Lauberhorn - Downhill
Lauberhorn - Downhill is located in Switzerland
Lauberhorn - Downhill
Lauberhorn - Downhill
Location in Switzerland
Coordinates46°35′35″N 7°55′30″E / 46.593°N 7.925°E / 46.593; 7.925
Vertical1,028 m (3,373 ft)
Top elevation2,315 m (7,595 ft) 
Base elevation1,287 m (4,222 ft)
Wengen is located in Alps
Wengen
Wengen
Location in the Alps of Europe

The Lauberhorn ski races (Lauberhorn World Cup alpine ski races (German: Lauberhornrennen) (downhill, slalom, and combined) are among the highest-attended winter sports events in the world, attracting around 30,000 spectators each year. An established attraction is the airshow by the Patrouille Suisse, the aerobatic demonstration team of the Swiss Air Force. The 2016 races were held 15–17 January (super-combined, downhill, and slalom).

The races in Wengen in the Bernese Oberland are held in mid-January, usually the week prior to the Hahnenkamm, in Kitzbühel, Austria, another classic downhill race run since the early 1930s.

The Lauberhorn is a mountain in the Bernese Alps of Switzerland, located between Wengen and Grindelwald, north of the Kleine Scheidegg. Its summit is at an elevation of 2,472 m (8,110 ft) above sea level.

The downhill course is the longest in the world; its length of over 4.4 km (2.7 mi) results in run times of two and a half minutes (about 30–45 seconds longer than standard downhill races); top speeds approach 160 km/h (100 mph) on its Haneggschuss, the highest speeds on the World Cup circuit.

The Lauberhorn downhill run is surrounded by the Eiger, Mönch, and Jungfrau above the Lauterbrunnen valley. It is known for run arrangements such as the Hundschopf, a signature 40 m (130 ft) jump over a rock nose, the Kernen-S (passing over a bridge at around 80 km/h (50 mph) and the Wasserstation tunnel (underpassing the viaduct of the Wengernalpbahn).

Races are held on two famous courses "Lauberhorn" (downhill) and "Männlichen / Jungfrau" (slalom).

Key sections

Map of downhill and slalom

Many of the named portions of the course are due to historic falls or crashes by racers. The best known sections of the Lauberhorn downhill, or Lauberhornrennen,[1] race are the following (in descending order):[2][3]

  • Russisprung (Russi jump), named after Swiss Olympic champion Bernhard Russi, in the upper treeless part of the course
  • Hundschopf (dog's head), the Lauberhorn's signature jump over the rock nose, about a third of the way down the course
  • Minsch-Kante
  • Canadian Corner, a long fall-away right turn
  • Alpweg trail, very narrow and only 3 m (10 ft) in width
  • Kernen-S (formerly the Brüggli-S), consecutive right-left 90° curves separated by a small bridge), which reduces speed considerably; exit speed very important as the slower Langentrejen flats are next.
  • Wasserstation (water station), a small tunnel underpassing the local railroad Wengernalpbahn
  • Langentrejen where the slope becomes significantly flatter, now ends with Super-G turns
  • Haneggschuss, a pitch after the flats where top speeds approach 160 km/h (100 mph)
  • Silberhornsprung (Silberhorn jump)
  • Österreicherloch (Austrian hole)
  • Ziel-S (finish-S) which is endurance challenging and finally a finish jump (reduced in recent seasons)

History

Karl Schranz in 1966, winning his third of four Lauberhorn downhills, beneath the Mönch

One of the first reports of skiing from the Lauberhorn to Wengen was in 1912 when the Roberts of Candahar Ski Challenge Cup was offered.[4] By 1927 it was just known as the Lauberhorn Ski Cup.[5]

It is one of the oldest continuously-held ski races. The Russisprung was originally built in the spring for a television show and was incorporated into the course by organizers the following year. The Minsch-Kante is where Josef Minsch fell in 1965 and was hospitalized for weeks. The Canadian Corner is named after two of the Crazy Canucks, Dave Irwin and Ken Read, who aggressively attacked this part of the course in 1976 and subsequently fell during the race. The Kernen-S was renamed for 2003 winner Bruno Kernen after his crash in 2006 at the former Brüggli-S. The Silberhornsprung was introduced in 2003 with the pyramid-shaped Silberhorn mountain in the background for television viewers. The Österreicherloch (Austrian hole) got its name in 1954 when almost all participating Austrian skiers (including Toni Sailer) fell there; 1960s Austrian great Karl Schranz later fell there as well.

In 1991, a tragic death occurred during training for the race at the Ziel-S (Finish-S). The young Austrian skier Gernot Reinstadler was not able to finish the S-curve properly and therefore jumped into the slope boundary (because he was too far to the right), where he hooked one ski in the security net and suffered severe injuries to the lower body. He died shortly after the accident from internal bleeding. The race was not held that year. In reaction to this tragic event, the slope boundary at that place was also equipped with rejection canvas and the gates were moved upwards and more to the left.

