis also received no medal.

Super G

space country athlete Time (min)
1 NorwayNorway NOR Aksel Lund Svindal 1: 30.34
2 United StatesUnited States United States Bode Miller 1: 30.62
3 United StatesUnited States United States Andrew Weibrecht 1: 30.65
4th ItalyItaly ITA Werner Heel 1: 30.67
5 CanadaCanada CAN Erik Guay 1: 30.68
6th ItalyItaly ITA Christof Innerhofer 1: 30.73
7th ItalyItaly ITA Patrick Staudacher 1: 30.74
8th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Carlo Janka 1: 30.83
9 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Tobias Grünenfelder 1: 30.90
10 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Didier Cuche 1: 31.06
14th AustriaAustria AUT Benjamin Raich 1: 31.35
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Didier Defago 1: 31.43
17th AustriaAustria AUT Georg Streitberger 1: 31.49
20th AustriaAustria AUT Mario Scheiber 1: 31.93
21st AustriaAustria AUT Michael Walchhofer 1: 32.00

Date: February 19, 2010, 8:30 p.m. CET (11:30 a.m. local time)
Course: "Dave Murray"
Start: 1440 m, Finish: 825 m
Difference in altitude: 615 m, distance: 2200 m
Average speed of the winner: 87.6 km / h
course setter: Giovanni Rulfi, 44 goals

64 participants from 28 countries, 45 in the ranking. Retired u. a .: Marco Büchel (LIE), Robbie Dixon (CAN), Peter Fill (ITA), Patrik Jrebsyn (SWE), Andrej Jerman (SLO), Stephan Keppler (GER), Hans Olsson (SWE), Manuel Osborne-Paradis ( CAN), David Poisson (FRA), Natko Zrnčić-Dim (CRO).

The race was held in ideal weather conditions (sunshine, temperatures around 0 ° C). With start number 3, Andrew Weibrecht (so far ranked 11th as the best World Cup result) set a time at which the following athletes surprisingly failed in a row, sometimes extremely tightly. Only Bode Miller (No. 11) managed to beat his teammate by three hundredths of a second. In the end, Aksel Lund Svindal (No. 19) prevailed with 0.28 seconds and no one could beat his time. This was the fourth Norwegian victory in the seventh Olympic Super-G: Kjetil André Aamodt won the gold medal in 1992, 2002 and 2006 . The race was overshadowed by a serious fall by Patrik Järyn : The Swede remained unconscious and had to be transported by helicopter. In the hospital, he was diagnosed with a slight concussion and skin abrasions on his face.

Giant slalom

space country athlete Time (min)
1 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Carlo Janka 2: 37.83
2 NorwayNorway NOR Kjetil Jansrud 2: 38.22
3 NorwayNorway NOR Aksel Lund Svindal 2: 38.44
4th AustriaAustria AUT Marcel Hirscher 2: 38.52
5 AustriaAustria AUT Romed Baumann 2: 38.80
6th AustriaAustria AUT Benjamin Raich 2: 38.83
7th CroatiaCroatia CRO Ivica Kostelić 2: 38.88
8th GermanyGermany GER Felix Neureuther 2: 39.06
9 United StatesUnited States United States Ted Ligety 2: 39.11
10 SloveniaSlovenia SLO Aleš Gorza 2: 39.21
12 AustriaAustria AUT Philipp Schörghofer 2: 39.35
14th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Didier Cuche 2: 39.45
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Sandro Viletta 2: 39.54
29 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Marc Berthod 2: 42.10

Date: February 23, 2010
1st run: 7:00 p.m. CET (10:00 a.m. local time)
2nd run: 10:45 p.m. CET (1:45 p.m. local time)

Course: "Dave Murray"
Start: 1210 m, Finish: 805 m
Difference in altitude: 405 m, route length: 1512 m
Course setter 1st run: David Chastan (FRA), 52 goals Course setter
2nd run: Matteo Guadagnini (ITA), 55 goals

103 participants from 60 countries, 89 in the rating. Retired u. a .: 1st run: Thomas Mermillod Blondin (FRA), Bode Miller (USA); 2nd run: André Myhrer (SWE), Cyprien Richard (FRA), Marcus Sandell (FIN), Gauthier de Tessières (FRA).

The race was originally scheduled for February 21st, but postponements in previous races made it necessary to adjust the program. Light snowfall, which turned into sleet in the lower part of the route, made the slope conditions difficult. The first run resulted in relatively tight time gaps at the top of the rankings. No less than 13 drivers classified themselves within a second and thus still had realistic chances of winning a medal. The fastest was the Swiss Carlo Janka with a lead of 0.02 seconds over the Austrian Romed Baumann and 0.16 seconds over the Norwegian Aksel Lund Svindal . They were followed by two more Austrians, Marcel Hirscher and Benjamin Raich , the 2006 Olympic champion.

Kjetil Jansrud , still in 11th place after the first run, set the clear best time in the second run and overtook almost all of the competitors ahead of him. Only Carlo Janka was able to defy the Norwegian and also won the Olympic giant slalom gold medal with a controlled drive to World Cup gold in 2009. Svindal claimed his third place. The Austrians were not fortunate enough, they all fell back and finished in 4th (Hirscher), 5 (Baumann) and 6 (Raich) places.

slalom

space country athlete Time (min)
1 ItalyItaly ITA Giuliano Razzoli 1: 39.32
2 CroatiaCroatia CRO Ivica Kostelić 1: 39.48
3 SwedenSweden SWE André Myhrer 1: 39.76
4th AustriaAustria AUT Benjamin Raich 1: 39.81
5 AustriaAustria AUT Marcel Hirscher 1: 40.20
6th SloveniaSlovenia SLO Mitja Valenčič 1: 40.35
7th ItalyItaly ITA Manfred Mölgg 1: 40.45
8th CanadaCanada CAN Julien Cousineau 1: 40.66
9 FranceFrance FRA Julien Lizeroux 1: 40.72
10 AustriaAustria AUT Reinfried Herbst 1: 40.78
12 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Silvan Zurbriggen 1: 40.83
15th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Marc Gini 1: 41.35

Date: February 27, 2010
1st run: 7:00 p.m. CET (10:00 a.m. local time)
2nd run: 10:45 p.m. CET (1:45 p.m. local time)

Course: "Dave Murray"
Start: 985 m, Finish: 805 m Difference in
altitude: 180 m
Course setter 1st run: Dusan Grasic (CAN) 66 goals Course setter
2nd run: Christian Höflehner (AUT) 63 goals

102 participants from 56 countries, 54 in the rating. Retired u. a .: Axel Bäck (SWE), Marc Berthod (SUI), Jimmy Cochran (USA), Urs Imboden (MDA), Ted Ligety (USA), Bode Miller (USA), Steve Missillier (FRA), Lars Elton Myhre (NOR ), Felix Neureuther (GER), Manfred Pranger (AUT), Patrick Thaler (ITA), Bernard Vajdič (SLO), Sandro Viletta (SUI).

The Olympic slalom race was characterized by extremely unfavorable conditions: continuous rain had softened the slope, and thick fog at times made visibility poor. In the first run Giuliano Razzoli coped best with this situation. He was leading 0.43 seconds ahead of Mitja Valenčič and 0.54 seconds ahead of Benjamin Raich . Another seven drivers still had realistic medals. André Myhrer , who is in 10th place, set the fastest time in the second run and moved up to third place, which he had missed by 0.03 seconds four years ago in Turin . The fourth-placed Ivica Kostelić improved to second place. Razzoli was able to defend his lead and won (overall somewhat surprisingly, although he had won in Zagreb at the beginning of January) the gold medal as the third Italian after Piero Gros (1976) and Alberto Tomba (1988), who was present as a spectator .