Snowmaking was added in the mid-1990s, and the combined race has been a run as a "super combined" since the World Cup debut of the format at Wengen in 2005. The super-combi consists of a shortened downhill and with a slalom run, both on the same day, instead of three runs (one downhill and two slalom) of the traditional combined. On the World Cup circuit, the traditional combined is usually not run as separate races, but determined "on paper" from the results of the primary downhill and slalom races, which are run on separate days. (The Olympics and world championships are the exceptions, holding separate races for the combined.) At the Winter Olympics, the super-combined format replaced the traditional combined at the 2010 Winter Games.

Facts and figures

  • Longest downhill race in the World Cup circuit, with a length of 4.270 km (2.65 mi) in 2019;
    typical World Cup downhill courses for men are two miles (3.2 km) or less.
  • The course's starting elevation is 2,315 m (7,595 ft) above sea level;
    it descends 1,028 vertical metres (3,373 ft) to the finish at 1,287 m (4,222 ft) in Wengen.
  • The course record of 2:24.23 was set by Kristian Ghedina of Italy in 1997, with an average speed of 106.33 km/h (66.1 mph), an average vertical descent rate of 7.1 m/s (23 ft/s).
  • Top speeds can exceed 160 km/h (100 mph) on the Haneggschuss, a straightaway 25–30 seconds from the finish. The highest speed ever measured in a World Cup race was reached at this section in 2013 by Johan Clarey of France at 161.9 km/h (100.6 mph). Top speeds vary from year to year, depending upon snow conditions.
  • The average grade of the downhill race course is 25.3 percent (14.2 degrees).
  • The maximum grade is 87 percent (41 degrees) at the Hundschopf jump, one-third of the way down the course.
  • The largest crowd was recorded in 2012, when 38,000 observed the Lauberhorn downhill race.
  • Ten miles (16 km) of security nets are set up at the border of the downhill run, surrounded by around 1,000 m (3,300 ft) of high security nets and 800 m (2,600 ft) of rejection canvas.
  • The course was one of several featured in the 1969 movie Downhill Racer, starring Robert Redford and Gene Hackman.
    Redford's character challenges his rival teammate to a dual race at the end of practice on the Lauberhorn downhill course.
  • The record holders for the most wins are Karl Molitor of Switzerland, who won six times between 1939 and 1947, and Ivica Kostelić of Croatia, who won the slalom race 4 times between 2002 and 2012, and the combined event twice, in 2011 and 2012. Unlike most of the other major ski races, the Lauberhorn in neutral Switzerland was held during World War II; all of the events were won by Swiss racers. In the post-war era, the most notable multiple winners are three Austrians: Toni Sailer with four straight (1955–58), Karl Schranz with four (1959, 1963, 1966, 1969), and Franz Klammer with three consecutive (197577). Switzerland's Beat Feuz has also won three times (2012, 2018, 2020)
  • Austrians have won 31 times; Swiss racers have captured 29 victories (although 14 of these came before 1946).
  • The first non-European to win the race was Ken Read in 1980, the sole Canadian, followed by four other North Americans (all U.S.). Lasse Kjus of Norway was the first Scandinavian champion in 1999, joined by Aksel Lund Svindal in 2016, as Norway swept all three events.
  • The first American winner in the downhill was Bill Johnson, in 1984 on a shortened course; other U.S. winners include Kyle Rasmussen (1995), Daron Rahlves (2006), and Bode Miller (2007 & 2008). Miller and Marco Sullivan made the podium in 2009, taking second and third. Miller won the combined event in 2010, the second American to win the combined at Wengen and first in 52 years (Buddy Werner in 1958). Phil Mahre is the only U.S. racer to take the slalom event at Wengen, in 1982.
  • After heavy snowfall in 2016, the start was lowered to shortly before the Hundschopf jump. The course length was reduced 1.74 to 2.682 km (1.08 to 1.67 mi) and the vertical drop was 729 m (2,392 ft), a reduction of 299 m (981 ft); Svindal's winning time was under 1:49, more than 47 seconds less than the previous year's. The start was similarly lowered in 2020, with a vertical drop of 738 m (2,421 ft), a course length of 2.950 km (1.83 mi), and Feuz's winning time was under 1:43.
  • In 2021 races were cancelled because of COVID-19.