The Austrians, who provided the strongest slalom team, could not achieve their goal of winning a medal in the last competition. Benjamin Raich missed the bronze medal by 0.05 seconds, Reinfried Herbst , who was the leader in the Slalom World Cup , was tenth. In the fifth Olympic race, too, the Austrian men failed to win a medal, which resulted in the worst result in their Olympic history. Before that, there had only been no medalist in 1936: At that time, the Austrians did not even run because the IOC had banned ski instructors from starting. Behind the Austrians, the two remaining Swiss and Kilian Albrecht from Vorarlberg, starting for Bulgaria, landed. The 51-year-old Prince Hubertus von Hohenlohe, the oldest participant in these games, was also able to place in the rankings at his second start.

Super combination

space country athlete Time (min)
1 United StatesUnited States United States Bode Miller 2: 44.92
2 CroatiaCroatia CRO Ivica Kostelić 2: 45.25
3 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Silvan Zurbriggen 2: 45.32
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Carlo Janka 2: 45.54
5 United StatesUnited States United States Ted Ligety 2: 45.82
6th AustriaAustria AUT Benjamin Raich 2: 46.13
7th Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Ondřej Bank 2: 46.19
8th ItalyItaly ITA Christof Innerhofer 2: 46.45
9 NorwayNorway NOR Kjetil Jansrud 2: 46.50
10 United StatesUnited States United States Will Brandenburg 2: 47.06
14th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Sandro Viletta 2: 48.19
22nd GermanyGermany GER Stephan Keppler 2: 49.79

Date: February 21, 2010
Course: "Dave Murray"

Departure: 6:30 p.m. CET (9:30 a.m. local time),
start: 1678 m, finish: 825 m,
altitude difference: 853 m, route length: 3105 m
Course setter: Helmuth Schmalzl , 41 gates

Slalom: 9:15 p.m. CET (12:15 p.m. local time)
Start: 1005 m, Finish: 805 m
Height difference: 200 m
Course setter: Ante Kostelić (CRO), 69 goals

52 participants from 22 countries, 34 in the rating. Retired u. a .: Romed Baumann (AUT), Johan Clarey (FRA), Didier Défago (SUI), Peter Fill (ITA), Manfred Mölgg (ITA), Hans Olsson (SWE), Andrej Šporn (SLO), Georg Streitberger (AUT) , Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR).

The super combination was originally planned for February 16, 2010, but postponements of other races meant that the competition could only be held five days later. With sunshine and temperatures around freezing point, the external conditions were ideal. The descent, the first part of the super combination, could be held on the uncut route. To the top of sat Aksel Lund Svindal before the surprising Dominik Paris . Carlo Janka and Didier Défago followed on the other places . Of the slalom specialists, Bode Miller , Ivica Kostelić , Silvan Zurbriggen and Benjamin Raich , who was the only one of the Austrians who only entered the slalom with three drivers (Streitberger who did without rank 22 in the downhill), were in the most promising position. The slalom part (one run) followed just under three hours later. Kostelić was initially able to take the lead on the course set by his father, but was beaten by Miller by 0.33 seconds shortly afterwards. Zurbriggen improved from tenth to third place. As expected, Paris fell far behind, while Svindal, who was leading after the descent, was eliminated in the slalom. Miller was now the Olympic champion.

Results women

Departure

space country athlete Time (min)
1 United StatesUnited States United States Lindsey Vonn 1: 44.19
2 United StatesUnited States United States Julia Mancuso 1: 44.75
3 AustriaAustria AUT Elisabeth Görgl 1: 45.65
4th AustriaAustria AUT Andrea Fischbacher 1: 45.68
5 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Fabienne Suter 1:46:17
6th CanadaCanada CAN Britt Janyk 1: 46.21
7th FranceFrance FRA Marie Marchand-Arvier 1: 46.22
8th GermanyGermany GER Maria Riesch 1: 46.26
9 ItalyItaly ITA Lucia Recchia 1: 46.50
10 GermanyGermany GER Gina Stechert 1: 46.93
12 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Nadia Styger 1: 47.22
14th AustriaAustria AUT Regina Mader 1: 47.53
19th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Nadja Kamer 1: 48.14
22nd ItalyItaly ITA Johanna Schnarf 1: 48.77
25th AustriaAustria AUT Anna Fenninger 1: 49.95
Downhill medal winners: Julia Mancuso (left), Lindsey Vonn (middle), Elisabeth Görgl (right)

Date: February 17, 2010, 8:00 p.m. CET (11:00 a.m. local time)
Course: "Franz's Downhill"
Start: 1595 m, Finish: 825 m
Difference in altitude: 770 m, Length: 2939 m
Average speed of the winner: 101.5 km / h course
setter: Jan Tischhauser, 43 goals

45 participants from 22 countries, 37 in the rating. Eliminated: Elena Fanchini (ITA), Dominique Gisin (SUI), Daniela Merighetti (ITA), Anja Pärson (SWE), Marion Rolland (FRA). Disqualified: Alice McKennis (USA). Not at the start: Georgia Simmerling (CAN).

The women's descent, which was postponed by three days due to bad weather, was very uneven and exhausting, but could be carried out under fair conditions (sunshine, temperatures slightly above freezing point). To make matters worse, none of the riders had been able to complete an entire training run beforehand. Instead, a training session was split in half. Due to the lack of preparation, there were some dramatic scenes in the race. Anja Pärson fell after a nearly 60 meter flight at the target jump, up to then the Swede was on the medal course with the second best intermediate time. Dominique Gisin and Daniela Merighetti also fell at the target jump, but like Pärson were without serious injuries. In contrast, Edit Miklós , who fell into the safety fences in the middle section, and Marion Rolland , who tore a cruciate ligament in a harmless-looking fall a few meters after the start (got the sticks between the skis), were injured. The slope was then sometimes criticized as too dangerous, but several athletes described Franz's Downhill as an Olympic-worthy challenge.

Elisabeth Görgl drove a first serious target time with starting number 5 and clearly took the lead. Julia Mancuso caused a surprise and was 0.9 seconds faster; in the previous two years she had been far from top form and had never been on the podium. Lindsey Vonn , who won five of the six World Cup runs this winter, was the only one to live up to her role as a favorite . Withstanding the pressure exerted by the American media, she beat Mancuso's time by 0.56 seconds and took the victory. Görgl continued a family tradition: Her mother Traudl Hecher had won bronze downhill runs in 1960 and 1964.

Super G

space country athlete Time (min)
1 AustriaAustria AUT Andrea Fischbacher 1: 20.14
2 SloveniaSlovenia SLO Tina Maze 1: 20.63
3 United StatesUnited States United States Lindsey Vonn 1: 20.88
4th ItalyItaly ITA Johanna Schnarf 1: 20.99
5 AustriaAustria AUT Elisabeth Görgl 1: 21.14
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Nadia Styger 1: 21.25
7th ItalyItaly ITA Lucia Recchia 1: 21.43
8th GermanyGermany GER Maria Riesch 1: 21.46
9 United StatesUnited States United States Julia Mancuso 1: 21.50
10 FranceFrance FRA Ingrid Jacquemod 1: 21.77
12 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andrea Dettling 1: 22.03
13 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Fabienne Suter 1: 22.16
15th GermanyGermany GER Gina Stechert 1: 22.21
16 AustriaAustria AUT Anna Fenninger 1: 22.30
28 GermanyGermany GER Viktoria Rebensburg 1: 25.23
Medal winners of the Super-G on the Medal Plaza: Tina Maze (left), Andrea Fischbacher (middle), Lindsey Vonn (right)

Date: February 20, 2010, 7:00 p.m. CET (10:00 a.m. local time)
Course: "Franz's Downhill"
Start: 1425 m, Finish: 825 m
Difference in altitude: 600 m, length of the course: 2005 m
Average speed of the winner: 90.1 km / h course
setter: Jürgen Kriechbaum (AUT), 41 goals

53 participants from 27 countries, 38 in the rating. Retired u. a .: Emily Brydon (CAN), Maruša Ferk (SLO), Nadja Kamer (SUI), Marie Marchand-Arvier (FRA), Chelsea Marshall (USA), Daniela Merighetti (ITA), Shona Rubens (CAN), Nicole Schmidhofer ( AUT).