Winners list

Source:[6]

Year Downhill Slalom Combined Super-G
2024Switzerland  Marco OdermattAustria Manuel Feller ——France Cyprien Sarrazin
2023Norway Aleksander Aamodt KildeNorway Henrik Kristoffersen ——Norway Aleksander Aamodt Kilde
2022Austria Vincent KriechmayrNorway Lucas Braathen —— Switzerland  Marco Odermatt
2021 —— —— —— ——
2020 Switzerland  Beat FeuzFrance Clément NoëlAustria Matthias Mayer ——
2019Austria Vincent KriechmayrFrance Clément NoëlAustria Marco Schwarz ——
2018 Switzerland  Beat FeuzAustria Marcel HirscherFrance Victor Muffat-Jeandet[7] ——
2017 ——Norway Henrik Kristoffersen Switzerland  Niels Hintermann[7] ——
2016Norway Aksel Lund SvindalNorway Henrik KristoffersenNorway Kjetil Jansrud[7] ——
2015Austria Hannes ReicheltGermany Felix Neureuther Switzerland  Carlo Janka[7] ——
2014 Switzerland  Patrick KüngFrance Alexis PinturaultUnited States Ted Ligety[7] ——
2013Italy Christof InnerhoferGermany Felix NeureutherFrance Alexis Pinturault[7] ——
2012 Switzerland  Beat FeuzCroatia Ivica KostelićCroatia Ivica Kostelić[7] ——
2011Austria Klaus KröllCroatia Ivica KostelićCroatia Ivica Kostelić[7] ——
2010 Switzerland  Carlo JankaCroatia Ivica KostelićUnited States Bode Miller[7] ——
2009 Switzerland  Didier DéfagoAustria Manfred Pranger Switzerland  Carlo Janka[7] ——
2008United States Bode MillerFrance Jean-Baptiste GrangeFrance Jean-Baptiste Grange[7] ——
2007United States Bode Miller ——Austria Mario Matt ——
2006United States Daron RahlvesItaly Giorgio RoccaAustria Benjamin Raich[7] ——
2005Austria Michael WalchhoferGermany Alois VoglAustria Benjamin Raich[7] ——
2004 ——Austria Benjamin Raich —— ——
2003 Switzerland  Bruno Kernen
Austria Stephan Eberharter (Fri)
Italy Giorgio RoccaNorway Kjetil André Aamodt ——
2002Austria Stephan EberharterCroatia Ivica KostelićNorway Kjetil André Aamodt ——
2001 ——Austria Benjamin Raich —— ——
2000Austria Josef StroblNorway Kjetil André Aamodt —— ——
1999Norway Lasse KjusAustria Benjamin RaichNorway Lasse Kjus ——
1998Austria Andreas Schifferer
Austria Hermann Maier (Fri)
Austria Thomas Stangassinger[8]Austria Hermann Maier ——
1997Italy Kristian GhedinaAustria Thomas Sykora —— ——
1996 —— —— —— ——
1995United States Kyle Rasmussen
Italy Kristian Ghedina (Fri)
Italy Alberto TombaLuxembourg Marc Girardelli ——
1994 Switzerland  William Besse —— ——Luxembourg Marc Girardelli
1993 —— —— —— ——
1992 Switzerland  Franz HeinzerItaly Alberto Tomba Switzerland  Paul Accola ——
1991 —— —— —— ——
1990 —— —— —— ——
1989Luxembourg Marc Girardelli
Luxembourg Marc Girardelli (Fri)
Austria Rudolf NierlichLuxembourg Marc Girardelli ——
1988 —— —— —— ——
1987West Germany Markus Wasmeier Switzerland  Joel Gaspoz Switzerland  Pirmin Zurbriggen ——
1986 ——Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Rok Petrovic —— ——
1985Austria Helmut Höflehner
Austria Peter Wirnsberger (Sun)
Luxembourg Marc GirardelliFrance Michel Vion ——
1984United States Bill Johnson —— —— ——
1983 —— —— —— ——
1982Austria Harti WeiratherUnited States Phil Mahre Switzerland  Pirmin Zurbriggen ——
1981 Switzerland  Toni BürglerSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bojan KrizajSoviet Union Valery Tsyganof ——
1980 Switzerland  Peter Müller
Canada Ken Read (Fri)
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bojan KrizajWest Germany Michael Veith ——
1979 —— —— —— ——
1978 ——Austria Klaus Heidegger —— ——
1977Austria Franz KlammerSweden Ingemar Stenmark Switzerland  Walter Tresch ——
1976Austria Franz Klammer
Italy Herbert Plank (Fri)
Sweden Ingemar StenmarkAustria Franz Klammer ——
1975Austria Franz KlammerSweden Ingemar StenmarkItaly Gustav Thöni ——
1974 Switzerland Roland CollombinWest Germany Christian NeureutherAustria David Zwilling ——
1973 ——West Germany Christian Neureuther —— ——
1972 ——France Jean-Noel Augert —— ——
1971 —— —— —— ——
1970France Henri DuvillardFrance Patrick RusselFrance Henri Duvillard ——
1969Austria Karl SchranzAustria Reinhard TritscherAustria Heini Messner ——