In sunshine and temperatures slightly above freezing point, the slope presented itself in a compact state. The course setting turned out to be technically demanding, which is why numerous drivers missed a goal. Julia Mancuso (USA) opened the race; her time of 1: 21.50 minutes was enough for ninth place. Elisabeth Görgl was the first of the favorites to start the race; she took the lead but then dropped back to fifth. Lindsey Vonn , who started after her and won the Super-G world title a year earlier, was the biggest favorite (also because of her gold medal in the downhill run a few days ago); she drove 0.26 seconds faster and looked like the sure winner. But then Andrea Fischbacher surprised , who was already ahead in the interim measurements and clearly undercut Vonn's time by 0.74 seconds. Finally Tina Maze moved up to second place ahead of Vonn. Fischbacher's gold medal was the only one for Austria's Alpine. The Swiss women, the strongest Super-G team in the current World Cup season, remained without a medal.

Giant slalom

space country athlete Time (min)
1 GermanyGermany GER Viktoria Rebensburg 2: 27.11
2 SloveniaSlovenia SLO Tina Maze 2: 27.15
3 AustriaAustria AUT Elisabeth Görgl 2: 27.25
4th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Fabienne Suter 2: 27.52
5 AustriaAustria AUT Kathrin Zettel 2: 27.53
6th GermanyGermany GER Kathrin Hölzl 2: 27.58
7th AustriaAustria AUT Eva-Maria Brem 2: 27.62
8th United StatesUnited States United States Julia Mancuso 2: 27.66
9 FranceFrance FRA Taïna Barioz 2: 27.79
10 GermanyGermany GER Maria Riesch 2: 27.97
15th AustriaAustria AUT Michaela Kirchgasser 2: 28.40
17th ItalyItaly ITA Manuela Mölgg 2: 28.66

Date: February 24, 2010
1st run: 7:00 p.m. CET (10:00 a.m. local time)
2nd run: February 25, 2010, 6:30 p.m. CET (9:30 a.m. local time)

Course: “Franz's Downhill”
Start: 1177 m, Finish: 805 m
Difference in altitude: 372 m
Course setter 1st run: Christian Schwaiger (GER), 49 goals
Course setter 2nd run: Anders Pärson (SWE) 47 goals

86 participants from 47 countries, 60 in the evaluation. Retired u. a .: 1st run: Lindsey Vonn (USA), Mona Løseth (NOR), Andrea Dettling (SUI). Not started for the 2nd run: Šárka Záhrobská (CZE), Veronika Zuzulová (SVK), Ana Jelušić (CRO), Nika Fleiss (CRO).

The giant slalom for women was by far the most affected by the extremely changeable weather. The first run could still be carried out under normal conditions with light snowfall. Austrians got along best with the course: Elisabeth Görgl led the surprising French Taïna Barioz and Kathrin Zettel ; a third Austrian, Eva-Maria Brem, was fourth. Lindsey Vonn fell into the safety fence and broke her little finger. Julia Mancuso , who started after her , Olympic champion in 2006, had to break off the journey. The second run was initially postponed several times because of the increasingly thick fog and finally scheduled for the next day.

The weather improved only slightly, but the second run could be carried out without any problems. Viktoria Rebensburg , who was in sixth intermediate rank, took the lead. None of the competitors following her could undercut her overall time. Tina Maze came next , who lost a total of 0.04 seconds and came in second. Third place went to Görgl, who was leading at halftime, pushing Fabienne Suter off the podium. Rebensburg is the first German giant slalom Olympic champion in 54 years: In 1956, Ossi Reichert was the fastest. The seventh time in the second round, which was won by Denise Karbon (ITA), was enough for Rebensburg. But just like Karbon (rank 30 after the 1st run, ultimately rank 23), these other runners were already too far behind after the first run. Only Fabienne Suter had hopes when she was in the lead for a long time (up to Rebensburg and Maze) after finishing 11th in the first run. Tina Maze drove 11th time in the second run, Elisabeth Görgl 15th.

Rebensburg first caught the eye of a large international audience on February 13, 2007, when the giant slalom was being driven at the World Championships in Aare and, with the third-best running time of the second round, it advanced from 21st to 8th place. She achieved her best World Cup result so far at RTL on January 24, 2010 in Cortina d'Ampezzo with third place.

slalom

space country athlete Time (min)
1 GermanyGermany GER Maria Riesch 1: 42.89
2 AustriaAustria AUT Marlies shield 1: 43.32
3 Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Šárka Záhrobská 1: 43.90
4th SwedenSweden SWE Maria Pietilä Holmner 1: 44.22
5 FranceFrance FRA Sandrine Aubert 1: 44.46
6th FinlandFinland FIN Tanja Poutiainen 1: 44.93
7th AustriaAustria AUT Elisabeth Görgl 1: 44.97
8th ItalyItaly ITA Nicole Gius 1: 45.01
9 SloveniaSlovenia SLO Tina Maze 1: 45.09
10 SlovakiaSlovakia SVK Veronika Zuzulová 1: 45.14
11 ItalyItaly ITA Manuela Mölgg 1: 45.31
13 AustriaAustria AUT Kathrin Zettel 1: 45.59
14th GermanyGermany GER Christina Geiger 1: 45.62
15th SwedenSweden SWE Frida Hansdotter 1: 45.67
22nd LiechtensteinLiechtenstein LIE Marina nigg 1: 46.83

Date: February 26, 2010
1st run: 7:00 p.m. CET (10:00 a.m. local time)
2nd run: 10:30 p.m. CET (1:30 p.m. local time)

Course: "Dave Murray"
Start: 985 m, Finish: 805 m
Difference in altitude: 180 m
Course setter 1st run: Klemen Bergant (SLO) 62 goals
Course setter 2nd run: Günter Obkircher (AUT) 64 goals

87 participants from 47 countries, 70 in the evaluation. Retired u. a. in the first run: Lindsey Vonn (USA), Ana Drev (SLO); in the 2nd run: Fanny Chmelar (GER), Chiara Costazza (ITA), Michaela Kirchgasser (AUT), Megan McJames (USA), Mona Løseth (NOR), Susanne Riesch (GER), Anja Pärson (SWE).

With heavy cloud cover and occasional light snowfall, the race could be carried out without any problems. Maria Riesch , who was one of the favorites before the race, set the fastest time in the first run. Šárka Záhrobská , Marlies Schild (in their comeback season after injury) and younger sister Susanne Riesch followed on the other places . The drivers in positions three to nine were less than half a second apart. In the second run there was only a small change in the lead when Záhrobská was overtaken by Schild. Maria Riesch was able to safely manage her lead of four tenths of a second in the second run and won the second gold medal after the super combination, while Susanne Riesch was eliminated. After 2006, the women's slalom was the only alpine ski race without Swiss participation, as none of the athletes had met the required qualification criteria. Záhrobská won the first alpine Olympic medal for the Czech Republic.