1968Austria Gerhard Nenning Switzerland  Dumeng GiovanoliAustria Gerhard Nenning ——
1967France Jean-Claude KillyFrance Jean-Claude KillyFrance Jean-Claude Killy ——
1966Austria Karl SchranzFrance Guy PérillatAustria Karl Schranz ——
1965Austria Stefan SodatFrance Guy PérillatAustria Karl Schranz ——
1964Austria Egon ZimmermannWest Germany Ludwig LeitnerAustria Gerhard Nenning ——
1963Austria Karl SchranzFrance Guy PérillatFrance Guy Périllat ——
1962 —— Switzerland  Adolf Mathis —— ——
1961France Guy PérillatAustria Pepi StieglerFrance Guy Périllat ——
1960West Germany Willy BognerAustria Hias LeitnerAustria Pepi Stiegler ——
1959Austria Karl SchranzAustria Ernst OberaignerAustria Ernst Oberaigner ——
1958Austria Toni SailerAustria Josl RiederUnited States Buddy Werner ——
1957Austria Toni SailerAustria Anderl MoltererAustria Josl Rieder ——
1956Austria Toni SailerAustria Anderl MoltererAustria Josl Rieder ——
1955Austria Toni Sailer Switzerland Martin JulenAustria Toni Sailer ——
1954Austria Christian PravdaAustria Toni SpissAustria Christian Pravda ——
1953Austria Anderl MoltererAustria Anderl MoltererAustria Anderl Molterer ——
1952Austria Othmar SchneiderNorway Stein EriksenAustria Othmar Schneider ——
1951Austria Othmar SchneiderNorway Stein EriksenAustria Othmar Schneider ——
1950 Switzerland  Fredy RubiItaly Zeno Colò Switzerland  Fredy Rubi ——
1949 Switzerland  Rudolf GrafItaly Zeno Colò Switzerland  Adolf Odermatt ——
1948Italy Zeno Colò Switzerland  Karl Molitor Switzerland  Karl Molitor ——
1947 Switzerland  Karl MolitorSweden Olle Dalman Switzerland  Edy Rominger ——
1946France Jean Blanc Switzerland  Otto von Allmen Switzerland  Karl Molitor ——
1945 Switzerland  Karl Molitor Switzerland  Otto von Allmen Switzerland  Otto von Allmen ——
1944 Switzerland  Rudolf Graf Switzerland  Marcel von Allmen Switzerland  Marcel von Allmen ——
1943 Switzerland  Karl Molitor Switzerland  Heinz von Allmen Switzerland  Heinz von Allmen ——
1942 Switzerland  Karl Molitor Switzerland  Heinz von Allmen Switzerland  Heinz von Allmen ——
1941 Switzerland  Rudolf Graf Switzerland Marcel von Allmen Switzerland  Marcel von Allmen ——
1940 Switzerland Karl Molitor Switzerland Karl Molitor Switzerland Karl Molitor ——
1939 Switzerland  Karl MolitorGermany Josef JenneweinAustria Willi Walch ——
1938 Switzerland  Heinz von AllmenGermany Rudi Canz Switzerland  Heinz von Allmen ——
1937 Switzerland Heinz von AllmenAustria Willi WalchAustria Willi Walch ——
1936 Switzerland Hans Schlunegger Switzerland  Hermann SteuriFrance Émile Allais ——
1935Austria Richard Werle Switzerland  Arnold Glatthard Switzerland  Hans Steuri ——
1934 Switzerland  Adolf Rubi Switzerland  Adolf Rubi Switzerland  Adolf Rubi ——
1933 —— —— ——
1932 Switzerland  Fritz Steuri Switzerland  Fritz von Allmen Switzerland  Fritz Steuri ——
1931 Switzerland  Fritz Steuri Switzerland  Hans Schlunegger Switzerland  Fritz Steuri ——
1930 Switzerland  Christian Rubi Switzerland  Ernst GertschUnited Kingdom Bill Bracken ——

See also

Notes and references

  1. InGerman "Lauberhornrennen", in English "Lauberhorn races" - http://www.lauberhorn.ch/de/home and http://www.lauberhorn.ch/en/home
  2. "Race Course Overview". Verein Internationale Lauberhornrennen. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  3. Brennan, Dave (January 14, 2015). "Wengen's vengeance". Ski Racing. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  4. "Curling and Ski-ing at Muerren". Globe. England. 30 December 1911. Retrieved 19 June 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. "The Camera as Recorder: News by Photography". Illustrated London News. England. 22 January 1927. Retrieved 19 June 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. FIS-ski.com - World Cup podium results - Wengen - (1967-present)
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 A super combination was held (short downhill and a slalom).
  8. The slalom took place in Veysonnaz.
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