Super combination

space country athlete Time (min)
1 GermanyGermany GER Maria Riesch 2: 09.14
2 United StatesUnited States United States Julia Mancuso 2: 10.08
3 SwedenSweden SWE Anja Pärson 2: 10.19
4th AustriaAustria AUT Kathrin Zettel 2: 10.50
5 SloveniaSlovenia SLO Tina Maze 2: 10.53
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Fabienne Suter 2: 10.85
7th Czech RepublicCzech Republic CZE Šárka Záhrobská 2: 11.02
8th ItalyItaly ITA Johanna Schnarf 2: 11.29
9 AustriaAustria AUT Michaela Kirchgasser 2: 11.35
10 FranceFrance FRA Marie Marchand-Arvier 2: 11.82
16 AustriaAustria AUT Anna Fenninger 2: 13.27
18th AustriaAustria AUT Elisabeth Görgl 2: 13.58
23 SwitzerlandSwitzerland SUI Andrea Dettling 2: 14.44

Date: February 18, 2010
Course: "Franz's Downhill"

Departure: 6:30 p.m. CET (9:30 a.m. local time),
start: 1500 m, finish: 825 m,
altitude difference: 675 m, route length: 2500 m
Course setter: Jan Tischhauser, 36 gates

Slalom: 9:30 p.m. CET (12:30 p.m. local time)
Start: 974 m, Finish: 805 m
Difference in altitude: 169 m
Course setter: Klemen Bergant (SLO), 55 goals

35 participants from 19 countries, 28 in the evaluation. Retired u. a .: Nadja Kamer (SUI), Daniela Merighetti (ITA), Gina Stechert (GER), Lindsey Vonn (USA).

The super combination had to be postponed by four days because of the persistently bad weather at the beginning of the first week and the lack of training drives. The combination run was shortened by a little more than 400 meters compared to the special run. In addition, the "Hot Air" target jump, where there had been some serious falls, was defused. Fastest in the descent was Lindsey Vonn , 0.33 seconds ahead of Maria Riesch and 0.8 seconds ahead of the again surprising Julia Mancuso .

Šárka Záhrobská , Michaela Kirchgasser and Sandrine Aubert set the fastest times in the slalom . After the descent, however, they were too far behind to be able to advance into the medal ranks. Riesch won the gold medal with the seventh best running time (it was her first Olympic medal after she was missing in 2006 due to injury) ahead of Mancuso (9th in the slalom) and Anja Pärson (5th). Pärson's bronze medal in particular was a surprise, as the Swede had suffered numerous bruises in her spectacular fall on the descent the day before . Vonn retired in the slalom with the second-best overall time.

Web links

Commons : Alpine skiing at the 2010 Winter Olympics  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. The Coronation of the Other Didier. Tages-Anzeiger , February 16, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  2. The double Didier. Spiegel Online , February 16, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010 .
  3. Svindal wins Super-G. Spiegel Online, February 19, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010 .
  4. RTL-Gold to Janka, Austria gets nothing. Der Standard , February 23, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010 .
  5. Historic defeat: no medals for ÖSV men. (No longer available online.) Salzburger Nachrichten , February 27, 2010, formerly in the original ; Retrieved February 28, 2010 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.salzburg.com  
  6. ^ Miller first Olympic champion - Zurbriggen third. Neue Zürcher Zeitung , February 22, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  7. A slope that polarizes. ARD , February 18, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  8. Rolland tears cruciate ligament on descent. Focus , February 18, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010 .
  9. Lindsey Vonn is crowned ski queen. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, February 18, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  10. Fischbacher outclasses competition. Der Standard, February 20, 2010, accessed February 28, 2010 .
  11. Fischbacher's dream run - Schwyzerinnen without a medal. Basler Zeitung , February 20, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  12. Cat war between Mancuso and Vonn. Tages-Anzeiger, February 25, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  13. Women's giant slalom canceled. Spiegel online, February 25, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  14. Viktoria Rebensburg full throttle to Olympic victory. Die Welt , February 25, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  15. Maria Riesch - The alpine ski queen of Whistler. Die Welt, February 26, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  16. Maria Riesch takes second Olympic gold. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, February 26, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .
  17. Maria Riesch strikes back. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, February 18, 2010, accessed on February 28, 2010 .